Church in Adelaide Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia April 22, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in 9MR 358-364. Dear Brethren and Sisters:
I am drawn out to address you. I am in great travail of soul for our people. We are living amid the perils of the last days. A superficial faith results in a superficial experience. There is a repentance that needs to be repented of. All genuine experience in religious doctrines will bear the impress of Jehovah. All should see the necessity of understanding the truth for themselves individually. We must each understand the doctrines that have been studied out carefully and prayerfully. It has been revealed to me that there is among our people a great lack of knowledge in regard to the rise and progress of the third angel’s message. There is great need to search the book of Daniel and the book of Revelation, and learn the texts thoroughly, that we may know what is written.
(12LtMs, Lt 1, 1897, 1)
The light given me has been very forcible that many would go out from us, giving need to seducing spirits, and doctrines of devils. The Lord desires that every soul who claims to believe the truth shall have an intelligent knowledge of what is truth. False prophets will arise, and will deceive many. Everything is to be shaken that can be shaken. Then does it not become every one to understand the reasons of our faith? In place of having so many sermons, there should be a more close searching of the Word of God, opening the Scriptures text by text, and searching for the strong evidences that sustain the fundamental doctrines that have brought us where we now are, upon the platform of eternal truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 1, 1897, 2)
I can write but little to you now at this time. I have very much writing to do to complete The Life of Christ, and I have been called away so much that I have but little time to write. But my soul is made very sad to see how quickly those who have had light and truth will accept the deceptions of Satan, and be charmed with a spurious holiness, like Fannie Bolton, who in the midst of her deceiving, claimed that she was inspired of God. When men turn away from the waymarks the Lord has established, then we may understand our position as marked out in prophecy, they are going, they know not whither.
(12LtMs, Lt 1, 1897, 3)
I could wish that, if possible, another camp meeting might be held in Adelaide, and that this slime and filth, which Satan has poured forth against the servants of God, might be washed away. I would not object to attending such a meeting. The way has been prepared for the message which God has given me. And the church in Adelaide may see and understand the truth, to be lived and advocated for this time.
(12LtMs, Lt 1, 1897, 4)
I question whether genuine rebellion is ever curable. Study in Patriarchs and Prophets the rebellion of Korah, Dathan, and Abiram. This rebellion was extended, including more than two men. It was led by two hundred and fifty princes of the congregation, men of renown. Call rebellion by its right name, and apostasy by its right name, and then consider that the experience of the ancient people of God with all its objectionable features was faithfully chronicled to pass into history. The Scripture declares, “These things were written for our admonition, upon whom the ends of the world are come.” [1 Corinthians 10:11.] And if men and women who have the knowledge of the truth are so far separated from their great Leader, that they will take the great leader of apostasy, and name him Christ our Righteousness, it is because they have not sunk the shaft deep into the mines of truth. They are not able to distinguish the precious ore from the base material.
(12LtMs, Lt 1, 1897, 5)
Read the cautions so abundantly given in the Word of God in regard to false prophets that will come in with their heresies, and, if possible, will deceive the very elect. With these warnings, why is it that the church do not distinguish the false from the genuine? The church thus misled need to humble themselves before God, and sincerely repent, because they were so easily led astray. They could not distinguish the voice of the true Shepherd from that of a stranger.
(12LtMs, Lt 1, 1897, 6)
Let them review this chapter in their experience. For more than half a century God has been giving His people light through the testimonies of His Spirit. After all this time is it left for two men and their wives to undeceive the whole church of believers, declaring Mrs. White a fraud and a deceiver? “By their fruits ye shall know them.” [Matthew 7:20.]
(12LtMs, Lt 1, 1897, 7)
I do not feel that any evidence presented to these men will have the least effect upon them. In McCullagh’s case, no new evidence can be given as to the truthfulness of the mission and work the Lord has given His servant to do. He has had the light. This apostasy has been permitted, that it may be faithfully written out in the true light, that the church at Adelaide may be helped to plant their feet upon the Rock of Ages and not on shifting sand. And this experience is to be a warning to others. Those who could ignore all the evidences God had given them in the recent camp meeting, and change that blessing into a curse, should tremble for the safety of their own souls. Their candlestick will be removed out of its place unless they repent. The Lord has been insulted. The standard of truth of the first, second, and third angels’ messages has been left to trail in the dust. If the watchmen are left to mislead the people in this fashion, God will hold some souls responsible for a lack of keen discernment to discover what kind of provender was being given to His flock.
(12LtMs, Lt 1, 1897, 8)
The Lord has permitted this matter to develop as it has done, in order to show how easily His people will be misled, when they depend upon the words of men instead of searching the Scriptures for themselves, as did the noble Bereans, to see if these things are so. Should the fair words of men, one of whom has had no real experience with us as a people, be so readily accepted? How can our people, with their Bibles in their hands, accept that which, if they would only consider, they must know is error and falsehood? The Lord has permitted this thing to be, that warning may be given that just such things will take place.
(12LtMs, Lt 1, 1897, 9)
Rebellion and apostasy are in the very air we breathe. We shall be affected by it unless we by faith hang our helpless souls upon Christ. If men are so easily misled, how will they stand when Satan shall personate Christ, and work miracles? Who will be unmoved by his misrepresentations, professing to be Christ when it is only Satan assuming the person of Christ, and apparently working the works of Christ? What will hold God’s people from giving their allegiance to false christs? “Go not ye after them.” [Luke 21:8.]
(12LtMs, Lt 1, 1897, 10)
The doctrines must be plainly understood. The men accepted to teach the truth must be anchored; then their vessel will hold against storm and tempest, because the anchor holds them firmly. The deceptions will increase, and we are to call rebellion by its right name. We are to stand with the whole armor on. My brethren, you are not meeting men only, but principalities and powers. We wrestle not against flesh and blood, (Let Ephesians 6:10-18 be read carefully and impressively before the church). These men are voicing the words of the dragon. We have to meet the satanic agencies who went to make war with the saints. “The dragon was wroth with the woman, and went to make war with the remnant of her seed, which keep the commandments of God, and have the testimony of Jesus Christ.” [Revelation 12:17.] These men who have apostatized leave the true and faithful people of God, and fraternize with those who represent Barabbas. “By their fruits ye shall know them.” [Matthew 7:20.]
(12LtMs, Lt 1, 1897, 11)
I write this because many in the church at Adelaide are represented to me as seeing men like trees walking. They must have another and a deeper experience before they can discern the snares spread to take them in the net of the deceiver. There must be no halfway work done now. The Lord calls for staunch, decided, whole-souled men and women to stand in the gap and make up the hedge. “And they that be of thee shall build the old waste places, and raise up the foundations of many generations, and thou shall be called The repairers of the breach, The restorer of paths to dwell in. If thou turn away thy foot from the Sabbath, from doing thy pleasure on my holy day; and call the Sabbath a delight, the holy of the Lord, honorable; and shalt honor him, not doing thine own pleasure, nor speaking thine own words, then shalt thou ride upon the high places of the earth, and I will feed thee with the heritage of Jacob thy father; for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it.” [Isaiah 58:12-14.]
(12LtMs, Lt 1, 1897, 12)
My brethren Daniells, Colcord, and Starr: there is a decided testimony to be borne by all our ministers in all our churches. God has permitted this apostasy to take place in order to show how little dependence can be placed in man. We are always to look to God. His word is not Yea and Nay, but Yea and Amen. All our labors to bring souls to a knowledge of the truth will be null and void unless we shall so present the truth as to work a decided reformation in the heart. The work must proceed from inward to outward, transforming the character of all who receive the truth. We are not to throw our arms about the men who are Satan’s masterpieces for working out his will, as were the opposers on the campground at Adelaide.
(12LtMs, Lt 1, 1897, 13)
Truth is to be proclaimed in warnings that will make hearts tremble in contrition before God. The sharp, clean-cut testimony must be borne. I hope that all who can possibly do so will come to this first term of school, where the Bible will be made the most important line of study. God help you all to go forth with the sword of the Spirit, which cuts both ways, is my prayer. “Be ye wise as serpents, and harmless as doves.” [Matthew 10:16.] Make no compromise with those who have apostatized, but treat them kindly, giving no occasion for your good to be evil spoken of.
(12LtMs, Lt 1, 1897, 14)
Lt 2, 1897
Anderson, C. Refiled as Lt 2, 1896.
Lt 3, 1897
Brothers and Sisters in Adelaide “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia May 6, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 9MR 364-366; CTr 202. + Dear Brothers and Sisters in Adelaide:
The truth alone is truth. Spiritual things can be only spiritually discerned. The Bible truth is one of faith alone. The kingdom of heaven can be entered only by those who come to him as a little child. “Faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.” [Hebrews 11:1.]
(12LtMs, Lt 3, 1897, 1)
“And, behold, one came and said unto him, Good Master, what good thing shall I do, that I may have eternal life?” This question was a very important one to this young ruler, for his entire present and future eternal interests were here involved. Christ made answer: “Why callest thou me good? there is none good but one, that is, God; but if thou wilt enter into life, keep the commandments. He saith unto him, Which? Jesus said, Thou shalt do no murder, Thou shalt not commit adultery, Thou shalt not steal, Thou shalt not bear false witness. Honor thy father and thy mother: and, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.” [Matthew 19:16-19.]
(12LtMs, Lt 3, 1897, 2)
This rich young ruler was apparently in earnest. He had seen the love and tenderness of Christ in receiving and blessing little children; he had beheld Christ’s self-denial in lifting the cross, and he was stirred with deep conviction. Running to Christ, he knelt before Him, and poured forth his great desire. “All these things,” he said, “have I kept from my youth up: what lack I yet? Jesus said unto him, If thou wilt be perfect, go and sell that thou hast, and give to the poor, and thou shalt have treasure in heaven; and come and follow me.” [Verses 20, 21.]
(12LtMs, Lt 3, 1897, 3)
This was the gospel which Christ came to preach by His words and His works. The poor were His heritage. “The poor,” He declared, “ye have with you always.” [John 12:8.] God has given men talents as He gave to this ruler, to the end that they may be the agents of God, that they may be faithful stewards of their entrusted capital of means, that they may help the poor, the needy, and the suffering ones, and thus represent His own character. The Christian is always to be the representative of the Master whom he serves. He is to follow Christ in the development of love, revealed in works for his neighbor. Those who have been blessed with abundance are to see in their poor fellow man a needy brother, and they are to help and encourage him, that he may have evidence that God has not forgotten him, that the Lord has him in mind, and has imparted to his brother the means to supply his needs. They should also encourage him to help himself, providing ways by which he can do this.
(12LtMs, Lt 3, 1897, 4)
“But this I say, He which soweth sparingly shall reap also sparingly: and he which soweth bountifully shall reap also bountifully. Every man according as he purposeth in his heart, so let him give: not grudgingly, nor of necessity: for God loveth a cheerful giver. And God is able to make all grace abound toward you; that ye, always having all sufficiency in all things, may abound to every good work: (as it is written, He hath dispersed abroad; he hath given to the poor: his righteousness remaineth forever. Now he that ministereth seed to the sower both minister bread for your food, and multiply your seed sown, and increase the fruits of your righteousness;) being enriched in all things to all bountifulness, which causeth through us thanksgiving to God.” [2 Corinthians 9:6-11.] Here is specified the work that is to be done for the needy ones, those who are in want. Their needs should be sufficient cause for drawing upon the liberal supplies of the wealthy.
(12LtMs, Lt 3, 1897, 5)
The ruler so far believed in Jesus that he was persuaded that He alone could give him the instruction he needed upon this vital question. The passage to Jesus was being thronged with travelers who were going to Jerusalem to attend the passover: but this did not deter him from his purpose, although he knew that as a ruler in Israel, this acknowledgement of Christ on his part would cause violent censure and scathing remarks.
(12LtMs, Lt 3, 1897, 6)
“Why callest thou me good?” asks Christ: “there is none good but one; that is God.” [Mark 10:18.] Christ declined to receive the term good, as applied to human beings apart from the One who only is truly good, and equal with the Father.
(12LtMs, Lt 3, 1897, 7)
“Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.” [Leviticus 19:18.] Here was the lack, the link to be supplied, the absence of which makes the longest and strongest chain worthless. For the sincerity of the young man, his consciousness that something was wanting, and his nearness to the full committal to the proposal of Christ, “Jesus beholding him loved him.” But nevertheless He must tell him the truth. He Himself, in words and works, was the Way, the Truth, and the Life. He must follow Christ’s example if he would be perfect. “One thing thou lackest,” He said, “go thy way, sell whatsoever thou hast, and give to the poor, and thou shalt have treasure in heaven: and come, take up the cross, and follow me.” [Mark 10:21.]
(12LtMs, Lt 3, 1897, 8)
With yearning heart Christ awaited his decision. How the heart of infinite love should have rejoiced to number him as a co-laborer, a fellow worker with the Master, wearing His yoke in perfect obedience, and seeking to save that which was lost. But the young man was “sad at that saying, and went away grieved: for he had great possessions.” [Verse 22.]
(12LtMs, Lt 3, 1897, 9)
Only one thing he lacked; but it was a vital principle, a lack which would prove fatal unto him, and one that would finally corrupt all that was good in his nature. Unless he should withdraw his affections from his riches, and fasten them upon the heavenly treasure, his riches would overcome him. Already he was revealing that riches were his idol, and the Lord who reads every heart must speak the truth, however unacceptable, which would prove a savor of life unto life, if he would receive it.
(12LtMs, Lt 3, 1897, 10)
He who was rich in all the treasures of heaven, possessing authority in the heavenly courts, for our sakes became poor, that we through His poverty might be made rich. All is the Lord’s. No human being can claim any earthly treasure as his own, or in any way exalt himself. As the giver of man’s means and talents, God lays His authoritative hand upon his earthly possessions, and plainly tells him his duty. “Sell that thou hast, and give to the poor, and thou shalt have treasure in heaven: and come and take thy cross, and follow me.” [See Matthew 19:21; Mark 10:21.] He does not specify every particular. If the ruler had inquired farther, Christ would have been his Counsellor. In laying his riches at the feet of Jesus, to whom all belongs, he would do no more than his duty: and in doing this he would place all his riches in the savings bank of heaven.
(12LtMs, Lt 3, 1897, 11)
Man is asked to scatter to the needy, suffering one of earth, that he may gather in return the imperishable, eternal riches which thieves cannot steal, moths cannot corrupt, and fire cannot consume. This treasure is eternally secure by the throne of God. And in all the good that man accomplishes, by investing his talents in the work, to advance the kingdom of God, he is following the example of Christ who came to the world to do this very work. He gave all His riches, He gave His own life, He emptied heaven to supply every necessity to accomplish the salvation of a lost world.
(12LtMs, Lt 3, 1897, 12)
Christ invited the young ruler, “Come and follow me.” [Matthew 19:21.] This lesson is for the benefit of every soul. In giving, there is ever an increase in the heavenly treasure for both rich and poor. Every obedient child of God is an heir of God, and joint heir with Christ. We are all choosing for time and for eternity.
(12LtMs, Lt 3, 1897, 13)
It did not please the ruler to keep all the commandments of God, irrespective of consequences, for this demanded self-denial and the use of his talents for God’s glory alone. This was too great a sacrifice. The young man was sorry that he could not be ranked as a follower of Christ, and yet retain all his earthly riches. He parted with Christ that day, and chose another god. He served and worshipped his earthly possessions. He wanted Christ, he loved Christ, but he gave the preference to his earthly treasure. The choice was offered him between earthly riches or heavenly treasure, he chose his idol.
(12LtMs, Lt 3, 1897, 14)
Thus it is with many who suppose themselves fully in harmony with the great Teacher. They may say, What lack I yet? The comprehensive requirement of the law of God makes no reservation. The command is, “Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy strength, and with all thy mind, and thy neighbor as thyself.”“This do, and thou shalt live.” [Luke 10:27, 28.]
(12LtMs, Lt 3, 1897, 15)
Christ’s eye followed the disappointed youth. He longed to draw him back whither his feet were tending. But He would have no unwilling sacrifice. He must have the entire subjection of the heart in consecration and doing God’s will, or the man is no manner of use to Him. “He that willeth to do his will, shall know of the doctrine, whether it be of God.” [John 7:17.] To His disciples Christ said, “How hardly shall they that have riches enter into the kingdom of God.” [Mark 10:23.]
(12LtMs, Lt 3, 1897, 16)
In the wilderness of temptation, the riches of the world was the bribe presented to our Lord. Satan did not come to Him with his temptations until the human nature was weakened, and was crying out in its necessity. It was then that Satan assailed Christ. It was then that he supposed he could deceive Him. Now was his time, now was his opportunity.
(12LtMs, Lt 3, 1897, 17)
“Then was Jesus led up of the spirit into the wilderness to be tempted of the devil.” [Matthew 4:1.] Christ must endure this trial in order to evidence to the fallen world, to the worlds unfallen, to the family of God in heaven, and to all the armies of Satan, that the fallen foe could find nothing in Christ to respond to his evil designs against the Father. It was a part of the plan of heaven that this trial and test should come. Christ’s humanity would have shrunk from that which awaited Him in the desert. But He came to the world, that, by coming into close personal contact with him, He might wrest from the hands of the usurper the Lord’s human heritage. Satan claimed to be the prince of this world, and that by overcoming Adam he had made the human race his subjects and placed them under his control. Adam fell upon the point of appetite, and for forty days Christ fasted and prayed.
(12LtMs, Lt 3, 1897, 18)
At the close of that time Satan came to Christ in the guise of an angel direct from heaven, apparently with a commission from heaven, declaring that His fast was at an end. The sensations of hunger were strong upon Christ; He was craving for food. Now Satan improves his opportunity. While the words of God from heaven, “This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased,” are still sounding in his ears, he comes suddenly upon Christ and says, “If thou be the Son of God, command that these stones (which bore the exact appearance of bread) be made bread.” [Matthew 3:17; 4:3.] Satan knew that the personal controversy between the Prince of life and the prince of darkness had commenced, and he sought to overcome Christ in His physical weakness.
(12LtMs, Lt 3, 1897, 19)
The proof that Satan required was for Christ to accept the doubt and act upon it, thus showing that He entertained the doubt by giving the evidence that Satan desired. Had Christ complied with this suggestion of the enemy, his satanic majesty would still have said, Show me a sign, that I may believe you to be the Son of God. But not one of the signs specified was Christ to give. By working a miracle in His own behalf He would show that He questioned God. That sign which is greater than all miracles, a firm reliance upon a “Thus saith the Lord,” was a sign that could not be controverted. “It is written,” He said, “man shall not live by bread alone; but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.” [Verse 4.] Where Adam failed, Christ endured the test. And on the point of appetite He was victor in behalf of the whole human family, making it possible for every one to be an overcomer as He in His humanity was an overcomer in their behalf.
(12LtMs, Lt 3, 1897, 20)
How artfully had Satan approached Eve in Eden! “Yea hath God said, Ye shall not eat of every tree of the garden?” [Genesis 3:1.] Thus far every word that Satan spoke was truth; but his manner of saying them was a disguised contempt for the words of God. There was in his words of truth a covert negative, a denial, a doubt of the divine truthfulness. He sought to instill into her mind the thought that God would not do as He had said; that the withholding of such beautiful fruit was a contradiction of His love and compassion for them.
(12LtMs, Lt 3, 1897, 21)
And now he seeks to inspire Christ with his own sentiments. “If thou be the Son of God.” [Matthew 4:3.] Thus he sought to imbue Christ with his doubts. The words rankle with bitterness in his mind. In the tones of his voice is an expression of utter incredulity. Would God treat His own Son thus? Would He leave Him in the desert with wild beasts, without anything to appease His hunger, without companions, without comfort? He insinuated that God never meant His Son to be in such a state as this. “If thou be the Son of God,” show Thy power by relieving Thyself of this pressing hunger. Command that this stone be made bread.
(12LtMs, Lt 3, 1897, 22)
And thus he comes to every soul who is not in an ecstasy of joy if clouds encompass them, if circumstances work against them, if poverty and distress afflict them, Satan is close by to annoy and perplex them. He attacks their weak points of character. He seeks to shake their confidence in God, who suffers such a condition of things to exist.
(12LtMs, Lt 3, 1897, 23)
Temptations will arise to cause distrust of God and to question his love. And in the place of submissively waiting the Lord’s time, and in faith believing in His care and His love, they take themselves in their own hands, and manifest the very attributes of Satan. They yield their faith and their confidence in God and show by their spirit, their words, and their actions that they will make a place for themselves. They become traitors, rebels against God, and accept the temptations of him whom they choose as their leader. They become a medium for Satan, a channel through which he communicates to other minds the doubts and infidelity with which he was imbued them.
(12LtMs, Lt 3, 1897, 24)
And there are those who will not be led into false paths, who will to deny the faith once delivered to prophets and holy men of old, who spake as they were moved upon by the Holy Ghost. “Of which salvation the prophets have inquired and searched diligently, who prophesied of the grace that should come unto you: searching what or what manner of time the Spirit of Christ which was in them did signify, when it testified beforehand the sufferings of Christ and the glory that should follow. Unto whom it was revealed, that not unto themselves, but unto us they did minister the things; what are now reported unto you by them that have preached the gospel unto you with the Holy Ghost sent down from heaven; which things the angels desire to look into.” [1 Peter 1:10-12.]
(12LtMs, Lt 3, 1897, 25)
Study the 10th chapter of Daniel, and mark particularly the fourteenth verse.“Now I am come to make thee understand what shall befall thy people in the latter days: for yet the vision is for many days.” When our brethren and ministers shall feel the burden that should rest upon them, they will not be content with a few surface truths. They will sink the shaft deep, and will have the spirit that Daniel possessed. There will be no frivolous spirit, no cheap, superficial sanctification, prated from unsanctified lips, and coming from hearts that are destitute of purity, of consecration and wholehearted surrender to God. There will be earnest prayer that the truth may be so indelibly stamped upon the heart that the entire man may be brought, with all his ways, into conformity to the truth. “With the heart man believeth unto righteousness; and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation.” [Romans 10:10.]
(12LtMs, Lt 3, 1897, 26)
Of Christ it is said that He was tempted in all points like as we are, yet without sin. His human nature did not yield to the suggestions of Satan on a single point. And if the Lord Jesus has overcome the temptations of Satan, every son and daughter of Adam may overcome. But there is only one way in which any of us can do this. It is to obey His voice. Let all carefully read the prayer of Daniel: “As it is written in the law of Moses, all this evil is come upon us: yet made we not our prayer before the Lord our God, that we might turn from our iniquities and understand thy truth.” [Daniel 9:13.] This has been our deficiency. The Word has not been a lamp to our feet and a light to our path. But thus it should be, for the Lord, He is God.
(12LtMs, Lt 3, 1897, 27)
Lt 4, 1897
Brethren and Sisters in Adelaide “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia April 5, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in 9MR 353-357. + Dear Brethren and Sisters in Adelaide:
It is your privilege and duty to stand firmly in the faith. I wish you now to see that which I never meant to be made public. It will explain to you the reason of this wonderful apostasy. Brother Haskell, I think, has the matter in clear lines, written to Brother McCullagh after he had received a special blessing at the Cooranbong Bible Institute. Brother McCullagh thanked me for reading this to him, but you can see plainly that if Satan had not power over his mind, he would not, dared not, have done the very things he was reproved for doing in Sydney. As he has poured out his tirade against me publicly, when I was not present to answer for myself, I think it just and right that his accusations shall be presented in writing or before others, that we may be able to answer them, point by point, and thus to disappoint the enemy in his determine efforts to accuse. See Revelation 12:10-12.
(12LtMs, Lt 4, 1897, 1)
This accusing spirit will continue till the close of time, but let none suppose that the Holy Spirit prompts them to work out Satan’s attributes. They are working under another leader. We have seen this acted over and over again in our experience. Adam was tempted in Eden. He yielded to a small temptation. Christ resisted a most powerful series of temptations. Adam fell from his integrity, and the floodgates of woe were opened to our world. Christ passed over the ground in human nature, and although tempted in all points as man is tempted, He stood and saved all who would receive Him. “As many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name.” [John 1:12.] Our Redeemer stood the test in man’s behalf. He passed over the ground where Adam fell, and redeemed Adam’s disgraceful failure and fall.
(12LtMs, Lt 4, 1897, 2)
The question now is, “Who is following the example of the first Adam? Who is standing firm as did our Redeemer to resist temptation?” “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 against the wiles of the devil. 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. Wherefore take unto you the whole armor of God, that ye may be able to withstand in the evil day, and having done all, to stand.
(12LtMs, Lt 4, 1897, 3)
“Stand, therefore, having your loins girt about with truth, and having on the breastplate of righteousness; and your feet shod with the preparation of the gospel of peace; above all, taking the shield of faith, wherewith ye shall be able to quench all the fiery darts of the wicked. And take the helmet of salvation, and the Sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God, praying with all prayer and supplication in the spirit, and watching thereunto with all perseverance and supplication for all saints.” [Ephesians 6:10-18.]
(12LtMs, Lt 4, 1897, 4)
Brethren, give no place to the devil. Do all you possible can to break the deception that is upon Brother McCullagh. O that he would see how unwilling he has been to counsel with his brethren, or to be corrected in anyway. His case is extremely perilous, because in his home there is a channel through whom the enemy works. I greatly desire that Brother and Sister McCullagh shall be saved, but unless Sister McCullagh shall see herself what manner of spirit she is of, she will be an hindrance to her husband. The Lord loves Brother McCullagh because his soul is precious; but He will never excuse sin. If Brother McCullagh will accept of the working of the Holy Spirit, the Lord will pardon him; He will take away his natural and hereditary tendencies. But God will not compel obedience from any soul. The Lord will work with him, if he will repent and be converted, and will give him His Holy Spirit which will enable him to overcome and receive the overcomer’s reward.
(12LtMs, Lt 4, 1897, 5)
I will say that there has not been a thing thought, said, or done against me but that I will freely forgive. It was not against me, but against the Lord Jesus. And I do all in my power to confirm and strengthen in the faith our tempted brethren and sisters. A sinful disposition has led them astray, but Christ knows our every weakness; He will pardon their every transgression and sin, if they will put them away from heart and mind, and lay them upon the Sin-bearer. Do not, I beseech of you, Brother and Sister McCullagh, link yourselves up with Satan. Bind your souls up with God. I will do all in my power to help you, and the Lord has unlimited power for you. If you will come into right relationship with Him, He will make you light-bearers to others.
(12LtMs, Lt 4, 1897, 6)
But what a terrible mistake you are making in changing leaders. What confidence can others have in you if you thus tear down that which you have advocated as truth. What dependence will be paced in your assertions that you now have the truth, when you will not allow the Spirit of God to work with you. Our God is not Yea and Nay, but Yea and Amen in Christ Jesus. O turn ye, turn ye, for why will ye die?
(12LtMs, Lt 4, 1897, 7)
I sent you the message of warning, which you did not heed, but resisted. You have tried to unsettle the faith of Brother Hawkins, and of the entire church, and by speaking evil from house to house, you have become accusers of your brethren. In the place of heeding the admonitions given, you have resented them, and have been at enmity with me. But it was not against me, but against the Lord, who gave me the message to give to you, both for your present and eternal good. I love your souls. I want you to be undeceived. I want you blind eyes to be opened. I want you to buy the white raiment of Jesus Christ, and gold tried in the fire, that you may be rich.
(12LtMs, Lt 4, 1897, 8)
I plead with you, my brother, my sister, to do diligent work in repulsing the enemy. Resist him through Jesus Christ. Would you be as Canright? The Lord is pitying you, and would save you from such a fate. The Lord will accept you as His servant, to help in saving souls, if you will learn obedience by the things you have suffered. Hold still, watch and pray, and die to self. “Let him take hold of my strength, and make peace with me; and he shall make peace with me.” [Isaiah 27:5.]
(12LtMs, Lt 4, 1897, 9)
I am so sorry for Brother Hawkins and his wife. Must he be bound up in your deceptions and deceived imaginations? O, consider that his blood will be upon your garments. I will pray that you both may come to a better mind. O, how Satan will work, the mystery of iniquity, Satan in the disguise of an angel of light.
(12LtMs, Lt 4, 1897, 10)
I have been shown that sleepless vigilance is the price of safety. The truth is still the truth. Not a peg of the principles of our faith have been moved, or will be moved. Even though you and many others apostatize and turn from the precious light that has come to our world, you will not make truth error. Men will arise as they have done to inspire confidence in the faith once delivered in the saints. “Of your own selves shall men arise, speaking perverse things, to draw away disciples after them.” [Acts 20:30.] I tell you in the name of the Lord, that you will be of this party, just as surely as Canright and others have been, unless you receive the warnings and entreaties of the Spirit of God, and fall on the Rock, and are broken.
(12LtMs, Lt 4, 1897, 11)
“Light is sown for the righteous, and truth for the upright in heart.” [See Psalm 97:11.] “Thus saith the high and lofty one, that inhabiteth eternity, whose name is holy; I dwell in the high and holy place, with him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit, to revive the spirit of the humble, and to revive the heart of the contrite ones.” [Isaiah 57:15.] “The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit; a broken and contrite heart, O God, thou wilt not despise.” [Psalm 51:17.]
(12LtMs, Lt 4, 1897, 12)
I shall look anxiously for a letter from you. You can read this the Brother McCullagh and Brother Hawkins. Do all in your power to save them, but if they will not hear, if they refuse to consider, then you just write out a careful statement of the facts, just as they are. There must be no exaltation of the men who will not be open and frank, and who will not consider all sides of the question. You will have to make clear statements, but we hope and pray that you will not be compelled to do this.
(12LtMs, Lt 4, 1897, 13)
Tell these brethren that the Lord has a complaint against them, which is not imaginary or trivial. Tell them that they have wounded Him who died to save them, and unless they shall break the snare, and confess their sins, and seek the forgiveness of God, they will feel His displeasure. O that the love of God may melt the hearts of these men, that they may see how they have grieved the heart of Christ! Our God is a God of infinite tenderness, of sympathy, and inexpressible love; and in Jesus is revealed His heart of love. May the Lord give these brethren the repentance that needeth not to be repented of.
(12LtMs, Lt 4, 1897, 14)
I write this in haste. Sister Haskell and Sara are laying the floor of the dining hall.
(12LtMs, Lt 4, 1897, 15)
Lt 5, 1897
My Brethren in America “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia March 2, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in SpTA #10 2-12. To my brethren in America:
“Gird up the loins of your mind, be sober, and hope to the end for the grace that is to be brought to you at the revelation of Jesus Christ; as obedient children, not fashioning yourselves according to the former lusts in your ignorance: but as he which hath called you is holy, so be ye holy in all manner of conversation; because it is written, Be ye holy; for I am holy.” [1 Peter 1:13-16.]
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 1)
I wish to say that the work that is being done by Dr. Kellogg is not to be regarded as a strange work, for it is the very work that every church that believes the truth for this time should long since have been doing. But our position as depositaries of sacred truth has been but dimly realized. If the world had before them the example that God demands those who believe in Him to set, they would work the works of Christ. If Jesus were set forth, crucified among us, if we viewed the cross of Calvary in the light of God’s Word, we would be one with Christ as He was one with the Father. Our faith would be altogether different from the faith now shown. It would be a faith that works by love, to God and to our fellow-men, and purifies the soul. If this faith were shown by God’s people, many more would believe on Christ. A hallowed influence would be exerted by the benevolent actions of God’s servants, and they would shine as lights in the world.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 2)
“Is not this the fast that I have chosen? to loose the bands of wickedness, to undo the heavy burdens, and to let the oppressed go free, and that ye break every yoke? Is it not to deal thy bread to the hungry, and that thou bring the poor that are cast out to thy house? When thou seest the naked that thou cover him, and that thou hide not thyself from thine own flesh? Then shall thy light break forth as the morning, and thine health shall spring forth speedily: and thy righteousness shall go before thee; the glory of the Lord shall be thy rereward.... Any they that be of thee shall build the old waste places; thou shalt raise up the foundations of many generations; and thou shalt be called, The repairer of the breach, The restorer of paths to dwell in.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 3)
“If thou turn away thy foot from the Sabbath, from doing thy pleasure on my holy day; and call the Sabbath a delight, the holy of the Lord, honorable; and shalt honor him, not doing thine own ways, nor finding thine own pleasure, nor speaking thine own words: then shalt thou delight thy self in the Lord; and I will cause thee to ride upon the high places of the earth, and feed thee with the heritage of Jacob thy father; for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it.” [Isaiah 58:6-8, 12-14.]
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 4)
The work specified in these words is the work God requires His people to do. It is a work of God’s own appointment. With the work of advocating the commandments of God, and repairing the breach that has been made in the law of God, we are to mingle compassion for suffering humanity. We are to show supreme love to God; we are to exalt His memorial, which has been trodden down by unholy feet; and with this, we are to manifest mercy, benevolence, and the tenderest pity for the fallen race. “Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.” [Leviticus 19:18.] As a people we must take hold of this work. Love revealed for suffering humanity gives significance and power to the truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 5)
When the Holy Spirit works through the human agents, exercising its consecrating influence, they will not seek to evade [their] obligations in regard to the souls perishing around them. Sin and iniquity will not go unrebuked, however important the personage may be who ventures to sin. Benevolence will be more common. There will be no limit to its plans for the salvation of souls.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 6)
Souls in our world today are in need of a Saviour. The Lord has given His church the opportunity to work for Him; He has invited them to come to the gospel feast, and to invite others to come with them. Again and again opportunities have been given for God’s people to go out into the highways and hedges, and compel those there to come in, that God’s house may be full. In the providence of God, Dr. Kellogg has entered upon a work whereby he can organize workers to carry forward the work of bringing the truth before thousands that are now in vice and iniquity, that they may be redeemed from a life of dissipation and sin. All the people of God should be interested in this work. But a love of ease and selfish indulgence has been shown by many. We are sorry to say that some who have had every privilege of knowing Bible truth have not brought it into the inner sanctuary of the soul. God holds all these accountable for their misused talents, which were entrusted to them to be improved, but which they have not returned to Him in honest, faithful service.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 7)
All such are represented as coming to the wedding supper without having on the wedding garment, the righteousness of Christ. They have nominally accepted the truth, but they do not practice it. They feel at liberty to come to the supper, but refuse to put on the robe of Christ’s righteousness. Professedly circumcised, they are among the uncircumcised in practice, and will be destroyed with the uncircumcised. They have walked with the uncircumcised in their covetousness, and the Lord will not spare them any more than He will the veriest sinner.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 8)
Those who are united heart and soul in the work of God will put on the wedding garment that Christ has provided. Then they will be prepared to work in Christ’s lines. They will not receive the grace of God in vain. With humble, devoted reverence, they will labor on the right hand and on the left, thoughtfully conforming their entire service, and all their capabilities to God. With singing and praise and thanksgiving, they rejoice with God and the heavenly angels as they see sinsick souls uplifted and helped, as they see the deluded and the insane sitting clothed and in their right mind at the feet of Jesus, learning of Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 9)
The work that Dr. Kellogg has been doing is a work that every Sabbath-keeping Adventist should heartily sympathize with and endorse, and take hold of earnestly. The Lord will accept the services of any one who will work in Christ’s lines and scatter His invitation of mercy broadcast throughout the world.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 10)
The money expended to prepare ministers for work was essential at the time when there was so much opposition to the light that God was giving in regard to justification by faith and the righteousness of Christ, which is abundantly imputed to all who hunger and thirst for it. But the Lord has set before you another work—the work of extending the truth by establishing centers of interest in cities, and sending workers into the highways and hedges. But this work has not been done. Money has been absorbed in other lines. Altogether too much work has been done among those who know the truth. It is religion, Bible religion, that God’s ministers need.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 11)
Satan will furnish an abundance of speculative projects, that are not after God’s order, but are inspired by man’s ambitious devising. Thousands of dollars may be spent in traveling. In this way money is consumed, but it accomplishes little. The only right way is to stop devising wonderful plans that absorb means and create inventions that God does not inspire, and devote the Lord’s means, and your God-given faculties to setting in operation a work that will reach the neglected ones, the oppressed, those that cannot rise of themselves.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 12)
Dr. Kellogg is doing a work which, if the churches shall be converted, they can undertake in a limited degree. It gives opportunity for many to minister for God. There are families within the shadow of your own doors in whom you have not shown sufficient interest to lead them to think that you cared for their souls. I entreat of you to read the third and fourth chapters of Zechariah. If these chapters are understood, if they are received, a work will be done for those that are hungering and thirsting for righteousness, a work that will be an advance work, a work that means, Go forward and upward.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 13)
“Thus saith the Lord, If thou wilt walk in my ways, and keep my charge, then shalt thou also judge my house, and shalt also keep my courts, and I will give thee a place to walk among them that stand by.” [Zechariah 3:7.] There are two parties in this world. The angels of heaven co-operate with every unselfish worker; but the angels of Satan will confuse judgment by using elements that put stumbling blocks in the way of those whom God would bring to an understanding of the truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 14)
If God’s workers will be controlled by the Holy Spirit, if they will keep the preparation necessary for time and for eternity ever before them, the Lord will enable them to do a work that will advance His truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 15)
Let every one who believes the truth empty himself of his selfishness and self-sufficiency, and his ambitious devising. Let the heavenly messengers empty themselves of the golden oil into the golden tubes, that it may flow into the golden bowls. Every church needs this golden oil; for their lamps are going out, when they should be bright and clear, sending forth to the world a shining light, that will penetrate the moral darkness which has covered the world like a funeral pall. If ever the anointed ones that stand by the Lord of the whole earth were needed, they are needed now.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 16)
The Lord has presented to the church in Battle Creek opportunities to work for Him. There are families there that are no help where they are. They should locate in other churches, and communicate to others the knowledge of the truth which God has given them. But let those who make this move first seek God. The spiritual life-blood from Christ is not circulating through their veins of experience because they do not do His service. Growth is impossible. They must be born again, not of corruptible seed, but of incorruptible, by the Word of God, which liveth and abideth forever. Backsliders know not the virtue of an incorrupted experience. Their counsels are so mingled, the common fire with the sacred, that their decisions are worthless. They are doing harm and misleading others.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 17)
The judgment of the men that have composed the Foreign Mission Board has often been wrong. They have often given opinions entirely contrary to a “Thus saith the Lord.” They have made decisions in accordance with their ignorance of missionary work in foreign countries. They have not carried the burden of the Lord, the travail for souls. Self, self, self, has figured largely in their religious experience, and God is displeased with them, for they venture to advance ideas about matters that they know nothing about, either by experience, or by the Holy Spirit of God. For years in the past the opinions of the councils have been largely the opinions of erring men, some of whom have backslidden from God, and are today in the enemy’s ranks.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 18)
When these men realize what it means to be in the service of God, there will be fewer words spoken, and less forwardness in advancing human opinions. After much earnest prayer for guidance, matters will be more carefully weighed. And they that seek the Lord with the whole heart shall find Him. Praise His holy name, He is not far from any one of us.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 19)
There must be a striving and agonizing to enter in at the strait gate. There are many paths that diverge, and lead into the broad road. Every traveller that walks in the strait road must be divested and stripped of self. There is no room in the narrow way to carry the loads of the world.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 20)
As surely as the Lord lives and reigns, the words spoken to Nicodemus are spoken to the men who have been handling sacred responsibilities. God says to them, “Ye must be born again.” [John 3:7.] A conversion, represented by a new birth, must take place. Then the men who have worked according to their supposed wisdom, will become as little children, seeking the Lord as did the children of Israel on the day of atonement, confessing their sins, and purifying themselves from every moral defilement. When they come to the Lord, with a sense of their own weakness, the Lord will hear them, and will answer, “Here am I.” [Isaiah 58:9.] The Holy Spirit will strip them of their self-righteousness, Pharisaism, and hardness of heart, and will give them a heart of flesh, made soft and tender by its indwelling presence. Self will die, and the life of Christ will be revealed in their lives. The life they now live, they will live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved them, and gave Himself for them.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 21)
I tell you, in the name of the Lord, that those who have had great light are today in the state described by Christ in His message to the Laodicean church. They think that they are rich, and increased in goods, and feel that they have need of nothing. Christ speaks to you. Hear, O hear, if you have any regard for your souls, the words of the great Counsellor, and act upon them. “I counsel thee to buy of me gold tried in the fire, that thou mayest be clean; and white raiment, that thou mayest be clothed, and that the shame of thy nakedness do not appear; and anoint thine eyes with eyesalve, that thou mayest see.” [Revelation 3:18.]
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 22)
Practical truth must be brought into the life, and the Word, like a sharp, twoedged sword, must cut away the surplus of self that there is in our characters. “The word of God is quick, and powerful, and sharper than any twoedged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart.” [Hebrews 4:12.]
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 23)
The Lord has given me messages of warning for His people, which I have, with much burden and pain of soul, communicated to you. I have been awakened at midnight, and in the small hours of the morning, to write you things which your blind eyes could not discern. “Am I therefore become your enemy, because I tell you the truth?” [Galatians 4:16.] The message God has given has affected some zealously, but not all well. You do not see, you do not realize the necessity of seeking the Lord earnestly, and fervently, and perseveringly until you know that Christ is formed within you, the hope of glory.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 24)
When you have a knowledge of God’s will, you will follow Christ in all things, and He will hide you in a cleft of the rock, and cover you with His hand, that you may lose sight of self, and behold His glory. Moses said to the Lord, “I beseech thee, show me thy glory.” [Exodus 33:18.] “And the Lord passed by before him and proclaimed, The Lord, the Lord God, merciful and gracious, longsuffering, and abundant in goodness and truth. Keeping mercy for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin, and that will by no means clear the guilty; visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children, and upon the children’s children, unto the third and fourth generation.” [Exodus 34:6, 7.] This is a representation of the passing by of God. It is a true description of the after-influence of all His working in the path where He goes.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 25)
Those who become careless and reckless and self-indulgent, do not stop to think of the consequences of their actions. Thus it was with Nadab and Abihu, the sons of Aaron. The Word of God had given specific direction that sacred fire only was to be used in the service of God. But the senses of Nadab and Abihu were beclouded with wine, and they offered strange fire before God. They placed themselves in a position where they could not distinguish between the sacred and the common. They used common fire, which God had commanded them not to use, and they died before the Lord. After they were slain, Moses said to Aaron, “This is it that the Lord hath spoken, saying, I will be sanctified in them that come nigh me.” [Leviticus 10:3.]
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 26)
How often the actions of these men have been repeated. In a careless manner, the sacred work of God has been mingled with common ideas. This has cheapened the truth. Human opinions have been brought to the front, and unsanctified propositions, born wholly of self, have been acted upon. If those who have done this could see the result of their work, if they could know what it means to turn things upside down, they would tremble before God.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 27)
“The Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with his mighty angels, in flaming fire taking vengeance on them that know not God, and that obey not the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ: who shall be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord, and from the glory of his power; when he shall come to be glorified in his saints, and to be admired in all them that believe.” [2 Thessalonians 1:7-10.] Selfish characteristics do not reveal the glory of God, and cannot be practiced by those who are truly united to Christ. There is to be straightforward action in all things. When the people of God begin to walk apart from Him, their actions testify that they are not eating the flesh and drinking the blood of the Son of God, that they are not one in spirit with Christ. “A little leaven leaveneth the whole lump.” [Galatians 5:9.] There is among us a leaven of disregard for spiritual and holy practices.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 28)
“I would they were even cut off which trouble you. For, brethren, ye have been called unto liberty; only use not liberty for an occasion to the flesh, but by love serve one another. For all the law is fulfilled in one word, even this, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. But if ye bite and devour one another, take heed that ye be not consumed one of another. This I say, then, walk in the Spirit, and ye shall not fulfill the lust of the flesh. For the flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh; and these are contrary the one to the other: so that ye cannot do the thing that ye would.” [Verses 12-17.] This is practical godliness. But it has been discarded and strange fire, which the Lord has condemned, has been used.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 29)
The Lord would have His institutions cleansed and uplifted to a high, holy standard. “The fruit of the Spirit of love, joy, peace, longsuffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance: against such there is no law. And they that are Christ’s have crucified the flesh, with the affections and lusts. If we live in the Spirit, let us also walk in the Spirit. Let us not be desirous of vain glory, provoking one another, envying one another.” [Verses 22-26.]
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 30)
“Put on therefore, as the elect of God, holy and beloved, bowels of mercy, kindness, humbleness of mind, meekness, longsuffering; forbearing one another, and forgiving one another, if any man have a quarrel against any; even as Christ forgave you, so also do ye. And above all these things, put on charity, which is the bond of perfectness. And let the peace of God rule in your hearts, to the which also ye are called in one body; and be ye thankful. Let the word of God dwell in you richly in all wisdom; teaching and admonishing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord. And whatsoever ye do in word or deed, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God and the Father by him.” [Colossians 3:12-17.]
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 31)
Strive to excel in the practice of the Word of God. This is the only lawful strife. Practice God’s Word; eat the flesh and drink the blood of the Son of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 32)
“As ye have therefore received Christ Jesus, so walk ye in him; rooted and built up in him, and stablished in the faith, as ye have been taught, abounding therein with thanksgiving. Beware lest any man spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit, after the traditions of men, after the rudiments of the world, and not after Christ. For in him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily. And ye are complete in him, which is the head of all principality and power.” [Colossians 2:6-10.]
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 33)
God is to be glorified in us. Please read the eighth chapter of second Corinthians. “This I say, He which soweth sparingly, shall reap also sparingly; and he which soweth bountifully, shall reap also bountifully.” [2 Corinthians 9:6.] This is the work of the Lord. When God’s people follow his directions on this point, the glory of the Lord shall be their rereward. Who will act on Bible principles, taking the word of God as their counsellor?
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 34)
There is a great work to be done. The world will not be converted by the gift of tongues, or by the working of miracles, but by preaching Christ crucified. The Holy Spirit must be allowed to work. God has placed instrumentalities in our hands, and we must use every one of them to do His will and way. As believers, we are privileged to act a part in forwarding the truth for this time. As far as possible we are to employ the means and agencies that God has given us to introduce the truth into new localities. Churches must be built to accommodate the people of God, that they may stand as centers of light, shining amid the darkness of the world.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 35)
We must sow beside all waters, keeping our souls in the love of God, working while it is day, using the means the Lord has given us to do whatever duty comes next. Whatever our hands find to do, we are to do it with cheerfulness; whatever sacrifice we are called upon to make, we are to make it cheerfully. As we sow beside all waters, we shall realize that “he which soweth bountifully shall reap also bountifully.” [Verse 6.]
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 36)
“Every man as he purposeth in his heart, so let him give; not grudgingly, or of necessity; for God loveth a cheerful giver. And God is able to make all grace abound toward you, that ye, always having all sufficiency in all things, may abound to every good work.” [Verses 7, 8.] Do not draw back after once the Holy Spirit has awakened in your mind a sense of duty. Act on the suggestion, for it was prompted by the Lord. “Whosoever draweth back, my soul shall have no pleasure in him.” [Hebrews 10:38.]
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 37)
It means much to sow beside all waters; it means a continual imparting of gifts and offerings. God will furnish facilities, so that that faithful steward of His entrusted means shall be supplied with a sufficiency in all things, and be enabled to abound to every good work.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 38)
Thank the Lord, the subject of beneficence has been made very clear and plain. “(As it is written, He hath dispersed abroad; he hath given to the poor; his righteousness remaineth forever. Now he that ministereth seed to the sower both minister bread for your food, and multiply the seed sown, and increase the fruits of your righteousness.)” [2 Corinthians 9:9, 10.] The seed sown with full, liberal hand is taken charge of by the Lord. He who ministers seed to the sower, gives His worker that which enables him to co-operate with the Giver of the seed by sowing the seed.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 39)
Man is the Lord’s co-laborer. The seed sown, acts of liberality, are first given by the Lord, and in sowing, in supplying the necessities of those who are in need, man returns to the Lord His own. The Lord supplies a sufficiency for this work, that His servants may continue ministering to those that are needy.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 40)
This seed-sowing is not merely bestowing temporal blessings. It embraces the precious seed of truth, which is to be given to those that are in need of spiritual enlightenment. They are to be fed with spiritual food, even the bread of life. Words of comfort must be spoken to them; they must be given the invitation to the gospel feast.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 41)
Both temporal and spiritual liberality is included in this lesson of seed-sowing. When God’s instrumentalities sow the good seed by distributing to others the temporal blessings God has given them, gratitude and thanksgiving to God are awakened in the hearts of the receivers. They are relieved; their temporal wants are supplied, and the evidence of the love and sympathy of others awakens in their hearts a feeling of thanksgiving to God, and opens the way whereby the seeds of truth may be sown. And God, who ministers seed to the sower, will cause the seed sown to germinate, and spring up until life eternal.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 42)
God gave His only begotten Son to bear the guilt of the world, that all who believe in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life. This is an assurance that everything is provided to enable us to be overcomers. We may be “enriched in everything to all bountifulness, which causeth through us thanksgiving to God. For the administration of this service not only supplieth the want of the saints, but is abundant also by many thanksgivings unto God; whiles by the experiment of this ministration they glorify God for your professed subjection unto the gospel of Christ, and for your liberal distribution unto them, and unto all men.” [Verses 11-13.]
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 43)
This work God would have us do. Christ’s example must be followed by those who claim to be His children. Relieve the physical necessities of your fellow men, and their gratitude will break down the barriers, and enable you to reach their hearts. Consider this matter earnestly. As churches, you have had an opportunity to work as laborers together with God. Had you obeyed the Word of God, had you entered upon this work you would have been blessed and encouraged, and would have obtained a rich experience. You would have found yourselves, as the human agencies of God, earnestly advocating a scheme of saving, of restoration, of salvation. This scheme would not be fixed, but progressive, moving on from grace to grace, and from strength to strength.
(12LtMs, Lt 5, 1897, 44)
Lt 6, 1897
My Brethren in America Refiled as Lt 8, 1896.
Lt 7, 1897
Brethren in Battle Creek “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia September 13, 1897 Previously unpublished. Brethren in Battle Creek:
I have risen at three o’clock to write my letters to America. If W. C. White were with you now, I should direct letters to him, but I do not think this can be the case. In regard to Brother Henry, those who have helped and sustained him during the years that the Lord has been sending His messages to them, and him, should be very careful how they lay their sins upon him. They have no excuse for doing this. They have not themselves made straight paths for their feet. They have gone out of the way; they have done unrighteously, and unless they turn unto the Lord with contrition of soul, they will never see the Lord Jesus as He is, and be like Him. Let them not now push or crowd any man, for this kind of work is an offense to God. They have done quite enough of this kind of work to spoil their own Christian experience and the experience of all those who have been associated with them.
(12LtMs, Lt 7, 1897, 1)
I write to say that the Lord is not pleased with the attitude of the men who have linked with Brother Henry. They vindicate themselves and censure him. How much better would it be in the sight of God to manifest all tenderness and compassion for him, for they have been guilty, and unless they repent, they will forever stand as guilty before God. Unless they fall on the Rock and are broken, that Rock will fall upon them.
(12LtMs, Lt 7, 1897, 2)
Let no one who has been linked up in the work of bringing the cause of God into disrepute, of dishonoring His name, be presumptuous. God has been appealing to them for years, but they have not heeded His voice. And now, if they expect to receive pardon, they must die to self. Their selfish practices must be put away. All the changing about of men in their different offices of responsibility does not convert them. They remain just as they were before. They put out their own spiritual eyesight by not walking in the light of the Lord and doing His will and His way. In their perversity of spirit, they do as they have done because they are not converted.
(12LtMs, Lt 7, 1897, 3)
Let all now humble themselves before God. Brother Henry is not the only man that refused counsel and followed his own perverted judgment. The spirit that men who have been connected with the work of God have cherished remains to spring into action upon any occasion, because they are unconverted men. These will never see the kingdom of heaven unless they turn to the Lord with full purpose of heart. They have sold themselves to work out false principles, and they will not have the favor of God until they come to Him with penitence, and obtain pardon. O that they would make thorough work for eternity! O that they would humble their hearts before the Lord before it shall be everlastingly too late!
(12LtMs, Lt 7, 1897, 4)
I speak to you in the name of Lord. Search your own heart, your motives, your actions, and then change right about. No longer delay. Those who do not repent will never be changed from unfaithful to faithful sentinels,
(12LtMs, Lt 7, 1897, 5)
Lt 7a, 1897
Evans, I. H. Stanmore, New South Wales, Australia December 22, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in PM 235. Dear Brother Evans:
The Mail via Vancouver brought me a few letters from America. I received your letter, and will answer it at once, lest I shall neglect it. The many things that are urging themselves on my mind, and the ill turns that I have had from overwork, make it hard for me to keep always in my mind the letters that need answering, so if at any time I do not respond, it is not because I have any wish to neglect important communications.
(12LtMs, Lt 7a, 1897, 1)
I was somewhat surprised when Brother Prescott told me that he had made selections and compiled the book Christian Education. I understand, as he wrote or said to me, that I would do what I pleased with the book. He gave his time and asked nothing for it, excepting that a few copies were to be published for the benefit of our schools. But from the private letters I have written on education, the Review and Herald published a separate little book. Of this edition I received just one copy. I do not, under the circumstances, consider this just right.
(12LtMs, Lt 7a, 1897, 2)
I think that if Brother Prescott had any donations to make of his time, he might appropriately have made it so that it would be of advantage in this far-off field. Here new fields are constantly opening before us, and every camp-meeting held means that we must build a church, to accommodate those who take hold of the truth. In this place there are forty new Sabbathkeepers, and the interest does not diminish.
(12LtMs, Lt 7a, 1897, 3)
Two weeks ago last Sabbath I was solicited to come to this place from Cooranbong. We have most interesting meetings in the tent. I spoke to the people Sabbath and Sunday. I had freedom in speaking to them. Ever since the camp meeting closed, meetings have been held in the tent on the same ground where the camp meeting was held. The people are so impressed with the meetings that the interest continues to grow. There is no stopping place. Meetings are held on Sabbath and Sunday and every evening during the week except Monday night.
(12LtMs, Lt 7a, 1897, 4)
A suitable house has been hired to accommodate the mission workers. Brother and Sister Haskell, Brother and Sister Starr, and Brother and Sister Wilson are here, and they are doing all that they possibly can. During the day they go from house to house, giving Bible readings.
(12LtMs, Lt 7a, 1897, 5)
We have faith to believe that no less than one hundred will embrace the truth as a result of this effort. The class that is interested are men and women of intellect, and seem like men and women of solid worth. None of them are rich, yet most of them are in business, earning good wages. The first thing in which they are interested is to have a meeting house. The land at which we have looked will cost seven hundred and fifty pounds. It is in a central and beautiful location. The decision regarding it is to be made today or tomorrow. Then we can call upon the people to make their donations, that a house of worship may be built in as few weeks as possible. This building will cost quite a sum of money, but it must be done. We must “arise and build.” [Nehemiah 2:20.]
(12LtMs, Lt 7a, 1897, 6)
Now you can see why I must use the income from my books to the best advantage for advancing the work here. I see so many things that must be done in order to make even a beginning, to raise the standard in these new fields. From every direction I hear the Macedonian cry for help, “Come over and help us.” [Acts 16:9.] I also have calls to assist young people to attend school, and also to open primary schools in different localities, where the children may be educated. This is work that must be done.
(12LtMs, Lt 7a, 1897, 7)
I wish to make some additions to Christian Education, and then if the Review and Herald wish to carry it, they can do so if they will pay me a small sum as royalty, to be invested in the education of many who cannot attend school and pay their own expenses. In Melbourne I bore the expenses of no less than fourteen. During the first term of the school in Cooranbong, I carried several through school, paying their board and school expense.
(12LtMs, Lt 7a, 1897, 8)
I would be pleased to hear from you as to whether my suggestions are accepted.
(12LtMs, Lt 7a, 1897, 9)
My brother, the painful part of your letter is no surprise to me. Notwithstanding the warnings given, men have gone directly contrary to these warnings, as if they cared not for them at all. Their great zeal to take over the institutions for the care of the sick, which are weighed down by debt, is a blind piece of work, for the worst sickness exists at the very heart of the work. The centralization scheme was an enterprise that should have been abandoned, after the warnings given. The men who have done just what the Lord told them not to do, who have involved the Conference in financial embarrassment, should be on the ground, that they might see and understand the result of their unwise moves. They put out their own eyes and blinded their understanding.
(12LtMs, Lt 7a, 1897, 10)
The people have lost confidence in the management at the center of the work, and they have every reason for doing this. But if the men who cherished the principles that led to disaster could see the result of their wrong course of action, if they would humble their hearts before God, confessing their sins, the Lord would pardon their transgression and forgive their sin.
(12LtMs, Lt 7a, 1897, 11)
The principles upon which the men in responsible places have acted in regard to the publication of books, the unfair way in which they have treated authors, those whom Christ died to save, is a disgrace to the name of Christian. When men are deceived and deluded by Satan, they make remarkably strange tracks. They would not take heed to the words of counsel given by the Lord. Their selfishness and lack of honest dealing has dishonored God.
(12LtMs, Lt 7a, 1897, 12)
Prosperity would have attended the Conference and all the lines of the publishing work if the men in responsible positions had moved wholly in the fear of the Lord, irrespective of consequences. But the publishing house let The Great Controversy fall dead from the press, and crowded in and carried Bible Readings; and from that time more decidedly dishonest schemes were acted upon to get possession of books. There were men who no longer worked in the fear of the Lord, but entered upon flattering schemes. They swayed things just as they pleased, and for years kept from the people the book they needed. The Lord removed His favor because of this wrong course of action, and the things that these men thought to do by unfaithful scheming, has brought a dearth of means. The same spirit that led them to pursue a selfish, ungenerous course when dealing with authors has defiled their spiritual honor. The Lord would not uphold the course they pursued. He declares, “I hate robbery for burnt offerings.” [Isaiah 61:8.]
(12LtMs, Lt 7a, 1897, 13)
When I left Battle Creek, I had no idea that I would remain away longer than two years. But the Lord let men have their desire, that the one through whom He sent warnings and reproofs should be removed. They were permitted to walk in their own ways, and be filled with their own doings. Poor, unconsecrated souls, they have walked in the sparks of the fire of their own kindling.
(12LtMs, Lt 7a, 1897, 14)
My brother, I feel sorely grieved that the old hands are being sent away to different places, leaving a terrible load upon some who in the past have not been directly connected with our institutions. I have not words to express my sorrow for you all, my sorrow for those who have sustained men who were leading them into a pit, when they knew it would be to their own ruin and to the harm of the cause of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 7a, 1897, 15)
“Thus saith the high and lofty One that inhabiteth eternity, I dwell in the high and holy place, with him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit, to revive the spirit of the humble, and to revive the heart of the contrite ones. For I will not contend forever, neither will I be always wroth; for the spirit should fail before me, and the souls which I have made. For the iniquity of his covetousness was I wroth and smote him: I hid me, and was wroth, and he went on frowardly in the way of his heart. I have seen his ways and will heal him; I will lead him also, and restore comforts unto him and to his mourners. I create the fruit of the lips; Peace, peace to him that is afar off, and to him that is near, saith the Lord, and I will heal him. But the wicked are like the troubled sea, when it cannot rest, whose waters cast up mire and dirt. There is no peace, saith my God, to the wicked.”Isaiah 57:16-21.
(12LtMs, Lt 7a, 1897, 16)
The fifty-eighth chapter of Isaiah points out the evil and the remedy for the diseased soul. Let this chapter be received as warning and instruction, for the Lord God of Israel calls for a decided reformation, not only among the young people, but among the instructors of the young. “Behold, the Lord’s hand is not shortened, that it cannot save, neither is his ear heavy, that it cannot hear; but your iniquities have separated between you and your God, and your sins have hid his face from you, that he will not hear.” [Isaiah 59:1, 2.] A decided change is called for. The work of repentance and reformation has not gone deep and thorough.
(12LtMs, Lt 7a, 1897, 17)
Whatever course A. R. Henry may have taken, let none of those who have had and who still have a connection with the work, lay their mistakes and sins upon him. The salvation of the soul is an individual work. They will have to answer to God for the sins they have committed. They have the Word of God, and if their hearts had been humble, if they had walked in the light, they could have said, by their words and their works, I long after God, even the living God.
(12LtMs, Lt 7a, 1897, 18)
Lt 8, 1897
My Ministering Brethren Refiled as Lt 21, 1897.
Lt 8a, 1897
Those in Resp. Positions in our Publ. Houses Refiled as Lt 28a, 1897.
Lt 9, 1897
Brethren and Sisters “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia April 18, 1897 Previously unpublished. My dear brethren and sisters:
I have just heard that our people, men and women, design to have a picnic on the morrow. Tomorrow is a holiday; there is to be a boat race, and therefore you feel at liberty to take this pleasure excursion. After the words spoken last Sabbath, will you show that you have made no application of the Word? Will you leave the very work that is essential to be done as rapidly as possible, and go on a pleasure excursion?
(12LtMs, Lt 9, 1897, 1)
We are passing through a crisis, a time when we need to be pleading with God to save the souls that are ready to perish. When you see the apostasy, the men who have preached the truth to others going out from among us, giving heed to Satan’s temptations, when the souls, of some of us at least, are bowed down with the greatest humiliation, knowing not what to do to break the infatuation, then every soul of you should be seeking the Lord, offering up your petition to Him in behalf of the souls that are standing on the very brink of ruin.
(12LtMs, Lt 9, 1897, 2)
We are living amid the perils of the last days, and let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall. I ask you all, men, women, and children, to re-consider this matter. Do everything with an eye single to the glory of God. I have done all that I possibly could do to help forward the work on the school buildings. I have let the men that should be working on Willie’s place—Worsnop, James, Connell—all go and put in their time at the school. I have also given up my help in the house, that they might work with Sister Haskell to complete their line of work. All these I am paying for their labor, with the exception of the pledges that they are working out. We need all these men to do the work that needs to be done on my barn, and in the preparation for building W. C. White’s house. But I have given all these laborers up willingly, that the building on the school ground might be completed.
(12LtMs, Lt 9, 1897, 3)
Sister Haskell and Sara have been doing carpenter’s work, and helping in every possible way that they could, when we have needed their help very much. I have also let the girls that I employ in the writing go over and help in the work of settling. I have let important writings stand aside, that Maggie and Minnie might lend a helping hand. And even our aged Brother Tucker has spent days in labor. And now, within ten days of the opening of the school, all the workmen feel at liberty to drop this essential, important work, to observe a holiday. I think your conscience will disturb you some if you do this. I know it is the enemy’s temptation, from whatever source it comes. You may say, Is it not my right to do this? Not if God has another work for you to do in preparing the building.
(12LtMs, Lt 9, 1897, 4)
We must guard every point zealously, lest inclination shall lead away from duty. Your time, your strength, your mind, belongs to God. He has purchased them all at an infinite cost, and I entreat of you not to patronize this excursion, where the mind will not be attracted to God or heavenly things. Between ourselves and God we are under solemn obligations to do his service.
(12LtMs, Lt 9, 1897, 5)
Our bodies and our souls are the Lord’s. Our time is the Lord’s, not only as His gift by creation, but we are the Lord’s by His daily maintenance. We bear the Lord’s stamp. We are to be His witnesses at all times and in all places, and we are to realize that we are His, not only by creation, but by redemption. When in all things, whether we eat, or drink, or whatsoever we do, we do all to the glory of God, we shall make progress in religious growth.
(12LtMs, Lt 9, 1897, 6)
A great lesson is learned when we heartily recognize God’s right over our time, talents, property, and our influence; when we remember that the Lord has a right over our individual selves.
(12LtMs, Lt 9, 1897, 7)
We are in a strait place. We want the work on the building finished. We want it completed as soon as possible. We cannot think it proper for you to leave this work under any consideration. You are the ones upon whom we depend to do your level best to complete the building. I have been waiting, hoping, and praying that the Lord will open ways for this work to be done. Will you co-operate with God in answering our prayers?
(12LtMs, Lt 9, 1897, 8)
Lt 10, 1897
Brethren “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia September 2, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in 19MR 19-29. +
My brethren:
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 1)
In your genuine unity is your strength. There is a great work before us. Those who believe the truth, present truth for this time, are few. Let these be bound together in bonds of closest Christian fellowship, to strengthen one another. Let them stand shoulder to shoulder, hearts blended together in oneness, and bound up with Jesus Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 2)
That sympathy, that tender regard for one another, that brings the blessing of God, that blends all together in God, has not been cherished. There is to be no exalting of self one above another. Union is enjoined by our Lord Jesus Christ. We are to stand as brothers, our hearts knit with the hearts of our fellow laborers.
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 3)
Selfishness and pride hinder the pure love that unites us in spirit with Jesus Christ. If this love is truly cultivated, finite will blend with finite, and all will center in the Infinite. Humanity will unite with humanity, and all will be bound up with the heart of infinite love. Sanctified love for one another is sacred. In this great work Christian love for one another—far higher, more constant, more courteous, more unselfish, than has been seen—preserves Christian tenderness, Christian benevolence, and politeness, and enfolds the human brotherhood in the embrace of God, acknowledging the dignity with which God has invested the rights of man. This dignity Christians must ever cultivate for the honor and glory of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 4)
O, do you not know, cannot you understand this? The only begotten Son of God recognized the nobility of humanity by taking humanity upon Himself, and dying in behalf of humanity, testifying throughout all ages that “God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.” [John 3:16.]
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 5)
The human agent who bears the test and trial and proving of God receives his reward. “Blessed are they that do his commandments, that they may have right to the tree of life, and may enter in through the gates into the city.” [Revelation 22:14.] Here the line is placed in our hands, enabling us to measure the love of God. Yet there are greater depths for the line to reach. The cross is invested with a power that language cannot express. Christ’s sacrifice in behalf of the human race puts to shame our meager efforts and methods to meet and uplift humanity, to help sinful men and women to find Jesus.
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 6)
The work of the sons and daughters of God must be of a different character than has yet been manifested by a large number. If they love Jesus, they will have enlarged ideas of the love that has been expressed for fallen man, which required the provision of so expensive an offering to save the human race. Our Saviour asks the cooperation of every son and daughter of Adam who has become a son or daughter of God. Who can limit the Lord God of Israel? Who can present in correct lines His expensive benevolence? Our Saviour declares that He brought from heaven, as a donation, eternal life. He was to be lifted up upon the cross of Calvary to draw all men unto Him. How then shall we treat the purchased inheritance of Christ? Tenderness, appreciation, kindness, sympathy, and love should be shown to them. Then we may work to help and bless one another. In this work we have more than human brotherhood. We have the exalted companionship of heavenly angels. They co-operate with us in the work of enlightening high and low.
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 7)
Having engaged in the work, the amazing work of our redemption Christ determined in council with His Father to spare nothing, however costly, to withhold nothing however highly it might be estimated, that would rescue the poor sinner. He would give all heaven to this work of salvation, of restoring the moral image of God in man. Can we not enlarge our comprehension, and for Christ’s sake see the sinfulness of selfish indulgence, the sinfulness of indifference? The want of interest and faith that has long been cherished has so divorced the soul from God that we have only a faint idea of what constitutes us children of God. To be a child of God is to be one with Christ in God, and to put forth our hands in earnest, self-sacrificing love to strengthen and bless the souls that are perishing in their sins. We are to communicate to them that which God has communicated to us.
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 8)
The word comes to me in the night season to speak to those nigh and afar off, “Arise and shine for thy light has come; and the glory of the Lord has risen upon thee.” [Isaiah 60:1.] Shall we confine our work in a narrow groove, and labor only for the churches? Our work is to educate all whose names are on the church books, by precept and example showing them how to work to enlighten, encourage, and save perishing souls.
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 9)
The Lord is coming, and we have a great work to do. I have been considering the light given me by God concerning the ministry. Within a few days light has come to me, or rather, past light has been repeated. In our council, One who has been our instructor, presented before me the work to be done in our cities. This work embraced the suburbs also. We will have close, earnest, trying work to do. Therefore you that have had an experience must stand together, one in heart and mind. No one must exalt himself above his brother in his measurement of himself. There is need that prayer go up to God in faith, that the Lord of the harvest will send forth laborers to His harvest, because the harvest is great and the laborers are few.
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 10)
There is need that men be set apart for the ministry; but unless there is a close seeking of the Lord to know his will, men who are unprepared will be set apart for the ministry. No man must be chosen because of his prepossessing appearance. Saul, who was designated as king of Israel, was a man of prepossessing appearance, tall and well proportioned. But neither in experience nor character was he fitted for the work. The Lord changed his heart through the operation of his Spirit, making him a converted man. The effect of divine grace upon the heart was accompanied by a visible change in his spirit. This gave him influence with the armies of Israel. Now he is set in the work aright. If he will cultivate humility and the fear of God, if he will trust in God, and learn His will, and not exalt himself, the Lord will give him grace.
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 11)
The same spirit that changed the heart of Saul will change the hearts of the men who are entering the ministry. A man may be as inexperienced as Saul, but if he will receive the Word of the Lord from the old, faithful standard bearers, if he will do the will of God, he will not fail as Saul did. Saul was exalted to the position of king, but he failed by presumptuously assuming to follow his own judgment.
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 12)
There are minds that are superficial, and that always will be superficial. The less of this class that enter the ministry the better will it be for the people. There is a most solemn work to be done in these last days. Only those who are willing to deny self, who give evidence that they realize that they are to be constantly learning how to do better work, can engage in God’s service. Having a vital connection with God, their love for and knowledge of the truth deepening, they reveal that the truth has become a part of their being. Their perceptive faculties are quickened, and the evidence of their growth in grace and habitual fidelity to their appointed work is apparent.
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 13)
Those who give themselves to God with humble, devoted hearts need not spend three or five years in qualifying themselves to do the work essential to win souls to Christ. They are not to graduate in their progressive study when they leave school. Every day they must do humble work for the Master. They must ascertain their duty and perform it, whatever may be its character.
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 14)
Every part of the man, brain, bone, and muscle, is to be worked. The gospel economy is in every way suited and conformed to the condition of man, not in heaven, but on earth, during his probationary test and trial. The Holy Spirit is to do its work upon mind and character, exerting an influence upon thoughts and actions. If received, cultivated, and appreciated, it will always be reformatory, refining, elevating, ennobling. He who aims always for entire conformity to God’s will, who does not follow his own natural inclinations, will allow the Holy Spirit to improve and mold and fashion his character upon a plan and model different from his own inherited and cultivated tendencies, changing him to another man.
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 15)
The influence of the Spirit upon the human mind will regulate it after the divine order. But the Spirit does not work in a manner and power beyond the human agent’s power of resistance. A man may refuse to hear the counsels and admonitions of God. He may choose to take the regulating of his conduct into his own hands; but when he does this, he is not made a vessel unto honor. Like Moab, he refuses to be changed, emptied from vessel to vessel, and therefore his scent remaineth in him. He refuses to correct his defective traits of character, although the Lord has plainly pointed out his work, his privileges, his opportunities, and the advancement to be made. It is too much trouble to break up his old ways, and transform his ideas and methods. “His scent is not changed.” [Jeremiah 48:11.] He clings to his defects, and is thus unfitted for the sacred work of the ministry. He was not willing to make a close examination of himself, or to closely inquire for light to shine upon him in a clear, distinct manner. His prayers have not ascended to God in humility, while with humble endeavor he sought to live his prayers by understanding and performing his duty.
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 16)
After the Lord has put one on test and trial, that he may be assured of his calling to the ministry, if he is content to follow his own way and his own will, if he will not heed the manifestations of the Spirit of God, if he refuses to profit by growth in grace and depth of understanding, be assured that the Lord does not need him, for he cannot communicate that which he has never received.
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 17)
Every soul is to minister. He is to use every physical, moral and mental power, through sanctification of the spirit, that he may be a laborer together with God. All are bound to devote themselves actively and unreservedly to God’s service. They are to co-operate with Jesus Christ in the great work of helping others. Christ died for every man. He has ransomed every man by giving His life on the cross. This he did that man might no longer live an aimless, selfish life, but that he might live unto Jesus Christ, who died for his salvation. All are not called upon to enter the ministry, but nevertheless, they are to minister. It is an insult to the Holy Spirit of God for any man to choose a life of self-serving.
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 18)
Ministry means not only the study of books and preaching. It means service. Especially are ministers to engage in useful, profitable manual labor, that all their faculties may be kept in a healthy condition. As they open the word to others, God will bless them in this line of work; but it is a mistake to read and study all the time, not using the physical organs. It is a neglect of thorough service to God. They cannot be all-round men. There is a necessity of ministers using their powers of ingenuity, that they may not be unskillful in the Word, and may show their ingenuity in devising and planning in business lines. These faculties should be used in the service of God, to win souls to the truth. Real planning and devising is required to bring the sinner out of darkness into the light of truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 19)
The apostle Paul was an able minister of the gospel, and yet he labored with his hands, doing the humble work of a tent-maker. By working with his hands he did not lessen his work of communicating the great trust of the gospel of Christ to Aquila and Priscilla. These two men and Priscilla labored with their hands, and Paul’s designs in tent-making were ingenious. He brought fresh methods into his work, also, as he labored for the people, preaching the gospel of Jesus Christ. Many were brought to a knowledge of the truth by witnessing the faithful toiler making tents to support himself, that he might not be dependent upon any one for food and raiment. While thus at work, he showed himself skillful, “not slothful in business, fervent in spirit, serving the Lord.” [Romans 12:11.] And in preaching the Word, he was no less fervent and able in speech because of his business tact.
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 20)
A man’s success in the ministry does not rest upon his excluding himself from useful labor, or upon his popularity or indolence, but upon his willingness to labor in any position that seems to be duty. Those who are the most willing to toil and show industry in business lines, and who themselves plan and devise to be a help to others in branches of common toil, are the men who will be chosen by God to do Him service wherever their lot may be cast. They may be called upon with the help of others to build their own homes or to build a church, or to do this alone, if they have a knowledge of how to handle tools. Privation may be the lot of every soul who now believes and obeys the truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 21)
Christ has told us that we will have reproach. If persecution for the truth’s sake is to come, it is important that every line of work become familiar to us, that we and our families may not suffer through lack of knowledge. We can and should have tact and knowledge in trades, in building, in planting, in sowing. A knowledge of how to cultivate the land will make rough places much smoother. This knowledge will be counted a great blessing, even by our enemies.
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 22)
A willingness to be ordained, to engage in the work of the ministry, that it may gratify the desire for an easy life without toil is selfish, and the end unholy. Such willingness is no proof that they are chosen by God for the work. Many are wanting in moral and intellectual qualifications. They do not want to tax their mind, to dig for the hidden treasure. They do not dig deep, they skim the surface, and they only see the things that are upon the surface. The work of God requires all-round men, those who can devise, plan, build up, organize, and exercise wisdom in discipline. These are the ones that are chosen by God for His work. All whom the Lord leads, all who appreciate the solemnity, the probabilities and possibilities of the work for this time, will feel like obtaining all the knowledge they can from the Word. By earnest study of the Word, they will gain all the knowledge they can use in ministering to the needy, the sick both in body and in soul.
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 23)
It has pleased the Lord to have select, representative men connected with the work as missionaries—men who have been tested and proved and tried. Often they have been in trying situations, and by earnest, frequent and laborious examination of their own spirit, habits, temper, appetites, and practice, they have carefully and thoroughly investigated themselves. Just as a carpenter, who in erecting a building inspects every piece of timber he puts in to see if any are weak or rotten, and as he discards all defective ones, so the human character should be carefully examined, to see if it is becoming more and more like Christ Jesus, pure, peaceable, kind, full of goodness, love, and truth. Those who enter through the gates into the city must and will have a right to the tree of life. To them the promise is made, “Blessed are they that do his commandments, that they may have right to the tree of life, and may enter in through the gates into the city.” [Revelation 22:14.]
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 24)
We must try our character by the moral standard, God’s holy law. Day by day we must measure our attainments, to see if we shall be of this number. “Thou hast a few names, even in Sardis, which have not defiled their garments, and they shall walk with me in white; for they are worthy.” [Revelation 3:4.] “Let us be glad and rejoice and give honor to him; for the marriage of the Lamb is come, and his wife (the church) hath made herself ready. And to her was granted that she should be arrayed in fine linen, clean and white, for the fine linen is the righteousness of the saints.” [Revelation 19:7, 8.]
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 25)
Dear brethren, we need now to carefully consider every plan. We need now to humble our hearts before God. We need now not to wait in a careless attitude, but in an attentive, reverent attitude. “Lord, what wouldst thou have me to do?”“Speak, Lord; for thy servant heareth.” [Acts 9:6; 1 Samuel 3:9.] We are living in the most critical period of this earth’s history. We are fully conscious of the great need of workers, but, my brethren, greatly as we need efficient helpers, we must not be careless, and allow the work to be cumbered with driftwood. We must draw nigh to God every day, every hour. In whatever we are called to do, we are to keep the spirit clean and fragrant.
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 26)
“Be pitiful, be courteous,” does not mean that we are to wink at sin and corruption. [1 Peter 3:8.] It frightens me to see how men who know the truth and the poverty of our mission, conduct themselves in their connection with the greatest interests that exist in our world. They take from that treasury, which needs to be replenished by them, in the place of being impoverished by their unfaithful stewardship. What does it mean that the cause of God in missionary lines is crippled through the defects in the management of those who ought to know how to move cautiously and circumspectly?
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 27)
The Lord requires that all who do Him service shall study how to save means by economizing. This can and must be done. Those who do not help to increase the fund should be very careful how they subtract from the precious fund that is the Lord’s treasure, from which many suffering fields that are in need of the gospel being preached unto them are supplied. There are many, many souls praying that they may know the truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 28)
The Word specified the gifts and graces that are essential for every soul who receives the truth. But especially does the Lord require his messengers, who carry his word to others, to live the truth, to reveal that they are sanctified through the truth. If they do not show their love of the truth by meeting the infallible standard, let them step out from the ministry and no longer dishonor God by their disorderly course of action.
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 29)
Let close, critical examination be made of the tenor of their life and action. Have they the marks that testify that they are children of God, that they apply the word of God as a test of their own qualification to do service that will properly represent Christ? Have they shown a clear understanding, a right judgment in the things of God? Have they a sweet, pure, clean spirit in the sight of God, in the home, and in the church? Do they give evidence that they are undefiled, that they can labor to help others out of Satan’s power, or do they show a want of sincere piety and conscientious scruples in willing toil, failing to lift burdens for Christ? Do they give evidence that day by day they are learning the meekness and lowliness of Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 30)
A great work is to be done. Who will engage in this work? Who will press the work forward and upward unto the victory? We have all the world against us; all the churches against us; all the synagogue of Satan against us. And if those of our own faith work against the truth by their own unsanctified habits and practices, the work will go very hard. God help us to pray, “O Lord, cleanse the camp of Israel from its defilement.”
(12LtMs, Lt 10, 1897, 31)
Lt 11, 1897
Brother “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia December 14, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in 21MR 20-26. Dear _____:
When your letter came to me on the subject of gold and silver, a political question, I knew that I could not help you by any words that I might say. Your self-confidence would be very strong, and any words I might offer would be as seed sown upon the rock. The Lord did not want you to employ your God-given time, and set your talents to work in wrong channels. Your work was not [to] set you in that line at all. Neither you nor any of your brethren had any work to do in arguing or writing or taking any part whatever in politics. God was dishonored by all who acted any part in politics.
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 1)
God has chosen a people who are to proclaim the third angel’s message to the world. They are to be a separate and peculiar people in this world of churches who are transgressing His commandments. We have a special work to do to prepare the people for the greatest event the world has ever seen. The books of Daniel and Revelation are of great consequence to us, and should be studied with great earnestness.
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 2)
“For thou art an holy people unto the Lord thy God: the Lord thy God hath chosen thee to be a special people unto himself, above all people that are upon the face of the earth. The Lord did not set his love upon you, nor choose you, because ye were more in number than any other people; for ye were the fewest of all people; but because the Lord loved you, and because he would keep the oath which he had sworn unto your fathers, hath the Lord brought you out with a mighty hand, and redeemed you out of the house of bondmen, from the hand of Pharaoh king of Egypt.
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 3)
“Know therefore that the Lord thy God, he is God, the faithful God, which keepeth covenant and mercy with them that love him and keep his commandments to a thousand generations; and repayeth them that hate him to their face, to destroy them; he will to be slack to him that hateth him, he will repay him to his face. Thou shalt therefore keep the commandments, and the statutes, and the judgments, which I command thee this day, to do them.... And the Lord will take away from thee all sickness, and will put none of the evil diseases of Egypt, which thou knowest, upon thee; but will lay them upon all them that hate thee.” [Deuteronomy 7:6-11, 15.]
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 4)
The Lord would have His people a separate and peculiar people, bearing the sign and seal of the Sabbath, in preserving the memorial, the seventh day, upon which the Lord rested after His work of creation. “And God blessed the seventh day, and sanctified it: because that in it he had rested from all his work which God created and made.” [Genesis 2:3.] He gave the Sabbath to man as a day of rest, when His people might assemble to worship Him and come in close relationship with God. All heaven is interested in the worship of God’s people.
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 5)
When man is created anew in Christ Jesus, he becomes a partaker of the divine nature. God has, through His own power, united in man the human and the divine. He clothes humanity with the robe of Christ’s righteousness. Man is enabled to discern the Saviour, and by Christ’s righteousness. Man is enabled to discern the Saviour, and by beholding he is changed into the likeness of His character. He recognizes the words of Christ, “All power is given unto me in heaven and in earth.” [Matthew 28:18.] He who discerns Christ is a partaker of His Spirit and His righteousness. He has the inward assurance that Christ is abiding in the soul temple.
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 6)
The redemption of men draws them away from political strife to rest and peace and quietude in God. All who contemplate this will indeed have the mind of Christ, will be clothed with the garments of Christ’s righteousness. And all who are thus blessed will, with ardor, cry, “We beheld his glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth.” [John 1:14.]
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 7)
Here was presented to the human mind spiritual and glorious light. “The Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us, ... full of grace and truth.” [Verse 14.] What nearness to God we may experience, what views of heaven we may obtain. But that which is of the greatest importance to all who live their life to God, is for them to understand their daily service for Jesus Christ, in representing His character in meekness and lowliness of heart, and in being good and doing good.
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 8)
“Wherefore he is able also to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by him, seeing that he ever liveth to make intercession for them.” [Hebrews 7:25.] The soul that has been misled by wrong influences, and has become a partaker of sin through association with others, to do contrary to the mind and character of God, need not despair. “For such an high priest became us, who is holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners, and made higher than the heavens.” [Verse 26.] Christ is not only priest and intercessor for our sins, but the offering. He offered Himself once for all.
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 9)
The conversation of those who are converted to God will not be the same as before their conversion. The words of the apostle Paul to the Philippians are, “Let your conversation be as it becometh the gospel of Christ: that whether I come and see you, or else be absent, I may hear of your affairs, that ye stand fast in one spirit, with one mind striving together for the faith of the gospel.” [Philippians 1:27.]
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 10)
“And he gave some, apostles; and some, prophets; and some, evangelists; and some, pastors and teachers; for the perfecting of the saints, for the work of the ministry, for the edifying of the body of Christ: till we all come in the unity of the faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of God, unto a perfect man, unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ: That we henceforth be no more children, tossed to and fro, and carried about with every wind of doctrine, by the sleight of men, and cunning craftiness, whereby they lie in wait to deceive; but speaking the truth in love, may grow up unto him in all things, which is the head, even Christ.” [Ephesians 4:11-15.]
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 11)
This is the service we are to render to God. Speaking the truth in love, we are to grow up into Him in all things, which is the Head, even Christ. “From whom the whole body fitly joined together, and compacted by that which every joint supplieth, according to the effectual working in the measure of every part, maketh increase of the body unto the edifying of itself in love. This I say therefore, and testify in the Lord, that ye henceforth walk not as other Gentiles walk, in the vanity of their mind.” [Verses 16, 17.]
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 12)
This chapter is full of instruction. “And grieve not the Holy Spirit of God,” he continues, “whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption. Let all bitterness, and wrath, and anger, and clamor, and evil speaking, be put away from you with all malice. And be ye kind one to another, tender-hearted, forgiving one another, even as God for Christ’s sake hath forgiven you.” [Verses 30-32.]
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 13)
This is the fruit of true conversion. I ask you, my dear brother and sister, to count the cost. Christ requires that you give soul, body, and spirit to Him. He shed His blood on Calvary’s cross to make this possible. Make an honest reckoning. Put into one scale Jesus, which means life, truth, and heaven, and into the other put every attraction the world may offer. Into the one put the loss of you soul, and in the other a life that measures with the life of God. Weigh them well; weigh for the present time and or eternity. While you are thus engaged, Christ speaks. What does He say? “What shall it profit a man if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?” [Mark 8:36, 37.] What will your answer be?
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 14)
You may have the witness of the Spirit that your ways please God. This is obtained by believing in the Word of God, by appropriating that Word to your own soul. This is eating of the bread of life, and this will bring eternal life. Compare Scripture with Scripture. Study the representation of the life of a true Christian as delineated in the Word of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 15)
The law of God is the great moral standard of righteousness. This the apostle declares is holy, just, and good. [Romans 7:12.] David says, “The law of the Lord is perfect, converting the soul.” [Psalm 19:7.] Christ says, “If ye love me, keep my commandments.” [John 14:15.] “If ye abide in me, and my words abide in you, ye shall ask what ye will, and it shall be done unto you.” [John 15:7.] “He that hath my commandments and keepeth them, he it is that loveth me; and he that loveth me, shall be loved of my Father, and I will love him, and will manifest myself to him.” [John 14:21.] This is most assuredly the witness of the Spirit. “Herein is my Father glorified, that ye bear much fruit, so shall ye be by disciples.”“As the Father hath loved me, so have I loved you: continue ye in my love. If ye keep my commandments (from the heart), ye shall abide in my love, even as I have kept my Father’s commandments, and abide in his love.” [John 15:8-10.]
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 16)
Those who are obedient to the will of God will not have a hard and miserable time in this life. Hear again the words of Christ, “These things have I spoken unto you that my joy might remain in you, and that your joy might be full.” [John 15:11.] This is the witness which it is the privilege of all to have—the joy of Christ in the soul through appropriating the Word of God, eating it as the bread of life, believing the Word, and bringing the requirements of Christ into the practical life. There is full assurance of hope in believing every word of Christ, believing in Him, being united to Him by living faith. When this is his experience, the human being is no longer under the law, for the law no longer condemns his course of action.
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 17)
The Word of God gives the description of a true Christian, which corresponds with the work of the Holy Spirit on the heart and life. The children of God know at once they have the evidence in their own hearts that they are born of God. “He that will come after me,” says Christ, “let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me.” [Mark 8:34.] It means depth and breadth of experience to follow the Lamb whithersoever He goeth. Self-denial and self-sacrifice will always be found in the path that leads through the straight gate to the broad meadows of the Lord’s pastures.
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 18)
To them that believe, Christ is precious. His Spirit moving upon the mind and heart of the believer is in perfect agreement with that which is written in the Word. The Spirit and the Word agree perfectly. Thus the Spirit beareth witness with our spirit that we are born of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 19)
The man who finds in his heart no resemblance to the great moral standard of righteousness, the Word of God, has no Christ to confess. His language, his thoughts, are not in harmony with the Spirit of Christ. His profession of faith is a counterfeit one. Do you ever find cream rising on water? The soul must have the vivifying influences of the breath of life from Christ in order to reveal in his conversation that Christ is formed within the hope of glory. Men never gather grapes from thistles. The words of a Christian will be in accordance with his enjoyment of Christ. Those who are perpetually talking doubts and demanding additional evidence to banish their cloud of unbelief do not build on the Word. Their faith rests on haphazard circumstances; it is founded in feeling. But feeling, be it ever so pleasing, is not faith. God’s Word is the foundation upon which our hopes of heaven must be built.
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 20)
It is a great misfortune to be a chronic doubter, keeping the eye and thoughts on self. While you are beholding self, while all your thoughts and talk is about “I,” you cannot expect to be conformed to the image of Christ. Self is not your saviour, poor, poverty-stricken souls. You have no redeeming qualities in yourself. “I” is a very leaky boat for your faith to embark in. Just as surely as you trust yourself in it, it will flounder. The lifeboat, to the lifeboat! This is your only safety. Jesus is the Captain of the lifeboat, and He has never lost a passenger. Discouraged doubters, how can you expect to find your heart glowing with the love of Christ; how can you expect His joy to remain in you and your joy to be full, while you are meditating and feeding upon your own imperfect characters?
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 21)
Says Christ, “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.” [John 14:23.] Do you believe Christ tells the truth? If you do, talk faith, talk hope, talk courage. What shall we say to you who are periodically doubters and grumblers? Indigestion is a trial, but do not make it worse by quarrelling with circumstances. Get your Bibles and hymn-books, and read and sing and pray, and go to work to help some poor soul who is in bodily suffering or despondency of soul. Pray in faith for the Lord to help both him and you. Do not, as you try to recover, put on a dismal, mourning attitude, as though prison walls enclose you and shut out every ray of sunlight. Pray short, easy prayers full of words of promise, and you will find yourselves out of the darkness into the light.
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 22)
It is your duty to war against oppressive thoughts and melancholy feelings, just as much as it is your duty to pray. It is your duty to counterwork the agencies of the enemy, to place a firm hold upon the bridle of your tongue, as well as your thoughts. Of all the periods in your life when you need a thorough supply of grace, it is when your food is grinding, and the sensitive, inflamed digestive organs are completely at work, and you are worried and tired out. But be very careful not to swear. You may look surprised at this, but it is a species of swearing to be constantly irritated and irritating others by your fault-finding and gloomy reflections. These fits of indigestion are trying, but hold fast to the bridle, that you shall not swear to those who are your best friends or to those who are your enemies.
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 23)
It is your duty, poor, afflicted soul, to come to the great Healer. He is as much afflicted by your affliction today as when He was upon the earth. He sympathized with all human woe. “All power is given unto me in heaven and in earth,” He says. [Matthew 28:18.] Then come to your Saviour who can heal all your sickness and all your diseases. He conquered death. He is the risen Saviour, the Lord of life. Will you come just as you are, and pray in faith to be healed of all manner of diseases, of all maladies which afflict the soul and the body? Center your faith so deeply and securely in Jesus Christ that no circumstance of any kind will jostle your faith. Let your life be hid with Christ in God.
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 24)
Do not waste your thoughts in dwelling upon the defective characters of others. This will not cure your defections of character. By dwelling upon the wrongs of others, you will be changed into the same image. Whenever you are tempted to talk of others’ follies, or blame them for injuries they have done to you, consider that they have wounded the heart of Christ in the person of His saints. Then take your Bible and open it before God and plead with Him for the healing balm of His peace.
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 25)
The Lord would have us represent Christ, and show to the world His attractive character. We may have joy in the Lord if we will keep His commandments. If we indeed have our citizenship above, and a title to an immortal inheritance, an eternal substance, then let us have that faith that works by love and purifies the soul from every spiritual defilement.
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 26)
If our citizenship is above, what right have we to be engaging in political strife? We are not called to any such service. “Come out from among them, and be ye separate, and touch not the unclean thing, and I will receive you, and will be a father unto you, and ye shall be my sons and daughters, saith the Lord Almighty.” [2 Corinthians 6:17, 18.] What more could we ask? We shall be members of the royal family, children of a heavenly King, heirs of God, and joint heirs with Christ to an immortal inheritance. We shall have the crown of life that fadeth not away.
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 27)
We are heaven-bound. Then why should we not show the attractive part of our faith? Why should we go as a crippled band of mourners, groaning and complaining all along the journey to our Father’s house? Just before He left, He said to His disciples, “Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid.”“Ye believe in God, believe also in me. In my Father’s house are many mansions; if it were not so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you; and if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and receive you unto myself, that where I am, there ye may be also.” [John 14:27, 1-3.]
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 28)
Praise the Lord; praise Him; for He is our Saviour, and liveth to make intercession for us! “The Lord hath not given us the spirit of fear, but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind. Be thou not therefore ashamed of the testimony of our Lord, nor of me, his prisoner: but be thou partaker of his afflictions of the gospel according to the power of God; who hath saved us, and called us with an holy calling, not according to our works, but according to his own purpose and grace, which was given us in Christ Jesus before the world began. But now is made manifest by the appearing of our Saviour Jesus Christ, who hath abolished death, and hath brought life and immortality to light through the gospel.” [2 Timothy 1:7-10.]
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 29)
From this time believe that the Lord can do all things, that He can make you a consistent Christian who wears the beauty of His heavenly character in the home life. A loving, loveable Christian is he most powerful argument in favor of the truth. Love your Saviour. Have your heart saturated with the holy oil that is emptied from the two olive trees. Zechariah 4:11-14. We want that oil emptied from the olive trees into our hearts every day. Then our tongues will speak forth the praise of our God. Looking unto Jesus, catching the light of His countenance, the light of His righteousness, we can turn deformity and sullenness and our many words of speech into sound words, and our deformity of character will be removed.
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 30)
“Whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report; if there be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these things.” [Philippians 4:8.]
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 31)
“My covenant was with him of life and peace; and I gave them to him for the fear wherewith he feared me, and was afraid before my name. The law of truth was in his mouth, and iniquity was not found in his lips: he walked with me in peace and equity, and did turn man away from iniquity. For the priests should keep knowledge, and they should seek the law at his mouth: for he is the messenger of the Lord of hosts.” [Malachi 2:5-7.]
(12LtMs, Lt 11, 1897, 32)
Lt 12, 1897
Brethren and Sisters “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia August 1, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in CTr 166-168. + Dear Brethren and Sisters:
I have had and still have a desire for help to come to us in Australia, in the building up of a sanitarium. I have cherished the hope that _____ might help us with his means; but there cannot be much done with a one power concern in Australia. We need men who can devise and plan and who have means to invest. But those will not give unless they feel it their duty to do so.
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 1)
We would do well to consider the case of Elisha when [he was] chosen for his work. Elisha was of a family who had kept the ancient true faith of Israel. He did not live in the thickly populated cities. His father was a tiller of the soil, a farmer. Even during the captivity there were souls who had not degenerated and gone into apostasy; and this family was included in the seven thousand who had not bowed the knee to Baal.
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 2)
Elijah was about to close his earthly labors. Another was to be chosen to carry forward the work to be done for that time. In his course of travel, Elijah was directed northward. How changed the scene before him, now, to that which the country had presented. Then the farming districts were unworked; the ground was parched, for neither dew nor rain had fallen for three years. Now everything seems to be springing up as if to redeem the time of famine and dearth. The plenteous rains had done more for the earth than for the hearts of humanity; it was better prepared for labor than were the hearts of apostate Israel.
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 3)
Wherever Elijah looked, the land he saw was owned by one man—a man who had not bowed the knee to Baal, whose heart had remained undivided in the service of God. The owner of the land was Shaphat. Busy activity was seen among the husbandry. While the flocks were enjoying the green pastures, the busy hands of his servants were sowing the seed for a harvest.
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 4)
The attention of Elijah was attracted to Elisha, the son of Shaphat, who, with the servants, was ploughing with twelve yoke of oxen. He was educator, director, and worker. Far from city and court dissipation, Elisha had received his education. He had been trained in habits of simplicity, of obedience to his parents and to God. Thus in quietude and contentment he was prepared to do the humble work of cultivating the soil. But though of a meek and quiet spirit, Elisha had no changeable character. Integrity and fidelity and the love and fear of God were his. He had the characteristics of a ruler, but with it all was the meekness of one who would serve. His mind had been exercised to be faithful in the little things, to be faithful in whatever he should do; so that if God should call him to act more directly for Him, he would be prepared to hear His voice. This was the lesson he had learned—to be obedient.
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 5)
It is only those who render perfect and thorough obedience to God that He will choose. If any man is in connection and association with men who do not obey God, who evidence that they are not in vital connection with Him, that man has a special work to do for God. He must separate from these men, whatever [his] position and experience, even if [he] has to walk as did Enoch—with God alone. The Lord God is a host, and all who are in His service will realize His words to Zerubbabel, saying, “Not by might, nor by power, but by my spirit saith the Lord of hosts.” [Zechariah 4:6.]
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 6)
Elisha waited contentedly, doing his work with fidelity. Thus day by day he obtained, through practical obedience, strength of purpose and rectitude through the divine grace in which he trusted. His surroundings at home were those of wealth; but he realized that in order to obtain an all-round education, he must be a constant worker in any line of work that needed to be done. He would not consent to be in any respect less informed than his father’s servants. He would learn how to serve first, that he might know how to lead and instruct and command. While doing all that he possibly could with his God entrusted capabilities in co-operating with his father in the home firm, he was doing God service. He was making manifest that he was obtaining a more perfect knowledge, how to co-operate with God.
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 7)
The youth should bear in mind that their physical strength, their mental qualification, soul, body, and spirit, are to be devoted to service. They are never to be misapplied, never misused, and never left to rust from inaction. Let the teachers in our schools educate the students in this line. Elisha daily increased in knowledge. Daily he prepared to do service in any line that opened before him. He served God in the little temporal duties. He grew in knowledge and in grace. And if the student will practice reliability and soundness of principle in the things which are least, he will reveal that he has acquired adaptability to serve God in a higher capacity.
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 8)
He who feels that it is of no great consequence to serve in the lesser capacity will never be trusted of God to serve in the more honored position. He may present himself as fully competent to accomplish the duties of the higher position, but God looks deeper than the surface. A Watcher is on his track, and after test and trial, there is written against him, “Thou art weighed in the balances, and found wanting.” [Daniel 5:27.] That decision in the courts of heaven decides for eternity the destiny of the human agent.
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 9)
The active service of God is in complete harmony with the ordinary duties of life—even in such humble occupations as felling trees, clearing ground, or following the oxen or horse at the plough. We are to serve God just where He puts us. Mere book education is a very one-sided affair. Service in the home life may be the very place we are to occupy for a time, if not always. Then preparedness for that work is to be obtained, that you may do your best in service for the Lord. God is to place us individually, and not we ourselves; and if any one of us is listless and indifferent or negligent and careless in the small every day duties, we shall never be fitted for service for God.
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 10)
The Lord is testing and proving us to see what sort of timbers or attributes we are bringing into the character building. He that is faithful in that which is least will be faithful also in much. He that is unfaithful in that which is least will certainly repeat this unfaithfulness if placed in higher positions of truth and given larger responsibilities. The performing of temporal business in a slack, shiftless manner will lead to the doing of business in higher grades in the same way. The service of God will be done in a haphazard manner. When there is order and exactitude in the little things we have to do in ordinary life, what wonder, then, if the exactitude is brought into the religious life.
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 11)
The importance of little things is underrated just because they are small, but the influence of the little things for good or for evil is great with the learner. The little things supply the actual discipline of life for each human agent. They are part of the training of the soul in sanctification of all our entrusted talents to God. Practice of the little things in the lines of duty makes the worker in God’s service to reflect more and more the likeness of Christ. Our Saviour is a Saviour to the perfection of the whole man. He is not a God of part of the being only.
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 12)
The grace of Christ works to the disciplining of the whole human fabric. He made all. He has redeemed all. The mind, the strength, the body as well as the soul, is a partaker of the divine nature, and all is His purchased possession. He must be served with the whole mind, heart, soul, and strength. The entire life must be glorified; then the Lord will be glorified in His saints, in even the common temporal things, with which they are connected. “Holiness unto the Lord,” will be the inscription upon them. [Exodus 28:36-38.]
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 13)
When Elijah saw Elisha in the field with the servants, ploughing with his twelve yoke of oxen, he came to the field of labor, and while passing by, he unfastened his mantle and threw it upon the shoulders of Elisha. During the three years and a half of barrenness and famine, the family of Shaphat became familiar with the work and mission of Elijah the prophet. The Spirit of God impressed the heart of Elisha in regard to the meaning of this action. This was his signal that God had called him to be the successor of Elijah. It was similar to the commission of Christ to the young ruler to leave all—houses, lands, friends, riches, comforts, and ease, “and come and follow me.” [Matthew 19:21.]
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 14)
Elijah passed on as if that were the end of the matter. But he knew that Elisha had understood the significance of the action, and he left him, without speaking a word, to decide whether he would accept the call or reject it. Elisha hastened after the prophet, and overtaking him, asked permission to take leave of his parents, and bid farewell to his family.
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 15)
The answer of Elijah was, “Go back; for what have I done unto thee?” [1 Kings 19:20.] This was not a repulse, but a test, a trial. If his heart clung to his home and its advantages, he was at liberty to remain there. But Elisha was prepared to hear the call of God. He had not been disorderly, running before the call had come, and when he was called, he revealed that he would not hesitate, nor relent, nor draw back.
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 16)
How many have had, and will have, such tests and proving! To every one the Lord has given his work. There is to be earnest, faithful waiting for the message from God calling to His service in prospect of the solemn event—[the] There is to be no idle waiting with nothing to do. They must prepare others for that great event. There is waiting and watching to be done, combined with a harmonious Christian character. This will make the Christian an all-round man, a perfect man in Christ Jesus, “not slothful in business, fervent in spirit, serving the Lord.” [Romans 12:11.]
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 17)
In genuine faith there is a buoyancy, a steadfast principle, which neither time nor toil can weaken. The youth shall faint and be weary; the young men shall utterly fail; but those who wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run and not be weary; and they shall walk and not faint.
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 18)
With the call of Christ comes the question, Are we ready to advance? Are we willing? Shall we not, like Moses, cheerfully deem the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures in Egypt?
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 19)
Had Elisha asked Elijah what was expected of him? what would be his work? he would have been answered, God knows; He will make it known to you. If you wait upon the Lord He will answer your every question. You may come with me if you have evidence that God has called you; if not, forbear. Come not simply because I called you. Know for yourself that God stands back of me, and that it is His voice you hear. If you can count everything but dross that you may win the favor of God, Come.
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 20)
Let all bear in mind that the Lord will not accept half-hearted service. Those who love to do the will of God can do perfect service. Let not the heart that hears the gracious invitation of mercy, “Come, for all things are now ready” [Luke 14:17], still feel to question as to the outcome of the matter, saying, How much shall I have to yield up. You have no arguments on this point. If we follow on to know the Lord, willingly, gladly, we shall know “that his going forth is prepared as the morning.” [Hosea 6:3.] If we have decided to obey Christ, we shall respond to His call, “If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me.” [Matthew 16:24.]
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 21)
Elisha immediately left all to commence his ministry. His leave taking was not with mourning and bitter regrets. They made a feast in his home in commemoration of the honor conferred upon one of the family. And what was the first work of Elisha? It was to take up the little things, and do them with heartiness. He is spoken of as pouring water on the hands of Elijah his master. He was the prophet’s personal attendant.
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 22)
Any work, however small it may appear, that is done for the Master with a thorough surrender of self, is as acceptable to Him as the highest service. “Thus saith the Lord, Let not the wise man glory in his wisdom, neither let the mighty man glory in his might, let not the rich man glory in his riches; but let him that glorieth glory in this, that he understandeth and knoweth me, that I am the Lord which exercise lovingkindness, judgment, and righteousness in the earth; for in these things I delight, saith the Lord.” [Jeremiah 9:23, 24.] Humble, willing service is before every one who claims to be a child of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 23)
After Elisha had been some time in the service of Elijah, he was to be called to take his place in the first rank. No one in that time was to be greater than he. He had worked under Elijah as a learner, and the time came when the head manager was removed, and the one under him came to the front, and as in Elijah there was a preparedness to be translated, so Elisha was prepared to take his place as the successor of the prophet.
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 24)
“And it came to pass, when the Lord would take up Elijah into heaven by a whirlwind, that Elijah went with Elisha from Gilgal. And Elijah saith unto Elisha, Tarry here, pray thee; for the Lord hath sent me to Bethel. And Elisha said unto him, As the Lord liveth, and as thy soul liveth, I will not leave thee. So they went to Bethel. And the sons of the prophets that were at Bethel, came forth to Elisha, and said unto him, knowest thou that the Lord will take away thy Master from thy head today? And he said, Yea, I know it; hold ye your peace. And Elijah said unto him, Tarry here I pray thee; for the Lord hath sent me into Jericho. And [Elisha] he said, As the Lord liveth, and as thy soul liveth, I will not leave thee. So they came to Jericho.
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 25)
“And the sons of the prophets which were at Jericho came to Elisha, and said unto him, Knowest thou that the Lord will take away thy Master from thy head today? And he answered, Yea, I know it; hold ye your peace. And Elijah said unto him, Tarry, I pray thee, here; for the Lord hath sent me to Jordan. And he said, As the Lord liveth and as thy soul liveth, I will not leave thee. So they two went on. And fifty men of the sons of the prophets went and stood to view afar off: and they two stood by Jordan. And Elijah took his mantle, and wrapped it together, and smote the waters, and they were divided hither and thither, so that they two went over on dry ground.” [2 Kings 2:1-8.]
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 26)
“And it came to pass, when they were gone over, that Elijah said unto Elisha, ask what I shall do for thee, before I shall be taken away from thee. And Elisha said, I pray thee, let a double portion of thy spirit be upon me. And he said, Thou hast asked a hard thing, nevertheless, if thou see me when I am taken from thee, it shall so be unto you. But if not, it shall not be so. And it came to pass, as they still went on and talked, that, behold, there appeared a chariot of fire, and horses of fire, and parted them both asunder; and Elijah went up by a whirlwind into heaven.
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 27)
“And Elisha saw it, and he cried, My father, my father, the chariots of Israel, and the horsemen thereof. And he saw him no more; and he took hold of his own clothes, and rent them in two pieces. He took up also the mantle of Elijah that fell from him, and went back and stood by the Jordan; and he took the mantle of Elijah which fell from him and smote the water, and said, Where is the Lord God of Elijah? And when he also had smitten the waters, they parted hither and thither; and Elisha went over. And when the sons of the prophets which were to view at Jericho saw him, they said, The Spirit of Elijah doth rest on Elisha. And they came to meet him, and bowed themselves to the earth before him.” [2 Kings 2:9-15.]
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 28)
This lesson is for us to study carefully. We are in no case to swerve from our allegiance. No duties that God presents before us will cause us to work at cross purposes with Him. The Word of God is to be our counsellor. The word of finite man is fallible. Human, manufactured laws, that are supposed to take the place of the law of God, are not to be respected.
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 29)
At every place that Elisha tarried with Elijah, he was given an opportunity to separate from him. “Tarry here, I pray thee,” said Elijah: “for the Lord hath sent me to Bethel.” [Verse 2.] Thus Elisha’s faith was tried at every point. But by ploughing in the field, Elisha had learned the lesson of not allowing failure or discouragement to be entertained. He had now set his hand to the plough in another line of work, and he would not fail nor be discouraged. Every time the invitation to turn back was given, he declared, “As the Lord liveth, and as thy soul liveth, I will not leave thee.” [Verse 2.]
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 30)
Unknown to Elijah the revelation that he was to be translated had been made known to his disciples in the schools of the prophets, and in particular to Elisha. He therefore kept close beside Elijah.
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 31)
There was a school of the prophets at Gilgal and also at Bethel, Jericho and Jordan: and the sons of the prophets came out to meet Elijah and Elisha. They asked Elisha, “Knowest thou not that thy Lord will take away thy master from thy head today?” And he said, “Yea, I know it. Hold ye your peace.” [Verse 3.]
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 32)
Again [Elijah] said, “Tarry here, I pray thee; for the Lord hath sent me to Jericho. And Elisha said As the Lord liveth, and as thy soul liveth, I will not leave thee. So they came to Jericho. And the sons of the prophets who were at Jericho came to Elisha and said unto him, Knowest thou not that the Lord will take away thy master from thy head today. And he answered, Yea, I know it: hold ye your peace. Elijah said to him, Tarry I pray thee here; for the Lord hath sent me to Jordan.” Again were the words repeated, “As the Lord liveth, and as thy soul liveth, I will not leave thee.” [Verses 4-6.]
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 33)
Elijah wished to visit these important places, the schools of the prophets, before he was parted from them. The last place at which he stopped was the Jordan, and here they were followed by fifty sons of the prophets, who wished to view the honor and exaltation of Elijah. Elijah was a type of the saints who will be translated to heaven without seeing death.
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 34)
As they came to the Jordan, Elijah took his mantle, and wrapped it together, and smote the waters, and the waters parted, and they two went over. Elijah favored Elisha by asking him, “Ask what I will do for thee before I be taken away from thee. And Elisha said, I pray thee, let a double portion of thy spirit be upon me. And he said, Thou hast asked a hard thing: nevertheless, if thou see me when I am taken from thee, it shall be so unto thee; but if not, it shall not be so.” [Verses 9, 10.]
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 35)
“They still went on, and as they talked, behold, there appeared a chariot of fire, and horses of fire, and parted them asunder; and Elijah went up by a whirlwind into heaven, and Elisha saw it, and he cried, My father, my father, the chariot of Israel, and the horsemen thereof. And he saw him no more; and he took hold of his own clothes, and rent them in two pieces. He took up also the mantle of Elijah that fell from him, and went back, and stood by the bank of Jordan, and he took the mantle of Elijah that fell from Him, and smote the waters, and said, Where is the Lord God of Elijah? And when he also had smitten the waters, they parted hither and thither, and Elisha went over. And when the sons of the prophets which were to view at Jericho saw him, they said, The spirit of Elijah doth rest on Elisha, and they came to meet him, and bowed themselves to the ground before him.” [Verses 11-15.]
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 36)
And from henceforth Elisha stood in the place of Elijah. He was called to the position of highest honor because he had been faithful over a few things. The question rose in Elisha’s mind, Am I qualified for any such position? But he would not allow his mind to question. The greatest qualification for any man in a position of trust is to obey implicitly the Word of the Lord. Elisha might exercise his reasoning, argumentative ability on every other subject but the one that would admit of no reasoning. He was to obey the Word of the Lord at all times and in all places. The men who follow the Lord are to be firm and straightforward in following the directions that He gives. Any deviation in following the devising or planning of men who reveal that they have not a connection with God, disqualifies those who thus deviate for being depended on as trustworthy men. Elisha put his hand to the plough, and would not look back. Thus he evidenced his determination and firm reliance upon God.
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 37)
Henceforth, the nations are to be in a very uncertain state. Kings and rulers will be involved in greater perplexities than they ever thought possible, and this because they are disobedient to the Word of the Lord, and work entirely contrary to His principles. The question now comes home to all who have their Bibles, Are we prepared to follow the Word of God? “He that will come after me,” said Christ, “let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me.” [Mark 8:34.] You cannot depend upon priests, rulers, human law-makers, for as in Christ’s day, they teach for doctrine the commandments of men. They know not the Scriptures nor the power of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 38)
Manmade theories are placed above a plain “Thus saith the Lord.” But the searching of the soul has come. Are we obedient to the law of God? Will every soul look up in faith, and answer to God, as did Elisha, “As the Lord liveth, I will not leave thee”? [2 Kings 2:2.] Whatever may come—persecution, reproach, falsehood, or anything that shall arise, we will not leave the source of our strength. We be proved and tried as in a furnace. Those who endure to the end will be saved. If our religious faith is spurious, it is of no manner of value.
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 39)
The spirit of Elijah was cheered, as by the direction of God he was permitted to see the schools of the prophets and the work that was going on in these institutions—an education that was to keep the wonderful works of God continually before them, to magnify the law and make it honorable. While idolatry was prevailing to an alarming extent, the heart of Elijah could see the word of the Lord verified—I have seven thousand that have not bowed the knee to Baal. The education was of that order that would preserve the souls of all who would be obedient to the law of God. And why should not we in these last days act in accordance with our faith? There must be not only education in books, instruction of far greater importance must be given. We must teach how to keep the way of the Lord, to do justice and judgment. We wish to arouse Seventh-day Adventists.
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 40)
Do not drop from the mind the fact that we are a spectacle to the world, to angels, and to men. Our education must be deep and thorough in the understanding of the Scriptures. The school standard must be kept high and pure and elevated that students may prepare to meet their God. Our work now is to tell men plainly what they must do to be saved. All who feel their need of Christ may go to Him just as they are, tell Him of their necessities, ask for the broken heart, the contrite soul, and the words of God will be fulfilled, “A new heart will I give thee.” [Ezekiel 36:26.]
(12LtMs, Lt 12, 1897, 41)
Lt 13, 1897
Brethren “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia August 27, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in Ev 125; 4Bio 335. + Dear Brethren:
I must place before you ideas that I cannot withhold. Is it at this time best to let every one possible know that there is to be a camp meeting held by Seventh-day Adventists? By the putting of God into the constitution as a religious enactment, the religious liberty question and Seventh-day Adventism have been pretty thoroughly ventilated. Will it be best to call much notice to our camp meeting? Will it not rather be best to set up the tents, and then let the people know; after the meeting has commenced doing the work of advertising? In spreading the intelligence of a Seventh-day Adventist camp meeting, are we not furnishing ammunition to our foes, the priests and rulers, encouraging them to make Seventh-day Adventists their target, and by misinterpretation, falsehood, and every other method, warn the churches and keep the people away? Would we really be advancing the work, or retarding it?
(12LtMs, Lt 13, 1897, 1)
I present this matter before you. After an interest has been created by the camp meeting, then is the time that a special work should be done in following up the interest created. The greatest secrecy is needed in some cases, lest there be created an intense opposition that will prevent the people from coming to the meeting to hear for themselves. The spies were sent out to search the land, but they were to go secretly, lest the forces of opposition should strengthen themselves against them for warfare, and make it much harder to go up and possess the land.
(12LtMs, Lt 13, 1897, 2)
Great wisdom should be used that no unadvised move be made, and satanic agencies stirred up to oppose, before the people shall have a chance to hear and know what they are opposing. If a camp-meeting can be started, to break in upon the community unexpectedly, the opposing elements will not be aroused with an intensity moved by Satan’s agencies to hold the people in error and darkness. The warning must be given, but let us give as little chance as possible for Satan to work, by moving cautiously and making no stir before. Let all the effort possible be put forth after the meeting closes.
(12LtMs, Lt 13, 1897, 3)
I understand that the ground you happened to select at Stanmore is absolutely refused you. Try in other places. It was not a bad ground on which the camp meeting was held in Ashfield. I know it would be much better to have the camp meeting in a new locality, but if the way seems to be hedged up, you cannot do less than look at the ground where the meeting was held three years ago. The Lord will open the way, we shall see His hand guiding and directing us where to hold our camp meeting. If every other door is closed, there is Parramatta or Granville. A meeting would do almost as much good there as in the suburbs of Sydney. But the suburbs are our first choice.
(12LtMs, Lt 13, 1897, 4)
Now in regard to the letter you sent in reference to the young man. I will take it to the school this morning and see what is the word. If they do not see light in his working through vacation, I will encourage you to send for him, and will venture to encourage him that he can have the advantages of the school. I will see that his school expenses are paid. You can, Brother Baker, send the money to get him here, and if the school does not see fit to take this responsibility, I will do it. He must have the benefits of the camp meeting, if possible. I will see Brother Haskell and Brother Hughes this morning.
(12LtMs, Lt 13, 1897, 5)
We had counted on having Brother Baron to act in his line as builder in the erection of the church here in Cooranbong. If he should go to Sydney, we must be at the expense of sending for an experienced carpenter. There are men right around you whom you can employ, and when he can be spared from this job, he can do the work you want done, and be with you in the position he has heretofore occupied. Brother Baron agreed to come next Monday and get to work, and we need him very much if this church is to be done in the appointed time.
(12LtMs, Lt 13, 1897, 6)
With respect.
(12LtMs, Lt 13, 1897, 7)
*****
Brother Baker wrote me that he had received a letter from Elder Daniells in regard to the work to be done in advertising the camp meeting by distributing notices and Echoes, thus preparing the people to manifest an interest in the truth that is to be presented. At that time, Brother Baker alone was here to engage in the work. It was proposed to send others to carry the work through. But light was given me by the Lord that it was not the best plan to make a display of what we were going to do, for just as soon as our intentions were made known, our enemies would be roused to block the way. Ministers would be called into the field to resist the message of truth. Warnings from the pulpit would be given to the congregations throughout Sydney, telling them the things that the Adventists designed to do.
(12LtMs, Lt 13, 1897, 8)
From the light given me by the Lord, I have a warning to present to our brethren. Do not wise generals keep their movements strictly secret, lest the enemy shall learn their plans, and work to counteract them. If the enemy has no knowledge of their movements, they have an advantage.
(12LtMs, Lt 13, 1897, 9)
We are to study the field carefully, and are not to think that we must follow the same methods in every place. If we move wisely, without one tinge of boasting, without stopping to challenge the enemy, if we advance one line of truth after another, crowding in the most important and soul-testing, the Lord will take care of the result. But just as soon as men think themselves able and efficient, they will fail. They may have some knowledge and understanding of the Scriptures, but if they do not understand from whence their help cometh, they will not do as much as simple, humble laymen, who understand how to pray and believe and trust in God.
(12LtMs, Lt 13, 1897, 10)
Wait; pitch the tents when the time for camp meeting comes. Put them up rapidly, and then give notice of the meetings. Whatever may have been your former practice, it is not necessary to repeat it again and again in the same way. God would have new and untried methods followed. Break in upon the people. Surprise them, without going into large expense to publish to Sydney what our purpose is. Let men stand, as it were, still, while the strength of God advances. Then follow. When it is apparent that the time has come to advance in new lines and new ways, do so, if possible.
(12LtMs, Lt 13, 1897, 11)
I have another warning to give. If any minister shall seek to draw the workers into debate or controversy on political or other questions, take no heed to his persuasions or his dares. Carry the work of God forward firmly and strongly, but as silently as possible. Let no human boasting be heard. Let no sign of self-sufficiency be made. Let it be seen that God has called us to handle sacred trusts, to preach the Word, to be diligent, earnest, and fervent. Lie low, if you would have clear views of truth and clear views of duty. Cease not to pray earnestly and humbly that God will work in you, to will and to do His good pleasure. God is willing to do much for His people, if man will not interfere by taking the work out of God’s hands into His own finite hands.
(12LtMs, Lt 13, 1897, 12)
At our yearly camp meetings there should be abundant ministerial help. Leave not one man to do all the ministering. A variety of gifts is needed. Fresh capabilities must be brought into the work. Let God vivify human agents. The Holy Spirit must work on the mind. Then the voice will be heard speaking with freshness and power. It is not the best policy to allow a constant strain to come upon one or two men. Under this strain they become physically and intellectually exhausted. They are rendered incapable of doing the work appointed them in behalf of their fellow men.
(12LtMs, Lt 13, 1897, 13)
God calls upon men to co-operate with His power. He alone can make the Word effective and give the increase. Faith must be kept in constant exercise, that the Christian duties to be done for those who shall attend our camp meetings may be faithfully performed. Those who do the commandments of God will in every tent effort add to their faith virtue, “and to virtue knowledge; and to knowledge temperance; and to temperance patience; and to patience godliness; and to godliness brotherly kindness; and to brotherly kindness charity; and if these things be in you and abound, they make you that ye shall neither be barren nor unfruitful in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ.” [2 Peter 1:5-8.]
(12LtMs, Lt 13, 1897, 14)
The Lord calls upon His servants to have faith. In the past unbelief has kept away His richest blessings. His servants have not in contrition of soul made God their entire trust. Truth in its solemn reality has not been comprehended.
(12LtMs, Lt 13, 1897, 15)
In this great work our ministers must have a more thorough sense of their responsibility to God. This is the most powerful of all motives to spiritual advance and earnest effort. It is the efforts springing from and carried out by man that are such a hindrance that God has little room to work. Lower motives mingle with sacred responsibilities, and unsteady efforts result.
(12LtMs, Lt 13, 1897, 16)
A selfish confinement of the work of God to finite business principles is weakening and not strengthening. The work of God is susceptible of more breadth and fulness in every respect than it has yet [had]. The self-interest that has come in has ruined the work in Battle Creek. The Lord will not bless a line of work that is prescribed to certain limits. Selfishness woven into the publishing interests and tract and missionary branches of the work is a deadly foe to its purity, excellency, and high, exalted character.
(12LtMs, Lt 13, 1897, 17)
Ambition, if brought into the different lines of work, is a hindrance rather than a blessing. Disappointment and disgust is always the outgrowth of doing business selfishly. God’s work must never again be carried on as it has been in Battle Creek—interwoven with unjust principles. It is now like a poor, stranded bark, a leaky vessel, because men were eager to control and monopolize everything.
(12LtMs, Lt 13, 1897, 18)
But God said, I will bring it to nought. Unholy impulses have spread wider and wider. Men have thought that if they took in everything, they could control everything, and make all a success. The warnings of God have been cast aside as not meaning what they declared.
(12LtMs, Lt 13, 1897, 19)
All the branches of God’s work must move upon unselfish, pure, holy, elevated, and sanctified principles. Then there will be complete unity in every branch. The work will be a complete whole. God will be regarded as the great efficiency. The workers will act with a steady, harmonious balance, drawing in even lines, with steady and ever increasing force onward.
(12LtMs, Lt 13, 1897, 20)
God will permit disappointment to come, to test and prove us. Perfection of character cannot be secured without the testing and proving of God. God makes it necessary for us to call faith into exercise, that this faith may bring the needed results. But unless our souls are constantly guarded, high-mindedness will creep in. The thought will intrude, “We will make a high record. We will exalt others,” when really, it is for ourselves that we are planning to get glory. Thus self-deception comes upon us.
(12LtMs, Lt 13, 1897, 21)
Satan is active and cruel in his devising. Let none of us talk humility and practice high-mindedness. Let us fear lest we fail of the grace of God. We need the simple faith in Christ that works by love and purifies the soul. Faith in Jesus, if it is genuine faith, always means conversion. He who has this faith gives diligence to make his calling and election sure.
(12LtMs, Lt 13, 1897, 22)
*****
Thursday night, at the first meeting of the camp, the large tent was crowded, and the people stood like a wall on the outside. Elder Daniells spoke with clearness and force. On Thursday night just as large a congregation gathered. We see that the Lord is at work. May He create an interest in the hearts of those that come to the meetings.
(12LtMs, Lt 13, 1897, 23)
All seem to be interested in the meetings. One lady and then another told me that they had read my books. One lady told me that she had Great Controversy, and her daughter had Patriarchs and Prophets. She said that she had never read anything that made so deep an impression on her mind. She mentioned several books that she had which treated on present truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 13, 1897, 24)
On Sabbath morning Brother Haskell presented the truth in the Spirit and power of God. The tent was full. In the afternoon I spoke from 1 John 1:1-4. The tent was again filled, and numbers stood on the outside.
(12LtMs, Lt 13, 1897, 25)
Lt 14, 1897
Brethren “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia March 30, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 3SM 74-75; 4Bio 281. Dear Brethren:
My heart feels very sad that Brethren McCullagh and Hawkins have taken the position which they have. From the light which the Lord has been pleased to give me, I knew that unless Brother McCullagh could be enlightened by receiving the light given him of God, in regard to the influence of his wife in the home and in the church, unless she were converted heart and soul, the enemy would work through her to deceive her husband. Here is where his past usefulness has been, and his future usefulness will be, marred. I have spared them, and have been as tender of them as possible, hoping and praying that Sister McCullagh would be a transformed woman, that she would receive the warning given her of the Lord, and be a helpmeet to her husband. But she is not, and she has not brought herself into right relations with God. She is his ill-adviser.
(12LtMs, Lt 14, 1897, 1)
The child Christabel needed altogether different management than she has had in order for the formation of a pure, modest, Christian character. But sorrow is before Brother and Sister McCullagh in the reaping of the harvest sown.
(12LtMs, Lt 14, 1897, 2)
When the health of Brother McCullagh was so precarious in his last illness, I dared not keep silent. I had spoken upon general principles, plainly and decidedly, in accordance with the Word of God, in regard to the responsibilities resting upon parents, the home missionary work to be done, the treatment children should receive in their education and training. The atmosphere surrounding the soul of their daughter is malarious and is communicated to all the children with whom she associates. In order to save other children from being led into evil practices, I have had a duty to do, and have done this as gently and as carefully as I knew how to do the work. I shall continue to do the same, in order that children shall not be educated by the knowledge and ways and habits of this child. Here is where the present difficulty of Brother McCullagh and his wife lies. This is no sudden movement. The enemy has been at work for a long period of time.
(12LtMs, Lt 14, 1897, 3)
I knew that Brother and Sister McCullagh would be strongly tempted in the very direction in which they are now. I knew that a crisis would come, that they would either see the defects in their home management, or else that Satan would blind their perception, so that the sin of Eli would become their sin.
(12LtMs, Lt 14, 1897, 4)
These things must be kept before the people, whether men will hear or refuse the warnings. I have not to study the consequences, which may be the sure result, to me. I have put myself in the hands of God. If He shall permit the enemy to do to me as he did to my Saviour, shall I complain?
(12LtMs, Lt 14, 1897, 5)
I sincerely wish that all children were educated to possess the precious virtues possessed by Joseph. His life declares what children and youth may be under the discipline of God. The childhood and youth of Jesus is an example of that which all youth may be under the proper training and blessing of God. The inspired writing of Moses, who was moved by the Holy Spirit of God to make reference to Joseph’s excellent conduct, gives the glory to God. God’s presence and guardianship took Joseph in charge after he was separated from his father. And Joseph looked to the Lord as his friend and protector, and because he loved and feared the Lord, God made him a representative character. The origin of the borrowed luster which his character reflected was from God.
(12LtMs, Lt 14, 1897, 6)
The righteousness which Joseph possessed was the righteousness of Jesus Christ. In Christ are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge, as a stream is hidden in its fountain. These treasures were communicated to Joseph in the earthen vessel, and the excellency of the power was all of God. Joseph was the human agent, yet he drew his spiritual nourishment from God, and the good seed sown in good soil sprang up, and bare much fruit. The tenderness and virtue of Joseph’s character was constantly unfolding, and displaying the mind which was in Christ Jesus. That mind, full of compassion, participates in the sorrow of others.
(12LtMs, Lt 14, 1897, 7)
The Lord would have all children mark the character of Joseph and be like Him. Yet the life of Joseph in its integrity, was not preserved from trial and grievous affliction. He wore not only the badge of a slave, but the inscription of a felon. Robbed of his liberty, his name and his character, he was, in the fear of God, strengthened to preserve his integrity. He was loaded with false charges of criminality, but the Lord’s eye was upon Joseph, watching his course of action, as critically as He watched the wicked course of action followed by the sons of Eli. Each was rewarded according to his deeds, even before the whole universe of heaven.
(12LtMs, Lt 14, 1897, 8)
None of the followers of Christ are to despond, although, for the faithful discharge of their duty they may incur the unbelief, displeasure, and disaffection of those who ought to know better. Our Redeemer was never appreciated by the very people that He, by all His labor, was trying to bless and save. He was brought into abasement by the very ones He had pitied and had compassion upon, and tried to save. He stood at the bar of an unjust judge. He was condemned by the charges of poor, deceived, deluded men, who were following their own way, but supposing themselves to be highly exalted by the false charges they brought against our Redeemer. He was misinterpreted, misstated, falsified, and was numbered among the most flagrant malefactors who beheld His agonizing death. With a voice of triumph and exultation, they cried, “Come down from the cross, and we will believe on thee. He saved others; himself he cannot save.” [Matthew 27:42.]
(12LtMs, Lt 14, 1897, 9)
The followers of Jesus Christ will understand, in the great crisis which is before us, what dependence can be placed upon men who have turned from the warnings and entreaties of the Spirit of God, to follow their own imaginings. It becomes every soul now to stand on the sure rock, to build for time and for eternity, and to understand what voice they are following. Show us a sign, said the unbelieving Jews, but the Lord did not gratify their curiosity. Jesus gave them a statement, “They have Moses and the prophets. If they believe not these, neither will they believe although one rose from the dead, and should come to them with a message.” [Luke 16:29, 31.]
(12LtMs, Lt 14, 1897, 10)
I can say no more at present, but be assured, this is no more than I expected. I attempted to write out some precious things, to these brethren, but the word came, Write not; they will misinterpret and misapply whatever word you may send them. With his specious temptations, Satan is weaving his net about their feet. Brother McCullagh has been misleading, and the seed sown will produce its harvest that he will not care to garner.
(12LtMs, Lt 14, 1897, 11)
The influence of his wife is not a pure, uncorrupting influence. He has had this atmosphere surrounding his soul until he is one with it, and if he fails of eternal life, the blood of his soul will be upon her garments, for she has not a living connection with God, and is not led or taught of God. She can speak very good things; she can make fair speeches, but she does not understand what a Christian experience is. I fear she will never know what her great need is. She must be born again. She needs, O so much, that transformation of character that will cause her to realize spiritual things. My heart is drawn out in a sincere pity and love for the family, I would do anything in my power to save them.
(12LtMs, Lt 14, 1897, 12)
You may inquire, “What effect does this have upon you?” Sorrow only, sorrow of soul, but peace and perfect rest and trust in Jesus. To vindicate myself, my position, or my mission, I would not utter ten words. I would not seek to give evidence of my work. “By their fruits ye shall know them.” [Matthew 7:20.]
(12LtMs, Lt 14, 1897, 13)
We have never made meat eating a test of fellowship, never; but when the Lord presents before us the evil of eating the flesh of dead animals that are corrupted with disease—scrofula, cancer, tumors and these pulmonary diseases, it becomes every one who knows these things to speak decidedly against subsisting on such a diet. When, as in the case of Collins, who makes meat his principle article of food, the sure result is presented, and its effect upon the man, who is full of animal passions and lustful practices, then I shall speak. When, in the case of Brother McCullagh, the sure result of a meat eating diet is that it wars against the health and his life, I shall bear testimony. But he is unfortunate, for his wife is constantly leading away from health principles, which are so essential for him and for every member of his family. It is not merely meat eating; but the food that is daily prepared for the table is not of the best quality for his health and life.
(12LtMs, Lt 14, 1897, 14)
Here I must stop.
(12LtMs, Lt 14, 1897, 15)
Lt 15, 1897
Wessels, Peter Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia February 8, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother:
I feel a deep interest that you shall abide the day of God. [Read] Revelation 20:15. Your greatest sorrow has not been because you have had a true sense of your sins, but you have been very much annoyed because the sin has caused you much humiliation because it was known. If there is nothing which you have done that is so wrong, why should you feel so greatly annoyed to have this matter revealed. The aggravated character of your sin you have not realized, and felt a real sorrow and disgust of your own course of action. My brother, in your present state of mind, with your present conceptions of this matter, when placed in similar circumstances as you have been, temptations would come to you, and habit and practice would lead you to pursue the same course of action if you thought it would not be made known to others. But if no eye could see or know of these polluting actions, which you have taken so much pleasure in, you would continue their practice because you have no true conception of their results.
(12LtMs, Lt 15, 1897, 1)
I hope you will not feel as did Cain against Abel. Because your brethren know these things, they cannot but feel that you are not a safe man to be entrusted with the flock of God and they take the responsibility of giving you credentials as a safe teacher. You have led souls astray. One soul is precious in the sight of God, and you have created temptations for them which they have not power to resist.
(12LtMs, Lt 15, 1897, 2)
You have created a condition of thoughts, an appetite for practicing shameful things, which the Lord abominates. A compassionate Saviour will forgive your course of action if you humble your heart in contrition before God, and hang your helpless soul upon Jesus Christ. He alone can save you from the result of your own educating practice. Please read 1 John 1:5. Read the entire chapter.
(12LtMs, Lt 15, 1897, 3)
Now, your mind is not at rest. Your impulsive character will under temptation say and do strange things. You will be tempted to make rash moves which will cause the loss of your own soul and endanger the souls of others. But you are not at present the man that can be entrusted with the sacred responsibilities as a minister of God, a shepherd of the flock. I cannot express to you how earnest I feel for you. I see your peril. You are represented to me as a man standing on the very brink of a precipice, tempted to throw yourself over. Go back, go back! Cut off not the last hope for yourself of that life which will, if you are a faithful overcomer, measure with the life of God. Your soul costs too much to be rashly thrown away.
(12LtMs, Lt 15, 1897, 4)
If you humble your heart before God, He will pardon your transgression and forgive your sins. You may make it necessary by your own course of action for explanations to be made. But if you will move guardedly it is not essential that these matters shall become extended, but your wife should know. She is the one that could help you. But I beg of you for Christ’s sake to not imperil your soul. When you see yourself in your true light, you will seek earnestly for a transformation of character.
(12LtMs, Lt 15, 1897, 5)
I was reading in the night season, from the Word of God to you. You seemed to be very restless, and I was trying to quiet your mind. I said to you, Peter Wessels, Whosoever abideth in Him, sinneth not; whosoever sinneth hath not seen Him neither knoweth Him. If you really knew God and Jesus Christ by an experimental knowledge, you would never have done the things which you have done. Your course in these things have polluted the minds and bodies of inexperienced youth. Could you only see these things as they are, but you do not sense them yet.
(12LtMs, Lt 15, 1897, 6)
What can be worse than the crime of educating young girls in the habits of desecrating and polluting their bodies by exposing them to the view and the touch of man, and that man an ordained minister? Cannot you see that you have enfeebled and confused your moral conceptions of right and wrong, so that you would be in constant temptation to practice the same sin? These things in the sight of God are as grievous a crime as adultery. You will make your sin tenfold greater by giving the impression that you are not treated with proper respect. This matter has been laid open before me, and I laid it open before you, and asked you to consider this matter of greater consequence than you have hitherto done.
(12LtMs, Lt 15, 1897, 7)
I want you to read and heed the instruction God has given you. I want you to consider it a great mercy and kindness of God to open these matters to your mind, that you should break off your sins by repentance and thorough reformation. Do not, I beseech of you, leave the impression upon your mother’s mind that your brethren have misused you and have treated you ill because they withheld credentials from you. You need to see that you have entered into a series of temptations which have become a strong infatuation, and if you will only humble your heart before God, and never cease until you know that the transformation of character has taken place in you, then you may have an experience [so] that you are better prepared to teach the truth to others than you ever have been.
(12LtMs, Lt 15, 1897, 8)
You have a God-fearing wife. You have very nice children. God loves the family, and He wants to save you as a family. I know your brethren would help you if they could. They must be true and faithful sentinels for God. They must do judgment and justice mingled with mercy. But it is their work to keep the danger signal uplifted against any influence that shall, through you or any other man, lead a soul into sin by polluting their own body and thus defiling the temple of God, that He has made, by the sight or touch of man.
(12LtMs, Lt 15, 1897, 9)
Lt 16, 1897
Brother and Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia June 11, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 1BC 1086-1087; CTr 36. + Dear Brother and Sister:
For weeks I have been in an exhausted condition day and night. I did not realize that I was carrying so heavy a burden of responsibility; but as soon as Brother and Sister Haskell came in to do their work, I found myself in a nervous state of exhaustion. Anything that required thought distracted my brain. Since coming upon this ground it has been one continual strain, because there were those who were interested only so far as concerned themselves. They carried no burden except that terrible load of criticizing and accusing. I was obliged to brace up, and brace up, and stand true to Bible principle.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 1)
Those who were on the ground, and could have helped us, put their influence in the scale to counterwork that which God had given me especially to do. Those whose experience ought to have been clear and helpful and true, the Lord revealed to me were not to be trusted. They had not their eyes anointed with the spiritual eyesalve to discern that they were working largely on Satan’s side of the question. Those who carried the heaviest load were made the subjects of constant criticism; and those who carry any burden at all, were placed in severest trial because they did not shape themselves to favor this or that or the other individual in their several wishes.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 2)
To remove all occasion of criticism from these varied minds, I was instructed, was the very worst thing we could do in the treatment of those who came upon the ground. The discipline that God requires is pure. Uncontaminated principles are to be brought into everything in their association one with another. I was shown that every one was on trial and test from their very first connection with the interests on this ground. God saw that every one who should have any connection with His work must be proved and tried. He knew that inexperienced men and women would come in to settle on the land whose influence would not be of a right character, and who would introduce their own individual harmful habits and methods, that would place a mold on the work at the very beginning that would be contrary to the Word of the living God, and that would turn His favor away from us.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 3)
The work of having these things out away from the school interests has been as hard a as I ever undertook, because men and women were here who claimed to be Christians, but whose entire life and experience was of that character that in no case should find standing room on this ground. They have evidenced that they were under the temptations of Satan. While we could not possibly shield them from temptation, the Lord would have shielded them if they had had any sense of their need of correcting the habits of long years standing in their experience. But all the light that came to them in the principles kept before them had no weight when it was brought to bear on their own individual defects in methods and principles.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 4)
The Lord was constantly instructing me that we should carefully and strictly avoid harmonizing with their ideas and course of action. A straightforward course must be pursued. Special efforts must not be made to remove the cause of their temptations and disaffection, for the very object in locating the school on these grounds was not to concede to the varied experiences that have been brought in and composed the religious life and character of these individuals. These must be cut away from them, or they had far better choose some other place than these grounds for their home. And God will work with our efforts in giving correct principles, line upon line, and precept upon precept, as revealed in His Word, in correcting the wrong through the light given in the testimonies during the last fifty years; in making manifest that which God would approve and that which He would condemn.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 5)
If the light which the Lord Jesus has given, sowing the world with truth in correct principles of action, were heeded, there would be provided for all who should locate on this ground an order of things that would be just what God could approve, and which would stand the stress and strain of all the liabilities that would occur; and His people [would] not become corrupted. The battles which each one must meet in the enemy’s workings would not pervert the subjects into apostasy or rebellion, but would make them staunch and brave and reliable representatives of Bible truth, which is the foundation principle in the education of youth for this time, for we are on the eve of tremendous changes. Crises are right upon us.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 6)
In the working of God’s people, there are always times of test and of trial, and God does not design that we shall shield men and women and youth from the liabilities that test the character. God will reveal His workings, and will supply His attributes to the humble men who are seeking Him. Satan also will reveal his workings, and will supply every soul he tempts with his attributes, his evil surmisings, his evil speaking and accusing of the brethren. From this condition of things, the Lord cannot possibly shield those who place themselves on the enemy’s side, for God does not compel the human mind. He gives His bright beams of light as a lamp to lead and guide all who will walk in the rays reflected from Him. That lamp, His Word, is a light unto our feet. But if men disregard the path lighted by the heavenly beams, and choose a path suited to their own natural hearts, they will stumble on in darkness, not knowing where they stumble or why. They will accuse and hate the very ones who make straight paths for their feet.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 7)
The history of Cain and Abel will be repeated. Cain insisted in carrying out his own plans in his offering to the Lord. Abel was steadfast in carrying out the directions of the Lord. He would not be converted to Cain’s way. Although the offering of Cain was a very acceptable one, that which made that offering required at all, the blood of the slain lamb, was left out. There could be no harmony between the two brothers, and contention must come. Abel could not concede to Cain without being guilty of disobedience to the special commands of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 8)
“And in process of time it came to pass, that Cain brought of the fruit of the ground an offering unto the Lord. And Abel, he also brought of the firstlings of his flock and of the fat thereof. And the Lord had respect unto Abel and to his offering. But unto Cain and his offering he had not respect. And Cain was very wroth and his countenance fell.” [Genesis 4:3-5.] The Lord preferred the offering of Abel because it was correct. His offering was of value because it prefigured the redemption plan of God in the costly offering of His only begotten Son as the hope and salvation of the fallen race.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 9)
When God accepted the offering of Abel, and gave no sign that He recognized the offering of Cain, because it left out the true figure, the representation of the world’s Redeemer, Cain was very angry. But the Lord did not give up His way and will to conciliate Cain. He reasoned with him: “Why art thou wroth? and why is thy countenance fallen? If thou doest well, shalt thou not be accepted? and if thou doest not well, sin lieth at the door. And unto thee shall be his desire, and thou shalt rule over him. And Cain talked with Abel his brother; and it came to pass, when they were in the field, that Cain rose up against Abel his brother, and slew him.” [Verses 6-8.]
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 10)
This same spirit has been acted over on this ground.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 11)
The Lord passed by Saul the chosen king of Israel, because, as king of Israel, he did not follow the requirements of God, but chose his own ideas and his own methods. Standing at the head as he did, he could mislead Israel from following the Lord.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 12)
The discarding of King Saul and the choosing of David in his stead made a condition of things wholly unpleasant for the one chosen in Saul’s stead. David could not be anointed in Saul’s stead without experiencing his jealousy. And what a time of it David had! Yet all this he was compelled to bear because of a disobedient king who refused to keep the way of the Lord, and hearken to His voice. It was a very sad time for Saul, Samuel, and David, all because one man was venturing to follow his own hereditary and cultivated tendencies.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 13)
The Lord had blessed Saul, chosen and converted him, and he was made head over Israel. He had God as his teacher through Samuel the prophet, but he would not harken to the voice. He revealed himself to be an unsafe leader for Israel, because he would follow his own way in the place of doing God’s way and God’s will. Saul had had all the promise that Cain had had. The words of God to Cain were applicable to him. God had declared; “If thou doest well, shalt thou not be accepted; and if thou doest not well, sin lieth at the door.” [Verse 7.] Cain would not come to God’s plans, and he killed his brother because he did not take his side of the controversy against God. Saul also justified his acts of disobedience when reproved through Samuel.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 14)
“Then Samuel took a vial of oil, and poured it upon his head, and kissed him, and said, Is it not because the Lord hath anointed thee to be captain over his inheritance? ... And the Spirit of the Lord will come upon thee, and thou shalt prophesy with them, and shalt be turned into another man. And let it be, when these signs come unto thee, that thou do as occasion serve thee; for God is with thee. And thou shalt go down before me to Gilgal, and behold, I will come down unto thee, to offer burnt offerings, and to sacrifice sacrifices of peace-offerings; seven days shall thou tarry, till I come to thee, and shew thee what thou shalt do.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 15)
“And it was so, that when he had turned his back to go from Samuel, God gave him another heart; and all those signs came to pass that day, And when they came thither to the hill, behold, a company of prophets met him; and the Spirit of God came upon him, and he prophesied among them. And it came to pass, that when all that knew him before time saw that, behold, he prophesied among the prophets, then the people said one to another, What is this that is come to the son of Kish? Is Saul also among the prophets? And one of the same place answered and said, But who is their father? Therefore it became a proverb, Is Saul also among the prophets? And when he had made an end of prophesying, he came to the high place.” [1 Samuel 10:1, 6-13.]
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 16)
God gave Saul another heart. His spirit came upon him, and he prophesied. Thus with a new heart, under the molding of the Spirit of God, he entered into the responsible position of king of Israel. After the Lord gave Saul the signal victory over the Ammonites, “the people said unto Samuel, Who is he that said, Shall Saul reign over us? Bring the men, that we may put them to death. And Saul said, There shall not a man be put to death this day: for today the Lord hath wrought salvation in Israel.” [1 Samuel 11:12, 13.]
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 17)
In this decision Saul evidenced that he had a changed heart. His own natural temperament was transformed by the power of God, who had laid these responsibilities upon him. And Saul was not left to battle alone with his old natural tendencies. Through his servant God had declared, “The Spirit of the Lord will come upon thee, and thou shalt prophesy with them, and thou shalt be turned into another man. And let it be, when these signs are come to thee, that thou do as occasion serve thee; for God is with thee.” [1 Samuel 10:6, 7.]
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 18)
“And Samuel called the people together unto the Lord at Mizpeh; and said unto the children of Israel, Thus saith the Lord God of Israel, I brought up Israel out of Egypt, and delivered you out of the hand of the Egyptians, and out of the hand of all kingdoms, and of them that oppressed you; and ye have this day rejected your God, who himself saved you out of your adversities and your tribulations; and ye have said unto him, Nay, but set a king over us. Now therefore present yourselves before the Lord in your tribes, and by your thousands.” [Verses 17-19.] We see that here the Hebrews made a great mistake in setting up their own way against God’s way. The way of the nations under kingly rule and their display had attractions for the nation that God had chosen and wrought amongst by His own infinite power.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 19)
Samuel had obeyed the word of the Lord and had granted the people their request for a king. The 12th chapter of 1st Samuel gives the record of their sin in turning from God’s rule to the customs of heathen nations and kingly authority. And now the servant of God said, “When ye saw that Nahash, the king of the children of Ammon came against you, ye said unto me, Nay; but a king shall reign over us: when the Lord your God was your king. Now therefore behold the king whom ye have chosen, and whom ye have desired! and, behold, the Lord hath set a king over you.” [Verses 12, 13.]
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 20)
But the Lord did not abandon His people. He did not leave them to their own devices. He still makes conditions with them. He leaves them not in any deception in regard to their course of action. “If ye will fear the Lord,” He says, “and serve him, and obey his voice, and not rebel against the commandment of the Lord, then shall both ye and also the king that reigneth over you continue following the Lord your God: but if ye will not obey the voice of the Lord, but rebel against the commandment of the Lord, then shall the hand of the Lord be against you, as it was against your fathers.” [Verses 14, 15.]
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 21)
God then gave the children of Israel an evidence from heaven that they should not think it a light matter that they had rejected the administration of God, and chosen human authority in the place of the divine: “Now therefore stand and see this great thing, which the Lord will do before your eyes. Is it not wheat harvest today? I will call unto the Lord, and he shall send thunder and rain; that ye may perceive and see that your wickedness is great, which ye have done in the sight of the Lord, in asking you a king. So Samuel called unto the Lord; and the Lord sent thunder and rain that day: and all the people greatly feared the Lord and Samuel. And all the people said unto Samuel, Pray for thy servants unto the Lord thy God, that we die not; for we have added unto all our sins this evil, to ask us a king.” [Verses 16-19.]
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 22)
The Lord was working for the good of the people and for His own glory in permitting the nation for whom He had done great and wonderful things to have the thing which they had determined upon. But He did not utterly forsake them. They could have turned to the Lord, every man in the nation, if they had humbled their hearts and repented. But they failed to show contrition. They did not go back from their wicked course in choosing a king and rejecting God’s rule.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 23)
After the displeasure of God had been revealed to them, and the people had acknowledged their sin, Samuel encourages them. “And Samuel said unto the people, Fear not: ye have done all this wickedness: yet turn not aside from following the Lord, but serve the Lord with all your heart; and turn ye not aside: for then should ye go after vain things, which cannot profit nor deliver; for they are vain. For the Lord will not forsake his people for his great name’s sake: because it hath pleased the Lord to make you his people. Moreover as for me, God forbid that I should sin against the Lord in ceasing to pray for you: but I will teach you the good and the right way: only fear the Lord, and serve him in truth with all your heart: for consider how great things he hath done for you. But if ye shall still do wickedly, ye shall be consumed, both ye and your king.” [Verses 20-25.]
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 24)
The Lord gave Israel a sore trial. He permitted them to be brought into straight places. “And the Philistines gathered themselves together to fight with Israel, thirty thousand chariots, and sixty thousand horsemen, and people as the sand on the sea shore for multitude; and they came up, and pitched in Michmash, eastward from Beth-aven. When the men of Israel saw that they were in a strait, (for the people were distressed,) then the people did hide themselves in caves, and in thickets and in rocks, and in high places, and in pits. And some of the Hebrews went over Jordan to the land of Gad and Gilead. As for Saul, he was yet in Gilgal, ... and the people were scattered from him.” [1 Samuel 13:5-8.]
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 25)
Samuel had given directions to Saul: “And thou shalt go down before me to Gilgal; and, behold, I will come down unto thee, to offer burnt offerings, and to sacrifice sacrifices of peace offerings: seven days shalt thou tarry, till I come to thee, and shew thee what thou shalt do.” [1 Samuel 10:8.] “And Saul tarried seven days, according to the set time that Samuel had appointed: but Samuel came not to Gilgal; and the people were scattered from him.” [1 Samuel 13:8.] Here was the test for Saul.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 26)
Appearances were discouraging, and Saul looked at these outward appearances. In the place of looking to God, trusting in Him, and waiting for Samuel to appear, he became impatient, and took upon himself responsibilities which the Lord had not laid upon him. He attempted to do a work which he could not perform acceptably to God.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 27)
“And Saul said, Bring hither a burnt offering to me, and peace offerings. And he offered the burnt offering. And it came to pass that as soon as he had made an end of offering the burnt offering, behold Samuel came; and Saul went out to meet him, that he might salute him.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 28)
“And Samuel said, What hast thou done? And Saul said, Because I saw that the people were scattered from me, and that thou camest not within the days appointed, and that the Philistines gathered themselves together at Michmash; therefore said I, The Philistines will come down now upon me to Gilgal, and I have not made supplication unto the Lord: I forced myself therefore; and offered a burnt offering. And Samuel said to Saul, Thou hast done foolishly: thou hast not kept the commandment of the Lord thy God, which he commanded thee; for now would the Lord have established thy kingdom upon Israel forever. But now thy kingdom shall not continue; the Lord hath sought him a man after his own heart, and the Lord hath commanded him to be captain over his people, because thou hast not kept that which the Lord commanded thee.” [Verses 9-14.] Saul was tested by circumstances, but he did not bear the test. He showed just what he would do under pressure of circumstances.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 29)
It was God’s design in the detention of Samuel that the heart of Saul should be revealed, that others might know what he would do in an emergency. If he would under all circumstances obey the orders given him from one who in all things received his orders from heaven, the head of the nation could then be trusted. All who are in positions of responsibility must follow implicitly the counsels of God. It was a trying place for Saul; but he had not obeyed orders and waited for Samuel. He did not feel that it would make a difference who should approach God and in what way. Saul was tried, and full of energy and self-complacency, he put himself forward into sacred office, for which he was not appointed. If Saul would pursue such a course in an emergency, the people would follow his example, and thus no distinction would be made between the sacred and the common. By his example he left it open for the men of war to assume the priesthood on any occasion or in any emergency.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 30)
The Lord has His appointed agencies, and if these are not discerned and respected by those who are connected with His work, if they feel free to place themselves in a position of disregard for God’s requirements, they must not be kept in positions of They would neither listen to counsel, or to the commands of God through His appointed agencies. They would, like Saul, rush into a work that was never appointed them, and the mistakes they would make in following their human judgment would place the Israel of God where He could not reveal Himself to them, because the sacred things would become mingled with the common.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 31)
When the Lord exalted Saul to be king of Israel, he was not invested with the sacred office of priesthood. But as he sees the people terrified at the immense armies of the enemy; as he sees them fleeing to the caves, and hiding among the thickets and rocks, climbing to the tops of mountains and down into the pits, he took upon him this office. While his army were scattering from him everywhere, his ardor was not abated; he trusted to his own strength. “Some of the Hebrews went over Jordan to the land of Gad and Gilead. As for Saul, he was yet in Gilgal, and all the people followed him tremblingly.” [Verse 7.] The people realized their sin in choosing a king, and they dared not put their confidence in him, as they had trusted in the Lord as their Ruler and Authority. The new king was not God, and they were learning the meaning of defeat, even before the battle had been entered upon.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 32)
This was Saul’s time to act his faith, to show respect to the special directions given. A few hours of waiting was the test which the Lord gave Saul. Then the Lord saw the situation of Israel; He saw the distrust and fear of Saul; but Saul did not bow his knees and heart before God, and trust in the Lord God of Israel. In the place of becoming humble and self-distrustful, he grew passionate and presumptuous. [Samuel] was on the ground within the seven days, but in the very last moments of that time Saul knowingly transgressed, by assuming the office of priest because he was king in Israel. He could have offered humble prayer to God without the sacrifice, for the Lord will accept even the silent petitions of a burdened heart. But Saul revealed his impatience. He did not manifest the faith of Gideon and the Hebrew generals whom God had appointed.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 33)
Saul could have made his supplication to God with his whole heart; but instead of this, he forced himself into the priesthood. And Samuel declared, “Thou hast done foolishly: thou hast not kept the commandment of the Lord thy God, which he commanded thee: for now would the Lord have established thy kingdom upon Israel forever. But now thy kingdom shall not continue: the Lord hath sought him a man after his own heart, and the Lord hath commanded him to be captain over his people, because thou hast not kept that which the Lord commanded thee.” [Verses 13, 14.]
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 34)
After this severe rebuke, Samuel left Saul to pursue his own way and follow his own impulses. And Saul found that the work left for him to do had been left undone. He had not done his part as a kingly general over armies; and when the crisis came, there was no smith found throughout all the land of Israel. The Philistines had been wiser than the Hebrews, and had worked diligently to prevent the Hebrews from obtaining an education in preparing their swords and spears.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 35)
The Hebrews had depended upon the facilities of the Philistines to prepare their instruments of war. “So it came to pass in the day of battle, that there was neither sword nor spear found in the hand of any of the people that were with Saul and Jonathan: but with Saul and with Jonathan his son was there found.” [Verse 22.] Thus Saul was left without any special direction from the Lord because of his presumption; and he knew not what to do. He looked at the immense army of the Philistines; but he trusted in his own skill and aptitude—for he had but a small army and this was incomplete and disorderly, many of them hiding away for fear and terror.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 36)
But the Lord saw in Jonathan a man of pure integrity, one to whom He could draw nigh, and upon whose heart He could move.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 37)
“Now it came to pass upon a day, that Jonathan the son of Saul said unto the young man that bare his armor, Come, and let us go over to the Philistines’ garrison, that is on the other side. But he told not his father. And Saul tarried in the uttermost part of Gibeah under a pomegranate tree which is in Migron: and the people which were with him were about six hundred men....
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 38)
“And Jonathan said to the young man which bare his armor, Come, and let us go over to the garrison of these uncircumcised; it may be that the Lord will work for us; for there is no restraint with the Lord to save by many or by few. And his armorbearer said unto him, Do all that is in thine heart; turn thee; behold, I am with thee according to thy heart. Then said Jonathan, Behold, we will pass over to these men, and we will discover ourselves unto them. If they say thus unto us, Tarry until we come to thee; then we will stand still in our place, and will not go up unto them. But if they say thus, Come up unto us; then we will go up; for the Lord hath delivered them into our hand; and this shall be a sign unto us.” [1 Samuel 14:1, 2, 6-10.] Here was a man who put the Lord first.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 39)
“And both of them discovered themselves unto the garrison of the Philistines; and the Philistines said, Behold, the Hebrews come forth out of the holes where they had hid themselves. And the men of the garrison answered Jonathan and his armorbearer and said, Come up to us and we will show you a thing. And Jonathan said unto his armorbearer, Come up after me; for the Lord hath delivered them into the hands of Israel.” [Verses 11, 12.] Here we have an evidence that the enemy knew the weakness of the armies of Israel, and of their hiding in the holes and the secret places; and they taunted them and mocked them for their cowardice.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 40)
“And Jonathan climbed up on his hands and on his feet, and his armorbearer after him: and they fell before Jonathan; and his armorbearer slew after him. And that first slaughter, which Jonathan and his armorbearer made, was about twenty men, within as it were an acre of land which a yoke of oxen might plow.” [Verses 13, 14.]
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 41)
[Jonathan] and his armorbearer had asked a sign of the Lord, and the challenge had come, the sign was given. These two men placed their hope in God and went forward. But they had hard climbing to do to reach the spot. They climbed up on their hands and upon their feet, Jonathan saying at every step, “The Lord hath delivered them into the hand of Israel.” [Verse 12.]
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 42)
This was no easy passage for the brave adventurers. The top of the precipice was encamped with Philistines; the two camps were in sight of each other; but up the steep sides of this rocky eminence, Jonathan and his armorbearer ventured, using hands and feet in their climb. To outward appearance, this adventure seemed rash, and contrary to all military rules; but the Lord had moved upon these men, and Jonathan went forward, saying at each step, “It may be that the Lord will work for us.” [Verse 6.]
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 43)
These two men evidenced that they were moving under the influence and command of a higher than human general. The action of Jonathan was not done in human rashness; he depended not on what they could themselves do; he was an instrument that God used in behalf of his people Israel. They made their plans, and rested the cause in the hands of God. If the armies of the Philistines recognize them and challenge them, they will advance. If they say come, then we will go forward. This was their sign, and the angels of the Lord prospered.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 44)
It would have been an easy matter for the Philistines to kill these two brave, daring men. But it did not enter into their minds that these two solitary men had come with any intent of hostility. They were regarded as deserters. They were therefore permitted to come without any harm. The wondering men above were looking on, too surprised to gather in their possible object. “And they fell before Jonathan; and his armorbearer slew after him. And that first slaughter which Jonathan and his armorbearer made, was about twenty men, within as it were an acre of land, which a yoke of oxen might plow.” [Verses 13, 14.]
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 45)
This daring work sent a panic throughout the camp. There lay the dead bodies of twenty men, and to their sight there seemed hundreds of men before them prepared for warfare. Who was it that was upon the ground to work with these two men? It was the armies of heaven; “and there was trembling in the host, in the field, and among all the people: the garrison, and the spoilers, they also trembled, and the earth quaked: so it was a very great trembling.” The armies of heaven were revealed to the opposing host of the Philistines. “And the watchmen of Saul in Gibeah looked; and behold, the multitude melted away, and they went on beating down one another.” [Verses 15, 16.]
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 46)
Saul had been sitting in discontent and fear and trembling with his six hundred men under the pomegranate tree. Now he said to the people that were with him, “Number, now, and see who is gone from us. And when they had numbered, behold, Jonathan and his armorbearer were not there. And Saul said unto Ahiah, Bring hither the ark of God. For the ark of God was at that time with the children of Israel. And it came to pass, while Saul talked unto the priest, that the noise that was in the host of the Philistines went on and increased: and Saul said unto the priest, Withdraw thine hand.” He began to think that the time had come for him to do something. “And Saul with all the people that were with him assembled themselves, and they came to the battle: and, behold, every man’s sword was against his fellow, and there was a very great discomfiture.” [Verses 17-20.] When they came to the place of conflict, lo, they saw the men in the Philistine army fighting one another, and not discerning that they were fighting their own army; and there was a very great battle.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 47)
And now see the result: “Moreover the Hebrews that were with the Philistines before that time, which went up with them into the camp from the country round about, even they also turned to be with the Israelites that were with Saul and Jonathan. Likewise also all the men of Israel which had hid themselves in Mount Ephraim, when they heard that the Philistines fled, even they also followed hard after them in battle. So the Lord saved Israel that day.” [Verses 21-23.]
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 48)
Now Saul, who had been sitting under the pomegranate tree, became very zealous, and made a law, saying, “Cursed be the man that eateth any food until evening, that I may be avenged on mine enemies. So none of the people tasted any food.” [Verse 24.] Jonathan and his armorbearer, who had through God wrought deliverance for Israel—for they were in stern conflict and hand to hand battle—became weak through hunger. This rash oath of Saul’s was a human invention. It was not inspired of God, and God was displeased by it, for the people were weary and faint with hunger.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 49)
“And all they of the land came to a wood; and there was honey upon the ground.” This was the provision of God. He designed that the armies of Israel should partake of the food thus provided, and receive strength. But Saul, who was not under the direction of God, had interposed his rash oath, saying, “Cursed be the man that eateth any food till evening, that I may be avenged upon mine enemies.” “And when the people were come into the wood, the honey dropped; but no man put his hand to his mouth; for the people feared the oath.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 50)
“But Jonathan heard not when his father charged the people with the oath: therefore he put forth the end of the rod that was in his hand, and dipped it in an honey comb, and put his hand to his mouth, and his eyes were enlightened.” His whole system was strengthened to do the work before him. “Then answered one of the people and said, Thy father straitly charged the people with an oath, saying, Cursed be the man that eateth any food this day, And the people were faint. Then said Jonathan, My father hath troubled the land: see, I pray thee, how mine eyes have been enlightened, because I tasted a little of this honey. How much more, if haply the people had eaten freely today of the spoil of the enemy which they found? For had there not been now a much greater slaughter among the Philistines?” [Verses 24-30.]
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 51)
Another test was prepared for Saul after this first lesson. The Lord’s time had come to punish the Amalekites, and Samuel brought Saul the message that Amalek was to be utterly destroyed. God gave commandment unto Saul: “Now go and smite Amalek, and utterly destroy all that they have, and spare them not; but slay both man and woman, infant and suckling, ox and sheep, camel and ass.” [1 Samuel 15:3.] But Saul did not do the work which the Lord had given him to do. He brought in his own human judgments against God’s commandments. “And Saul gathered the people together and numbered them in Telaim, two hundred thousand footmen, and ten thousand men of Judah. And Saul came to a city of Amalek, and laid wait in the valley.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 52)
“And Saul said unto the Kenites, Go, depart, get you down from among the Amalekites, lest I destroy you from among them: for ye shewed kindness to all the children of Israel, when they came up out of Egypt. So the Kenites departed from among the Amalekites. And Saul smote the Amalekites from Havilah until thou comest to Shur, that is over again at Egypt. And he took Agag the king of the Amalekites alive, and utterly destroyed all the people with the edge of the sword. But Saul and the people spared Agag, and the best of the sheep, and of the oxen, and of the fatlings, and of the lambs, and all that was good; and would not utterly destroy them; but everything that was vile and refuse, that they destroyed utterly.” [Verses 4-9.]
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 53)
What a position was [Saul] in. He had the message from God. And God was watching his course to see if he could be trusted with his work as king of Israel. But God said to Samuel, “It repenteth me that I have set up Saul to be king; for he is turned back from following me, and hath not performed my commandments.” [Verse 11.] Saul had had a change of heart; he had been converted to God; but he did not trust the Lord under difficulty.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 54)
This message from God grieved the prophet, and he cried unto the Lord all night. He saw that the people were to have their trial very soon after coming under the rule of a king like other nations around them. Samuel had concluded that because of Saul’s stature and beauty of countenance, he would be greatly in favor; but the displeasure of the Lord was kindled against Saul because of his lack of keen perception to distinguish sacred and holy things, to discern that the requirements of God are supreme, and in trial to show that he did not properly estimate the word given through God’s faithful servant.
(12LtMs, Lt 16, 1897, 55)
Lt 17, 1897
NA “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia April 7, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in ChL 64. Dear _____:
I am wakened at twelve o’clock p.m. In the night season I was conversing with you, and quite a number of others came in and listened to what I had to say.
(12LtMs, Lt 17, 1897, 1)
We should not be discouraged if things of a trying nature arise. Do not let your passion rise. Control yourself. When things occur which seem unexplainable, which do not appear to be in harmony with the great Counsel Book, do not allow your own peace to be spoiled. Remember that there is a Witness, a heavenly messenger, by your side, who is your shield, your fortress. Into it you can run, and be safe. But a word of retaliation will destroy your peace and your confidence in God. Who then is injured? Yourself. Who is grieved and wounded? The Holy Spirit of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 17, 1897, 2)
On every occasion be armed and equipped with “It is written.” God is your armor, on the right hand, and on the left. A flood of hasty words may seek for expression, but say, “No; no. I will not place my feet on Satan’s ground. I will not sacrifice my peace and honor as a child of God. I will keep in the only safe path, close beside Jesus, who has done so much for me. He was tempted, but not overcome. I will follow the example He has left me.” When tempted by the enemy, Christ used the only weapon whereby He could conquer—“It is written.” These words were inspired by the Spirit of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 17, 1897, 3)
Till the place that the Lord would have you fill is assigned you, do your duty where you are, and know that under a special director you are doing God’s service. You are not serving men, but your Lord and Master. The Holy Watcher hears every word you utter, and marks your every action. He weighs the Spirit that prompts the utterances and actions.
(12LtMs, Lt 17, 1897, 4)
You are fighting for an immortal crown, and those who strive for this crown must fight lawfully. Many who might ride victoriously into the harbor will make shipwreck of the faith. But looking unto Jesus, the Author and Finisher of your faith, you may say as did Peter, when the Lord asked His disciples, “Will ye also go away?”“Lord, to whom shall we go; thou hast the words of eternal life.” [John 6:67, 68.]
(12LtMs, Lt 17, 1897, 5)
Many of those who had been following Christ apostatized almost immediately after the miracle of the loaves. Why did they do this? “Ye seek me,” said the One who knows all things, “not because ye saw the miracles, but because ye did eat of the loaves, and were filled.” [Verse 26.] Christ made the miracle of the loaves the occasion of His wonderful sermon on the bread of life. The result was that many, when they heard the conditions of eternal life and entrance into the kingdom of God, “went back, and walked no more with him.” [Verse 66.] They came only for the temporal advantages they could obtain.
(12LtMs, Lt 17, 1897, 6)
Be not surprised if great changes are made. Do not wonder if the men who have felt themselves capable of handling the consciences of their fellow men, and of controlling the minds and talents God has given them, should go back and walk no more with those who believe the truth. The truth makes too great a demand upon them. When they see that they must die to self, and practice the principles of self-denial, they are displeased because they cannot gratify their ambitious desire to rule other men. Their true characters will appear. Some will make total shipwreck of the faith. “They went out from us, but they were not of us,” said John, and so it will be again. [1 John 2:19.]
(12LtMs, Lt 17, 1897, 7)
Hold fast to the truth, the precious, sanctifying truth. You are then in the best of company, and the very highest intelligences are beholding your course of action. You are a spectacle to the world, to angels, and to men. Under provocation, your work is to hold the faith and a good conscience, “Which some having put away, concerning faith have made shipwreck.” [1 Timothy 1:19.]
(12LtMs, Lt 17, 1897, 8)
Know that in times of trial you have a helper who will enable you to keep your words choice and your attitude circumspect. I will give you a Bible recipe: “Beloved, think it not strange concerning the fiery trial which is to try you, as though some strange thing happened unto you, but rejoice, inasmuch as ye are partakers of Christ’s sufferings, that, when his glory shall be revealed, ye may be glad also with exceeding joy. If ye be reproached for the name of Christ, happy are ye; for the spirit of glory and of God resteth upon you: on their part he is evil spoken of, but on your part he is glorified. But let none of you suffer as a murderer, or as a thief, or as an evildoer, or as a busy body in other men’s matters. Yet if any man suffer as a Christian, let him not be ashamed; but let him glorify God in this behalf. For the time is come that judgment must begin at the house of God, and if it first begin at us, what shall the end be of them that obey not the gospel of God? And if the righteous scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear? Wherefore let them that suffer according to the will of God commit the keeping of their souls unto him in well doing, as unto a faithful Creator.” [1 Peter 4:12-19.]
(12LtMs, Lt 17, 1897, 9)
There are those who profess to be sincere Christians, but who, when they see a soul that has repented of his sin, and is struggling heavenward, will do a work similar to that of Satan, which we read of in the third chapter of Zechariah. Here Joshua represents God’s people, and the angel of the Lord is Jesus Christ, our Redeemer. Christ is about to bestow special favors upon His repentant people. But Satan is not in harmony with Joshua. He had been fighting against him continually, and now he brings before Christ the past wrong course of the people, which he tempted them to pursue. With his opposing argument he stands at the right hand of the Redeemer, ready to resist the work that Christ is about to do—to pardon and not to condemn the souls that had come to Him for forgiveness.
(12LtMs, Lt 17, 1897, 10)
How does Christ answer the pretendedly pious angel, who is an apostate, and the originator of sin? “And the Lord said unto Satan, The Lord rebuke thee, O Satan; even the Lord that hath chosen Jerusalem rebuke thee. Is not this a brand plucked out of the fire? Now Joshua was clothed with filthy garments, and stood before the angel.” [Verses 2, 3.] Christ, the Restorer, said in the hearing of the destroyer, to the angel that stood before him, “Take away the filthy garments from him. And unto him he said, Behold I have caused thine iniquity to pass from thee, and I will clothe thee with change of raiment. And I said, Let them set a fair mitre upon his head, so they set a fair mitre upon his head, and clothed him with garments.
(12LtMs, Lt 17, 1897, 11)
“And the angel of the Lord stood by. And the angel of the Lord protested unto Joshua, saying, Thus saith the Lord of hosts, If thou wilt walk in my ways, and if thou wilt keep my charge, then thou shalt also judge my house, and shalt also keep my court, and I will give thee places to walk among these that stand by. Hear now, O Joshua, the high priest, thou and thy fellows that sit before thee; for they are men wondered at; for, behold, I will bring forth my servant the BRANCH.” [Verses 4-8.]
(12LtMs, Lt 17, 1897, 12)
What is the language of those who stand before God forgiven? “I will greatly rejoice in the Lord, my soul shall be joyful in my God; for he hath clothed me with the garments of salvation, he hath covered me with the robe of righteousness. As the bridegroom decketh himself with ornaments, and as a bride adorneth herself with her jewels. For as the earth bringeth forth her bud, and as the garden causeth the things that are sown in it to spring forth, so the Lord God will cause righteousness and praise to spring forth before all the nations.” [Isaiah 61:10, 11.] Here nature is opened before us as an object lesson, from which we are to learn.
(12LtMs, Lt 17, 1897, 13)
“For Zion’s sake will I not hold my peace, and for Jerusalem’s sake I will not rest, until the righteousness thereof go forth as brightness, and the salvation thereof as a lamp that burneth. And the Gentiles shall see thy righteousness, and all kings thy glory; and thou shalt be called by a new name, which the mouth of the Lord shall name; thou shalt also be a crown of glory in the hand of the Lord, and a royal diadem in the hand of thy God.” [Isaiah 62:1-3.] Therefore I say unto you, Although you may be sorely tempted by the accusations of those who are helping the enemy in his work of discouraging and disheartening, look to the Word, “It is written,” and hold fast your confidence in God.
(12LtMs, Lt 17, 1897, 14)
Comfort your heart with these words: “Blessed is the man whose transgression is forgiven, whose sin is covered. Blessed is the man unto whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity, and in whose spirit there is no guile.... I acknowledged my sin unto thee, and mine iniquity have I not hid. I said, I will confess my transgressions unto the Lord, and thou forgavest me the iniquity of my sin. For this shall every one that is godly pray unto thee in a time when thou mayest be found: surely the floods of great waters they shall not come nigh unto him. Thou art my hiding place; thou shalt preserve me from trouble, thou shalt compass me about with songs of deliverance. I will instruct thee and teach thee in the way which thou shalt go. I will guide thee with mine eye.” [Psalm 32:1, 2, 5-8.]
(12LtMs, Lt 17, 1897, 15)
I ask you if these words are not as a granite wall, to encompass you. Do not be thrown off your balance by the methods and plans of finite men, who would aid the enemy to clothe you with the filthy garments of your past life, presenting to you in the worst light your past sins, that they may place you at their footstool, and who, if they could, would place you under the rebuke of God. But the Lord has given you consolation. “Many sorrows shall be to the wicked, but he that trusteth in the Lord, mercy shall compass him about.” [Verse 10.]
(12LtMs, Lt 17, 1897, 16)
Be not in any way dismayed, for man is not to be your judge. Praise God, all judgment is committed to One who has borne our sins in His own body on the tree. Every man should be exceedingly thankful that God has excused him from climbing on the judgment seat and punishing his brethren as he thinks they should be punished for their past transgressions.
(12LtMs, Lt 17, 1897, 17)
Let not any man yoke up with Satan, and do his work by accusing his brethren. Those who name the name of Christ are to depart from all iniquity. They are to reach out their hands and grasp firmly the hands of their brethren. If those who are so ready to accuse their brethren would think of their own mistakes and covetousness, which is idolatry, they would humble their hearts before God.
(12LtMs, Lt 17, 1897, 18)
“Be glad in the Lord, and rejoice, ye righteous; and shout for joy, all ye that are upright in heart.” [Verse 11.] “The Lord bringeth the counsel of the heathen to nought: he maketh the devices of the people of none effect. The counsel of the Lord standeth forever, the thoughts of his heart to all generations. Blessed is the nation whose God is the Lord; and the people whom he hath chosen for his own inheritance.... Behold, the eye of the Lord is upon them that fear him, upon them that hope in his mercy; to deliver their soul from death, and to keep them alive in famine. Our soul waiteth for the Lord; he is our help and our shield. For our heart shall rejoice in him, because we have trusted in his holy name. Let thy mercy, O Lord, be upon us, according as we hope in thee.” [Psalm 33:10-12, 18-22.]
(12LtMs, Lt 17, 1897, 19)
There is hope for the erring. God would have us trust in Him, and walk in faith and righteousness before Him. “The Lord is nigh unto them that are of a broken heart; and saveth such as be of a contrite spirit.” [Psalm 34:18.] “Seek ye the Lord while he may be found; call ye upon him while he is near. Let the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts, and let him return unto the Lord, and he will have mercy upon him, and to our God; for he will abundantly pardon.” [Isaiah 55:6, 7.]
(12LtMs, Lt 17, 1897, 20)
God only can read the motives which prompt to action. Then why should man seek to fill this situation? Why should he say to one, “Sit thou at my right hand,” and to another, whom he does not favor, or who does not sanction his plans and ideas, “Sit thou at my footstool”? This is the work of men who are not worked by the Holy Spirit, who have taken to themselves the privilege of excusing their own sins, and condemning others. To all such God says, “Take heed how you put forth your finger, and speak words of vanity against those whom the Spirit of God has not destroyed, but restored and pardoned.”
(12LtMs, Lt 17, 1897, 21)
My spirit is stirred within me when those who should humble themselves before God exalt themselves and pass judgment upon the transgressions of their fellow men, when these transgressions have been repented of, and in those whom they condemn the prayer has been fulfilled, “A new heart will I give thee.” [Ezekiel 36:26.] What would these Pharisaical ones say were the curtain rolled back, and they could see God and the holy angels rejoicing with singing over those whom they condemned? “Take heed that ye despise not one of these little ones, for I say unto you, That in heaven their angels do always behold the face of my Father which is in heaven.” [Matthew 18:10.]
(12LtMs, Lt 17, 1897, 22)
Lt 18, 1897
Those in Responsible Positions in our Publishing Houses “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia January 1897 Portions of this letter are published in PM 215, 217. To Those in Responsible Positions in our Publishing Houses:
I am troubled in regard to the use of pictures in our publications. Some of our papers seem bent on using them in season and out of season. Some of the cuts used are very inferior, and but poorly illustrate the subjects represented. I hope our publications will not come to represent a comic almanac.
(12LtMs, Lt 18, 1897, 1)
On one point I wish to speak decidedly: that is in regard to using in the papers the cuts from my books. Who has given the publishing houses permission to do this? Such use makes the pictures so common that it hurts the book. Is this right? Let it be understood that hereafter the cuts from my books are not to be used in the papers.
(12LtMs, Lt 18, 1897, 2)
There should be greater care in the choice of subjects for illustrations. Cuts of auto de fe, Catholic pictures of persecution and burning, should be kept out of our publications. It is enough to read of these wicked deeds, without trying to bring them, in all their terrible details before the eyes. When I was a child, Fox’s Book of Martyrs was given me to read. I saw the pictures representing various horrible acts of cruelty. I could scarcely eat or sleep. Day and night I was passing through the horrors, identifying myself with the suffering ones. I almost lost confidence in God because He allowed such things. It was a long time before I could overcome the impression made on my mind. Whenever the Book of Martyrs, or any other book of like illustrations, finds its way into my library, I hide it, that no child may be caused to suffer as I did. Such pictures do not increase faith.
(12LtMs, Lt 18, 1897, 3)
I would not altogether condemn the use of pictures, but let fewer be used, and only such as are good illustrations of the subject. Bear in mind that illustrations should be choice rather than numerous.
(12LtMs, Lt 18, 1897, 4)
Lt 19, 1897
Haughey, J. H. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia July 4, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 3SM 252-255; VSS 65-66; SpM 90-92. + My Brother:
Your letter has been received and read, and this is the first mail that could bear an answer to you.
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 1)
The subject that has been placed before me for counsel is one that needs to be carefully considered. Our sisters whose minds are agitated upon the subject of again resuming the reform dress should be prayerfully cautious in every move they make. We have now the most solemn, important test given to us from the Word of God for this special period of time. This test is for the whole world. The Lord does not require that any tests of human inventions shall be brought in to divert the minds of the people or create controversy in any line.
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 2)
It may be that some are thirsting for distinction in some way. If they are thirsting for a battle with satanic agencies, let them be sure that they first have on every piece of the armor of God. If they have not, they will surely be worsted, and make for themselves grievous trials and disappointments that they are not prepared to meet. Let all seek the Lord most earnestly for the deep and rich experience that is to be found in the subject of heart preparation to follow Christ wherever He shall lead the way.
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 3)
“If any man will come after me,” He says, “let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me.” [Matthew 16:24.] These words are to be weighed well. The man who wishes to follow Christ, who chooses to walk in His footsteps, will find self-denial and the cross in that path. All who follow Christ will understand what this involves.
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 4)
God’s tests are now to stand out plain and unmistakable. There are storms before us, conflicts of which few dream. There is no need now for any special alteration in our dress. The plain, simple style of dress now worn, made in the most healthful way, demands no hoops, and no long trails, and is presentable anywhere, and these things should not come in to divert our minds from the grand test which is to decide the eternal destiny of a world—the commandments of God and the faith of Jesus.
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 5)
We are nearing the close of this world’s history. A plain, direct testimony is now needed, as given in the Word of God, in regard to the plainness of dress. This should be our burden. But it is too late now to become enthusiastic in making a test of this matter. The desire to follow Christ in all humility of mind, preparing the heart, purifying the character, is by no means an easy work. Our sisters may be assured that the Lord has not inspired them to make a test of that which was once given as a blessing, but which by many was hated and despised as a curse.
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 6)
The reform dress, which was once advocated, proved a battle at every step. Members of the church, refusing to adopt this healthful style of dress, caused dissension and discord. With some there was no uniformity and taste in the preparation of the dress as it had been plainly set before them. This was food for talk. The result was that the objectionable features, the pants, were left off. The burden of advocating the reform dress was removed because that which was given as a blessing was turned into a curse. There were some things which made the reform dress a decided blessing. With it the ridiculous hoops which were then the fashion, could not possibly be worn. The long dress skirts trailing on the ground and sweeping up the filth of the streets, could not be patronized. But a more sensible style of dress has now been adopted, which does not embrace these objectionable features. The fashionable part may be discarded, and should be, by all who will read the Word of God. The time spent in advocating the dress reform should be devoted to the study of the Word of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 7)
The dress of our people should be made most simple. The skirt and sack I have mentioned may be used—not that just that pattern and nothing else should be established, but a simple style as was represented in that dress. Some have supposed that the very pattern given was the pattern that all were to adopt. This is not so. But something as simple as this would be the best we could adopt under the circumstances. No one precise style has been given me as the exact rule to guide all in their dress. But this I do know, the very same objections, only much stronger exist today as when the short dress was discarded. The Lord has not indicated that it is the duty of our sisters to go back to the reform dress. Simple dresses should be worn. Try your talent, my sisters, in this essential reform.
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 8)
The people of God will have all the test that they can bear.
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 9)
The Sabbath question is a test that will come to the whole world. We need nothing to come in now to make a test for God’s people that shall make more severe for them the test they already have. The enemy would be pleased to get up issues now to divert the minds of the people and get them into controversy over this subject of dress. Let our sisters dress plainly, as many do, having the dress of good material, durable, modest, appropriate for this age, and let not the dress question fill the mind.
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 10)
I wish to have the people bear in mind the history of the spies. They went up to view the land which the children of Israel afterward inherited. But the unfaithful spies brought a false and exaggerated report of the difficulties to be encountered, so that the whole congregation of Israel received the unwelcome tidings. Caleb and Joshua alone brought a correct testimony. These two brave men stilled the people before Moses and said, “Let us go up at once, for we are well able to overcome it.” [Numbers 13:30.] They knew that no time was to be lost, because it would be noised abroad of their coming up to spy the land, and the people would be prepared to make determined resistance. “But the men that went up with him said, We be not able to go up against the people; for they are stronger than we.... The land, through which we have gone to search it, is a land that eateth up the inhabitants thereof; and all the people that we saw in it are men of a great stature. And there we saw the giants, the sons of Anak, which come of the giants, and we were in our sight as grasshoppers, and so we were in their sight.” [Verses 31-33.]
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 11)
The Lord manifested His displeasure because of their cowardice and unbelief, and his judgments were visited upon them just in accordance with their unbelief. Forty years they were to wander in the wilderness, and, said God, “ye shall know my breach of promise.” [Numbers 14:34.] The men who brought the evil report died by the plague before the Lord. Caleb and Joshua were the only adults who lived to go into the goodly land.
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 12)
“And Moses told these sayings unto all the children of Israel: and the people mourned greatly.” [Verse 39.] When they heard that they were to wander forty years more in the wilderness, those who had refused to go up and possess the land at God’s command were then determined to go to the battle. But while they had been delaying, the people of the land had been preparing to meet and resist their passage.
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 13)
“And they rose up early in the morning, and gat them up into the top of the mountain, saying, Lo, we be here, and will go up unto the place which the Lord hath promised: for we have sinned. And Moses said, Wherefore now do ye transgress the commandment of the Lord? but it shall not prosper. Go not up: for the Lord is not among you; that ye be not smitten before your enemies. For the Amalekites and the Canaanites are there before you, and ye shall fall by the sword: because ye have turned away from the Lord, therefore the Lord will not be with you. But they presumed to go unto the hill top; nevertheless the ark of the covenant of the Lord, and Moses, departed not out of the camp. Then the Amalekites came down, and the Canaanites which dwelt in that hill, and smote them, and discomfited them, even unto Hormah.” [Verses 40-45.]
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 14)
The Lord has not moved upon any of our sisters to adopt the reform dress. The difficulties that we once had to meet are not to be brought in again. There was so much resistance among our own people that it was removed from them. It would then have proved a blessing. But there must be no new branching out into singular forms of dress. There have been plenty of strange doings in Battle Creek with the bicycle craze, which has greatly displeased the Lord and greatly dishonored the cause of present truth. God holds those responsible who have expended money in this direction. They have greatly injured the influence of the work and cause of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 15)
Let there be no tests manufactured now to absorb time and minds to bring in new reforms. We have now to face tremendous issues, and all the time and power of our thought are to be called to the living issues before us. I know that the voice raised to create something new in the matter of dress now should be quenched. Put all there is of you in working to get as close as possible to perishing souls. See if you cannot, by a consistent, harmonious, all-round character, by the presentations of truth to individuals who are out of Christ, save some souls from ruin.
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 16)
I beg of our people to walk carefully and circumspectly before God. Follow the custom of dress in health reform, but do not again introduce the short dress and pants, unless you have the word of the Lord for it. Each of my brethren and sisters have a safer guide than any human agent. Let them understand that there is an individual duty for them to perform. This is but feebly understood by a large number of the members of the church. There is far greater need, in this day of deception and false claims, of heeding the proclamation of John, “Behold the Lamb of God, that taketh away the sin of the world.” [John 1:29.]
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 17)
There are those who with all the light of the Word of God will not obey His directions. They will follow their own tastes and do as they please. These give a wrong example to the youth, and to those who have newly come to the truth who have made it a practice to copy every new style of dress, in trimmings that take time and money, and there is little difference between their apparel and that of the worldling. Let our sisters conscientiously heed the Word of God for themselves. Do not begin the work of reform for others until you do, for you will have no success; you cannot possibly change the heart. The working of the Spirit of God inwardly will show a change outwardly. Those who venture to disobey the plainest statements of inspiration will not hear and receive and act upon all the human efforts made to bring these idolaters to a plain, unadorned, simple, neat, proper dress that does not in any way make them odd or singular. They continue to expose themselves by hanging out the colors of the world.
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 18)
To get up a different style of dress will not change the heart. The difficulty is that the church needs converting daily. There are many things that will come to try and test these poor, deluded, spiritually-dwarfed, world-loving souls; they will have deep trials. Let there be no human-made test, for God has prepared to prove them and try them. If they will heed His admonitions and warnings, and humble their souls before Him, let Him be the object of their worship; He will receive them graciously. There are those who will never return to their first love. They will never cease to make an idol of self. Nothing in any line of human wisdom should be presented to test, for it will only give them an excuse to make the final plunge into apostasy. There are those who know not whom they are serving.
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 19)
Knowledge and power belong to God. The ignorantly guilty must learn and obey. We must wait patiently, and not fail nor be discouraged; for God has His purposes all arranged. While we are burdened and distressed, but waiting in patient submission, our invisible Helper will be doing the work that we do not see, and bring to pass in His providences events which will work decided reformations, or will separate these half-hearted, world-loving members of the church from the believers.
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 20)
The Lord knows all about every case, and how to deal with each. Our wisdom is limited to a point, while infinite wisdom comprehends the end from the beginning. Our whole term of probation is very brief, and a short work will be done on the earth. God’s own tests will come; His proving will be sharp and decisive. Let every soul humble himself before God, and prepare for what is before us.
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 21)
“I will therefore that men pray everywhere, lifting up holy hands, without wrath and doubting. In like manner also, that women adorn themselves in modest apparel, with shamefacedness and sobriety; not with broidered hair, or gold, or pearls, or costly array; but (which becometh women professing godliness) with good works. Let the woman learn in silence with all subjection.” [1 Timothy 2:8-11.] “Likewise, ye wives, be in subjection to your own husbands; that if any obey not the word, they may without the word be won by the conversation of the wives; while they behold your chaste conversation coupled with fear. Whose adorning let it not be that outward adorning of plaiting the hair, and of wearing of gold, and of putting on of apparel.”“Finally, be ye all of one mind, having compassion one of another, love as brethren, be pitiful, be courteous.” [1 Peter 3:1-3, 8.]
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 22)
This chapter is of great consequence to all who desire enlightenment. They must receive the Word of inspiration, and conclude that for their present spiritual good it is best to place themselves on the Lord’s side, and under His divine guidance heed and obey His “It is written.”
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 23)
“But sanctify the Lord God in your hearts: and be ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you with meekness and fear.” [Verse 15.] The hope of the believer is the subject that is to occupy his thoughts. Nothing in the line of dress must divert the minds away from the truth. You are to bear witness for the truth for which you have the Word of God as Yea and Amen in Christ Jesus. A good conversation in Christ Jesus is a distinguishing contrast to the cheap, chaffing talk of hats, of dress, of fashion, and adorning of the person.
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 24)
“Forasmuch then as Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh, arm yourselves likewise with the same mind: for he that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin; that he no longer should live the rest of his time in the flesh to the lusts of men, but to the will of God. For the time past of our life may suffice us to have wrought the will of the Gentiles, when we walked in lasciviousness, lusts, excess of wine, revelings, banquetings, and abominable idolatries: wherein they think it strange that ye run not with them to the same excess of riot, speaking evil of you: who shall give account to him who is ready to judge the quick and the dead. For this cause was the gospel preached also to them that are dead, that they might be judged according to men in the flesh, and live according to God in the Spirit. But the end of all things is at hand: be ye therefore sober, and watch unto prayer.” [1 Peter 4:1-7.]
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 25)
“Yet if any man suffer as a Christian, let him not be ashamed; but let him glorify God on this behalf. For the time is come that judgment must begin at the house of God: and if it first begin at us, what shall be the end of them that obey not the gospel of God? And if the righteous scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear? Wherefore let them that suffer according to the will of God commit the keeping of their souls to him in well doing, as unto a faithful Creator.” [Verses 16-19.]
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 26)
Let every one who claims to be a Christian bear in mind that they are to arm themselves with the same mind. When you shall obey these positive directions in the Word of God, then you may be used as missionaries in many lines to do the will of God, to sanctify the Lord in your hearts, and be ready always to give a reason of the hope that is in you with meekness and fear. Sisters can speak to sisters in the love that they have for their souls. Let not a thread of your own spirit be woven in with your words. You may do this, if you are sanctifying the Lord God in your hearts, for this means that you are uplifting your heart in prayer to God through Jesus Christ for the Holy Spirit’s guidance.
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 27)
“As obedient children, not fashioning yourselves according to the former lusts in your ignorance; but as he which hath called you is holy, so be ye holy in all manner of conversation; because it is written, Be ye holy; for I am holy. And if ye call on the Father, which without respect of persons judgeth according to every man’s work, pass the time of your sojourning here in fear: forasmuch as ye know that ye were not redeemed with corruptible things, such as silver and gold, from your vain conversation, received by tradition from your fathers: but with the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot.” [1 Peter 1:14-19.]
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 28)
Please read carefully these precious words given for you, for “All Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness: that the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good works.” [2 Timothy 3:16, 17.] Let these conscientious sisters, who would enter upon the work of dress reform, walk circumspectly, and work with that kind of labor that is corresponding with the burden of the message.
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 29)
In our intercourse and association with unbelievers, we must bear in mind that God has given to every one talents to use, and improve by using. The talent of speech is a gift of God, and when we hear so much useless, meaningless chit-chat, we may be assured that those who thus use this precious gift are not Christians. They are not abiding in Christ: nor is Christ abiding in them. Every tree is known by its fruits. “A good man out of the good treasure of the heart, bringeth forth good things: and an evil man out of the evil treasure bringeth forth evil things.” [Matthew 12:35.] What a flood of evil and rubbish flows forth because of the talent of speech. And how many are denying Christ by their speech! Instead of making a good confession of Christ by their manner of conversation, they say, “I know not the man.” [Matthew 26:74.] It is easy enough to have a form of godliness; but to make a whole-sided confession of our faith in Christ means that our words and dress and spirit shall testify to the fact.
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 30)
These things will prove to others just where you stand—under the bloodstained banner of Prince Emmanuel, or under the black banner of the prince of this world. The entire man will reveal that we are volunteers for the one party or the other. If the tongue works iniquity, then all our words of profession are worthless; for in our words we say, “I know not the man.”
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 31)
Words and actions are a living testimony for or against Christ. No human being can communicate that which he has not. They may draw nigh unto God with their lips, but their hearts are far from Him. All who confess Christ must have a Christ to confess. A whole Saviour gave His life for us, and the whole being—mind, heart, soul, and strength—must be fully consecrated in service to Him. A divided heart can not be used in His service. The words that fell from the lips of Christ were, “Ye cannot serve God and mammon; for either ye will love the one and hate the other, or else ye will hold to the one and despise the other.” [Matthew 6:24.] The conversation, the dress, the whole conduct, will be a visible expression of the grace, the love, the devotion within. The operation of the Spirit of God is revealed in that faith that works by love and purifies the soul; and the graces of Christ are manifested in the sanctification of the spirit. This is a true confession of Christ. Words and profession count nothing with any human being unless Christ is abiding in the heart.
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 32)
I write these things that you may understand what I say. The great testing time is right upon us, when every human being will take sides. Christ’s words are definite. “He that is not with me,” wearing My yoke of restraint, and lifting My burdens of obedience, “is against me.” [Matthew 12:30.] All who have given themselves unreservedly to Christ will not deny Him in their words, in their dress, in their spirit, or by their influence. If they know the man, they will do Him service with every jot of influence they possess.
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 33)
All who are self-exalted, and speak evil of others, are denying Christ. All who devote their time, and thought, and affections to dress, deny Christ. All who inconsiderately let flow a stream of idle, foolish words, jesting and joking, unkind, mocking words, deny Christ. Many who act a part in our Sabbath schools as teachers need a decidedly changed experience before they will reveal Christ. They love self, and they interpose their love of self between the soul and Christ. Their outward apparel hangs out the sign of their service. Those who devote time and money to outward display dishonor their Redeemer by misrepresenting Him to the world. They confess by their apparel that they are of the world. As the congregations assemble on the Sabbath, to say by this act that they worship God, many things in their apparel testify against them. Their influence denies the presence and peace and grace of Christ in the soul.
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 34)
Christ declared that those who honor Him, He will honor. [1 Samuel 2:30.] “In the multitude of words there wanteth not sin.” [Proverbs 10:19.] Much talking does not speak forth the praises of Christ. Here is a work to be done. Every soul, unless daily converted to Christ, will dishonor God, and make the whole universe of heaven ashamed of them. They dishonor their own souls and do great injustice to themselves. The Author of our being claims from us, as His subjects, more, a great deal more, and of altogether a different character than we give Him. He has entrusted us with ability to learn of Him out of His Word, and with power to obey every requirement of His Word. This truth is able to make us wise unto salvation.
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 35)
“As many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name.” [John 1:12.] In believing and doing His words, we are eating the bread of life; we are drinking of the blood of the Son of God. All such Christ declares, “hath eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last day.... As the living Father hath sent me, and I live by the Father; so he that eateth me, even he shall live by me.” [John 6:54, 57.]
(12LtMs, Lt 19, 1897, 36)
Lt 19a, 1897
My Brethren in Battle Creek “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia July 27, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 2SM 147-153; 5MR 413-414. My Brethren in Battle Creek:
We are living in the last days of this earth’s history, and we may be surprised at nothing in the line of apostasies and denials of the truth. Unbelief has now come to be a fine art, which men work at to the destruction of their souls. There is constant danger of there being shams in pulpit preachers, whose lives contradict the words they speak; but the voice of warning and of admonition will be heard as long as time shall last; and those who are guilty of transactions that should never be entered into, when reproved or counseled through the Lord’s appointed agencies, will resist the message and refuse to be corrected. They will go on as did Pharaoh, and Nebuchadnezzar, until the Lord takes away their reason, and their hearts become unimpressible. The Lord’s word will come to them; but if they choose not to hear it, the Lord will make them responsible for their own ruin.
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 1)
In John the Baptist the Lord raised up for Himself a messenger to prepare the way of the Lord. He was to bear to the world an unflinching testimony in reproving and denouncing sin. Luke, in announcing his mission and work, says: “And he shall go before him in the spirit and power of Elias, to turn the hearts of the fathers to the children, and the disobedient to the wisdom of the just; to make ready a people prepared for the Lord.” [Luke 1:17.]
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 2)
Many of the Pharisees and Sadducees came to the baptism of John, and addressing these, he said, “O generation of vipers, who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come? Bring forth therefore fruits meet for repentance; and think not to say within yourselves, We have Abraham to our father: for I say unto you, that God is able of these stones to raise up children unto Abraham. And now also the axe is laid unto the root of the trees: therefore every tree which bringeth not forth good fruit is hewn down, and cast into the fire. I indeed baptize you with water unto repentance: but he that cometh after me is mightier than I, whose shoes I am not worthy to bear: He shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost and with fire, whose fan is in his hand, and who shall thoroughly purge his floor, and gather his wheat into the garner: but he will burn up the chaff with unquenchable fire.”Matthew 3:7-12.
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 3)
The voice of John was lifted up like a trumpet. His commission was: “Show my people their transgression, and the house of Jacob their sins.” [Isaiah 58:1.] He had obtained no human scholarship. God and nature had been his teachers. But one was needed to prepare the way before Christ who was bold enough to make his voice heard like the prophets of old, summoning the degenerate nation to repentance.
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 4)
And all went forth into the wilderness to hear him. Unlearned fishermen and peasants came from the surrounding countries and from regions nigh and afar off. The Roman soldiers from the barracks of Herod came to hear. Chieftains came with their swords girded by their sides, to put down anything that savored of riot or rebellion. The avaricious tax-gatherers came from the regions round about; and from the Sanhedrin came forth the phylacteried priests. All listened as if spellbound; and all came away, even the Pharisee, the Sadducee, and the cold, unimpressionable scoffer of the age, with the sneer gone, and cut to the heart with a sense of their sin. There were no long arguments, no finely cut theories, elaborately delivered in their “firstly,”“secondly,” and “thirdly.” But pure, native eloquence was revealed in the short sentences, every word carrying with it the certainty and truth of the weighty warnings given.
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 5)
The warning message of John was in the same lines as the warning to Nineveh, “In forty days, Nineveh shall be destroyed.” [Jonah 3:4.] Nineveh repented, and called upon God, and God accepted their acknowledgement of Him. Forty years of probation was granted them in which to reveal the genuineness of their repentance and to turn from sin. But Nineveh turned again to the worship of images; her iniquity became deeper and more desperate than before, because the light had come and had not been heeded.
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 6)
John called every class to repentance. To the Pharisees and Sadducees he said, Flee from the wrath to come. Your claims to Abraham as your father are not of the least value to you. They will not impart to you pure principles and holiness of character. Ceremonial sacrifices possess no value unless you discern the object, the Lamb of God, who taketh away the sin of the world. You turn from God’s requirements and follow your own perverted ideas; and you lose those characteristics which constitute you children of Abraham. And, pointing to the rocks in wild confusion around through which the stream was winding its course, he said, “God will of these stones raise up children unto Abraham.” [Matthew 3:7-9.]
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 7)
John the Baptist met sin with open rebuke in men of humble occupation, and in men of high degree. He declared the truth to kings and nobles, whether they would hear or reject it. He spoke personally and pointedly. He reproved the Pharisees of the Sanhedrin because their religion consisted in forms and not in righteousness of pure, willing obedience. Their forms alone were of no value to God. He addressed the soldiers who were made to serve the Roman power, and which often provoked in them insubordination and a spirit of defiance. He spoke to Herod in regard to his marriage with Herodias, saying, It is not lawful for thee to have her. [Matthew 14:4.] He spoke to him of a future retribution, a future judgment when God would judge every man according to his works. John made no reference to the Roman laws, but to the divine statutes given by the Lord God of heaven. There is a distinction made by the great Lawgiver between divine and human enactments.
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 8)
“And the people asked him, saying, What shall we do? He answereth and saith unto them, He that hath two coats, let him impart to him that hath none; and he that hath meat, let him do likewise. Then came also publicans to be baptized, and saith unto him, Master, what shall we do?” Did he say, Leave your toll and custom houses? No, he said to them, “Exact no more than that which is appointed you.” [Luke 3:10-13.] If they were taxgatherers still, they could hold just weights and balances of truth in their hands. They could reform in those things that savored of dishonesty and oppression.
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 9)
“And the soldiers likewise demanded of him, saying, And what shall we do? And he said unto them, Do violence to no man, neither accuse any falsely; and be content with your wages.... And many other things in his exhortation preached he unto the people. But Herod the tetrarch, being reproved by him for Herodias his brother Philip’s wife, and for all the evils which Herod had done, added yet this above all, that he shut up John in prison.” [Verses 14, 18-20.]
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 10)
Christ also spoke pointedly to every class of men. He reproved those who dominated over their fellow men, those whose passions and prejudices caused many to err and compelled many to blaspheme God. The sword of truth was blunted by apologies and suppositions; but Christ called things by their right names. The axe was laid at the root of the tree. He showed that all the religious forms of worship could not save the Jewish nation, because they did not behold and receive by faith the Lamb of God as their Saviour.
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 11)
Just such a work and message as that of John will be carried on in these last days. The Lord has been giving messages to His people, through the instruments He has chosen, and He would have all take heed to the admonitions and warnings He sends.
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 12)
The message preceding the public ministry of the Son of God was, Repent, publicans; repent, Pharisees and Sadducees, “for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.” [Matthew 3:2.] Our message is not to be one of “peace and safety.” [1 Thessalonians 5:3.] As a people who believe in Christ’s soon appearing, we have a work to do, a message to bear—“Prepare to meet thy God.” [Amos 4:12.] We are to lift up the standard, and bear the third angel’s message—the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus.
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 13)
The message we bear must be as direct as was the message of John. He rebuked kings for their iniquity. He rebuked the adultery of Herod. Notwithstanding his life was in peril, the truth did not languish upon his lips. And our work in this age must be as faithfully done. The inhabitants of the world at this time are represented by the dwellers upon the earth at the time of the flood.
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 14)
The wickedness of the inhabitants of the old world is plainly stated: “And God saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually.” [Genesis 6:5.]
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 15)
God became weary of these people whose only thoughts were of pleasure and indulgence. They sought not the counsel of the God who had created them, nor cared to do His will. The rebuke of God was upon them because they followed the imagination of their own hearts continually; and there was violence in the land. “And it repented the Lord that he had made man on the earth, and it grieved him at his heart.”“And God looked upon the earth, and behold, it was corrupt; for all flesh had corrupted his way upon the earth. And God said unto Noah, The end of all flesh is come before me; for the earth is filled with violence through them; and, behold, I will destroy them from the earth.” [Verses 6, 12, 13.]
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 16)
In His teaching Christ referred to this careless disregard of principle. “But as the days of Noah were,” He said, “so shall also the coming of the Son of man be. For as in the days that were before the flood they were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day that Noah entered into the ark, and knew not until the flood came and took them all away; so shall also the coming of the Son of man be.” [Matthew 24:37-39.]
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 17)
Look at the picture which the world presents today. Crime and bloodshed, dishonesty, fraud and bankruptcies exist on every hand. The widows and the fatherless are robbed of their all. Plays, amusements, and horse-races occupy the mind. Rewards are offered to those who excel in these sports, thus keeping the mind in a constant strain of excitement, such as was before the flood, before the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, and of Nineveh.
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 18)
The inhabitants of the earth had the warning given them prior to their overthrow; but the warning was not heeded. They refused to listen in the days of Noah; they mocked at his message. Righteous men lived in that generation. Before the destruction of the Noachic world, Enoch bore his testimony unflinchingly. He, the seventh from Adam, makes reference to the state of the world, and in prophetic visitation saw the condition of the world at the present time. He said, “Behold, the Lord cometh with ten thousands of his saints, to execute judgment upon all, and to convince all that are ungodly among them, of all the ungodly deeds which they have ungodly committed, and of all the hard speeches which ungodly sinners have spoken against Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 19)
“These are murmurers, complainers, walking after their own lusts; and their mouth speaking great swelling words, having men’s persons in admiration because of advantage.” [Jude 14-16.] Then he leaves the testimony for the believers, “But, beloved, remember the words which were spoken before of the apostles of our Lord Jesus Christ. How they told you that there should be mockers in the last time, who would walk after their own ungodly lusts. These be they who separate themselves, sensual, having not the spirit.” [Verses 17-19.]
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 20)
There are special duties to be done, special reproofs to be given, in this period of the earth’s history. The Lord will not leave His church without reproofs and warnings. Sins have become fashionable; but they are nonetheless aggravating in the sight of God. They are glossed over, palliated and excused; the right hand of fellowship is given to the very men who are bringing in false theories and false sentiments, confusing the minds of the people of God, deadening their sensibilities as to what constitutes right principles. Conscience has thus become insensible to the counsels and the reproofs which have been given. The light given, calling to repentance, has been extinguished in the clouds of unbelief and opposition brought in by human plans and human inventions.
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 21)
It is living earnestness that God requires. Ministers may have little learning from books; but if they do the best they can with their talents; if they work as they have opportunity; if they clothe their utterances in the plainest and most simple language; if they are humble men who walk in carefulness and humility, seeking for heavenly wisdom, working for God from the heart, and actuated by one predominating motive—love for Christ and the souls for whom He has died—they will be listened to by men of even superior ability and talents. There will be a charm in the simplicity of the truths they present. Christ is the greatest Teacher that the world has ever known.
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 22)
John had not learned in the schools of the rabbis. Yet kings and nobles, Pharisees and Sadducees, Roman soldiers and officers, trained in all court etiquette, wily, calculating taxgatherers, and world-renowned men, listened to his words. They had confidence in his plain statements, and were convicted of sin. They asked of him, “What shall we do?” [Luke 3:10.] Even Herod Antipas had his last opportunity to hear the truth through this messenger of God. The opportunity came for John to speak face to face with the royal commandment-breaker. And of Herod it is stated that he “heard him gladly.” [Mark 6:20.] He was glad of an opportunity to ask him, “What shall I do?” Herod heard the straightforward reproof of his character and life-practice. He knew he told him the truth. He knew him to be a just man and an holy. But while he respected his frankness, he did not fall in love with his practical godliness. And for his reproof of the wicked king, John lost his liberty and his life.
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 23)
In this age, just prior to the second coming of Christ in the clouds of heaven, the Lord calls for men who will be earnest and prepare a people to stand in the great day of the Lord. The men who have spent long terms in the study of books, are not revealing in their lives that earnest ministry which is essential for this last time. They do not bear a simple, straightforward testimony. Among ministers and students who suppose they must ventilate their learning there is need of the infusion of the Spirit of God. The prayerful, earnest appeals that come from the heart of a whole-souled messenger will create convictions. It will not need the learned men to do this, for they depend more on their learning from books than upon their knowledge of God and Jesus Christ whom He has sent. All who know the only true and living God will know Jesus Christ, the only begotten Son of God, and will preach Jesus Christ and Him crucified.
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 24)
Something must be done to save the people of God from being deceived and led astray. There may be those whose hearts are accustomed to resistance who will seek to do harm to the one who has reproved them, and resort to the law for “damages” done to their poor temporal life, poor souls. Cain killed his brother because, when Abel reproved him for disregard of God’s expressed requirements, he thought he had done him damage. But the Lord said to Cain, “Why art thou wroth? and why is thy countenance fallen? If thou doest well, shalt thou not be accepted? and if thou doest not well, sin lieth at the door. And unto thee shall be his desire, and thou shalt rule over him. And Cain talked with Abel his brother: and it came to pass when they were in the field, that Cain rose up against Abel his brother, and slew him.” [Genesis 4:6-8.]
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 25)
“By faith Abel offered unto God a more excellent sacrifice than Cain, by which he obtained witness that he was righteous, God testifying of his gifts: and by it he being dead yet speaketh.” [Hebrews 11:4.] “In this the children of God are manifest, and the children of the devil: whosoever doeth not righteousness is not of God, neither he that loveth not his brother. For this is the message that ye heard from the beginning, that ye should love one another. Not as Cain, who was of that wicked one, and slew his brother. And wherefore slew he him? Because his own works were evil, and his brother’s righteous.” [1 John 3:10-12.]
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 26)
Does any one suppose that the messages of warning will not come to those whom God reproves? The ones reproved may rise up in indignation and seek to bring the law to bear upon God’s messenger, but in doing this, they are not bringing the law upon the messenger, but upon Christ, who gave the reproof and the warning. When men endanger the work and cause of God by their own wrong course of action, shall they hear no voice of reproof? If the wrongdoer only were concerned, and the work reached no farther than himself, he alone should have the words of warning; but when his course of action is doing positive harm to the cause of truth, and souls are imperiled, God requires that the warning be as broad as the injury done. The testimonies will not be hindered. The words of rebuke and warning, the plain “Thus saith the Lord,” will come from God’s appointed agencies, for the words do not originate with the human instrument; they are from God, who has appointed them their work.
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 27)
If a suit is instituted in earthly tribunals, and God suffers it to come to trial, it is that His own name may be glorified. But a woe will be upon the man who gives himself to do this work. God reads the motives, whatever they may be. I pray that the Lord will teach our brethren to be straightforward, and make no compromise in the matter. The cause of God has been bruised and wounded by men connecting with it who refuse to keep the way of the Lord to do justice and judgment, and the sooner they are separated from it, if they refuse to reform, the better.
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 28)
But the Lord has a controversy with those who have acted in an underhanded manner, those who have failed to do their duty in their responsible positions of trust. Every soul is worth saving, and this poor soul might have been saved from the tempter’s power if those connected with him had faithfully done their duty. The Lord holds them accountable for their neglect of frank, open dealing. Years ago a plain, straightforward work should have been done. But the message given was withheld. If that message given of God had been faithfully delivered at the right time; if as faithful stewards of the grace of God, His people had come close to the erring and prayed with and for him, and perseveringly set matters before him as God had pointed out; if they had striven to save his soul in the place of daubing with untempered mortar, there would not be the showing that there is today.
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 29)
God requires that things be set in order. He calls for men of decided fidelity. He has no use in an emergency for two-sided men. He wants men who will lay their hand upon a wrong work and say, “This is not according to the will of God.” It is this miserable work in dealing with wrongs that God has condemned. It has been hurting souls and marring His work, so that the Lord has ... [unfinished sentence].
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 30)
For years great peril has been threatening the work of God. The Lord has sent warnings and reproof, but they have not been heeded. In the Battle Creek buildings important interests have been piled up which should have been distributed over a larger territory. Man’s reasoning and devising has made things very complicated and hard to disentangle.
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 31)
Let the men who are so fearful of their record here in this world only be one quarter as anxious to have their record good on high, to have their motives pure and lofty and unsullied, and they will feel safe in committing their case to God’s tribunal. Then they can say, It is a small thing for me to be judged by any man’s judgment.
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 32)
Let them assure themselves in the Lord that the decrease is not Christ’s decrease, that their course has been straightforward, that His sacred cause has not been imperilled by human reasoning or man’s judgment. When every one connected with His work will humble themselves before God, One who is mighty in counsel will be their wisdom, their ambition, their joy. If Christ is exalted, then all is well. Let self be hid. O, there has been such a grieving of the Spirit of God, by professed believers, in the manifestation of feelings of jealousy, of envy, of ambition.
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 33)
The work that will meet the mind of the Spirit of God has not yet begun in Battle Creek. When the work of seeking God with all the heart commences, there will be many confessions made that are now buried. I do not at present feel it my duty to confess for those who ought to make, not a general, but a plain, definite confession, and so cleanse the Lord’s institutions from the defilement that has come upon them. They do not meet the point. They do not see. They do not repent. They do not cleanse the soul-temple. The evil is not with one man or with two. It is the whole that needs the cleansing and setting in order.
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 34)
“Behold the Lamb of God that taketh away the sin of the world.” [John 1:29.] Unless there is a thorough reformation and turning unto the Lord, He will surely turn His face from His institution, the publishing house. Take no false panacea for wounds and bruises. Go to Jesus. Tell Him that you must be cleansed and restored. There is not one beyond hope if you will come just as you are. You may put on counterfeit garments of righteousness. You may smile and say that all these difficulties are made up of little or nothing. But God says to you in Battle Creek, “Except ye repent, ye shall all likewise perish.” [Luke 13:3.]
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 35)
Go and tell Jesus of your great needs, the unfaithfulness, the blindness, the lack of discernment. The great want of the soul is truth in the inward parts. Time is too short now to let warnings go unheeded. Should God send me to Battle Creek, I would go. I would bear the testimony given me of God. I would not change a single word from what I have given you. I would lift up my voice as did John and say, “Repent ye, for the kingdom of God is at hand.” [Matthew 3:2; Mark 1:15.] “Escape for thy life.” [Genesis 19:17.] It is a terrible thing to fall into the hands of the living God.
(12LtMs, Lt 19a, 1897, 36)
Lt 20, 1897
Brethren in California Stanmore, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia November 22, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in 16MR 45-56. + Dear brethren in California:
I have confidence that you will help us at this time. We have had a special interest aroused in Stanmore, a beautiful suburb of Sydney. About twenty, I learn, have taken their stand to observe the Sabbath of the Lord, and many more are convicted. The people are deeply interested in the truth, and the important points of present truth are to them as a new revelation. The interest continues to grow, and those who embrace the truth go right to work for their friends, inviting them to come out to hear. More than this, they invite their neighbors and friends to come to their house. They then secure one of our ministers to give a Bible reading. These meetings are made very interesting.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 1)
We have secured a good house for the mission. Here the workers have a home. Instruction is given them to prepare them for the work. Elder Haskell and wife, Elder Starr and wife, Brother Baker, and Brother and Sister Wilson are here. Then there are several women workers, who are selling papers, tracts, and small books. Some days they do very well; then on other days not so well. But they have good average success.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 2)
Those newly come to the faith are all enthusiastic over the idea of erecting a meetinghouse. Two who have just taken their stand on the Sabbath were expressing their desire for a church building. The husband said to the wife, What will you give? She turned to him and said, Husband, what will you give? He said, Let us each write on a slip of paper the sum we propose to give, and then exchange papers.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 3)
They did this, and each had subscribed £5. They told Brother Starr that no doubt they would make it more than this, and since that, they have doubled their subscription, each giving £10. £10 from each is quite a donation. No one has been asked to do anything, and this is a surprising chapter in our experience.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 4)
Yesterday afternoon I talked to the people from Luke 12. This chapter is a lesson of great importance for all the sons and daughters of God. I told them at the close of my talk that we desired to build a church, and that we would accept all the help that was freely given. We should have to move out by faith. We did not design to erect a cathedral, but a plain building, that we would call a tabernacle; one that would be in harmony with our faith. We could not conscientiously spend any of the Lord’s money in needless adornment. We would have a neat structure. Skillful hands could make it very tasteful and appropriate. I told them that the building at Cooranbong was a commendable house of worship, neat, thoroughly well built, and, in harmony with our faith, dedicated to God free from debt. The interest paid on a debt left on any house of worship is a great loss. We propose that this house shall be as a tabernacle for us. We are all pilgrims and strangers; our citizenship is above.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 5)
We would devote this tabernacle to educating and training not the elder members of the church alone, but the children and youth. They are to be taught not to live to please themselves, not to court praise, but to guard their hearts with perpetual vigilance and jealousy, lest they be estranged from God. Teach them what it means to hunger and thirst after righteousness. These lessons must be given, else there will be a thirst for human appreciation and honor, which would be only injury to them should they receive it.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 6)
The Lord understands every sacrifice we make for Him, to contribute to the necessities of His cause, without ostentation or display. Hide self in Jesus. Our great Teacher has plainly defined the way we should walk. The inward spiritual perception of the truth as it is in Jesus will never exalt the human agent in his own estimate of self. The Spirit of God leads the human heart to realize that sanctification of the Spirit brings self-abasement and lowliness.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 7)
December 16
I rise to write at two o’clock. What gives the proper level to the human mind? It is the cross of Calvary. By looking unto Jesus, who is the Author and Finisher of our faith, all the desire for self-glorification is laid in the dust. There comes, as we see aright, a spirit of self-abasement that promotes lowliness and humbleness of mind. As we contemplate the cross, we are enabled to see the wonderful provision it has brought to every believer. God in Christ and Christ in God, if seen aright, will level human exaltation and pride. There will be no self-exaltation, but there will be true humility.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 8)
“For Christ sent me not to baptize, but to preach the gospel: not with the wisdom of words, lest the cross of Christ should be made of none effect. For the preaching of the cross is to them that perish foolishness, but unto us which are saved it is the power of God. For it is written, I will destroy the wisdom of the wise, and will bring to nought the understanding of the prudent.... But we preach Christ crucified, unto the Jews a stumbling block, and unto the Greeks foolishness, but unto them which are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God. Because the foolishness of God is wiser than men, and the weakness of God is stronger than men.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 9)
“For ye see your calling, brethren, how that not many wise men after the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble are called; but 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 of the mighty, and base things of the world, and things which are despised, hath God chosen, yea, and things which are not, to bring to nought things that are: that no flesh should glory in his presence. But of him are ye in Christ Jesus, who of God is made unto us wisdom and righteousness and sanctification: and redemption: that, according as it is written, He that glorieth, let him glory in the Lord.” [1 Corinthians 1:17-19, 23-31.] “God forbid that I should glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom the world is crucified unto me, and I unto the world.” [Galatians 6:14.]
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 10)
The Creator of all worlds humbled Himself to human nature, and in human nature He took the place of meekness and lowliness. Any human being that cherishes highmindedness and self-trust, because of self-sufficiency and self-complacency, dishonors his Maker. Just as surely as he does this, he will be humbled. The Lord was rich in heaven’s treasure, yet He for our sake became poor, that we through His poverty should be made rich. In the days of His humiliation, He clothed His divinity with humanity. Although He was the Majesty of heaven, He humbled Himself.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 11)
Christ devoted Himself to the salvation of the human race, and man should never, never lift up his heart unto vanity. You who are possessed of worldly treasure are to become poor by following your Redeemer’s example, devoting your substance to the advancement of the cause of God, and not to self-indulgence.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 12)
Those who acquire wealth for the purpose of hoarding it, leave the curse of wealth to their children. It is a sin, an awful, soul-periling sin for fathers and mothers to do this, and this sin extends to their posterity. Often the children spend their means in foolish extravagance, in riotous living, so that they become beggars. They know not the value of the inheritance they have squandered. Had their fathers and mothers set them a proper example, not in hoarding but in imparting their wealth, they would have laid up for themselves treasure in heaven, and received a return even in this world of peace and happiness, and in the future life eternal riches.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 13)
Many, many church members have sold themselves, soul, body, and spirit—to enjoyment? No; none can know what enjoyment is till they lay their accumulated treasure at the feet of Jesus—to covetousness and idolatry. Church members are to be true and faithful servants of the Lord. They are to use their entrusted capital to bless the needy in their churches. Churches are to be established where the people of God may worship Him. The seats are not to be rented. The wealthy are not to be honored above the poor. No distinction is to be made. “All ye are brethren.” [Matthew 23:8.]
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 14)
Your property is a talent lent you by God to test you, to see if you will accept the character of Christ, and be a subject of the kingdom of God. Thus you may come into possession of eternal riches. Your profession of Christianity is true if you follow Christ; worthless if you do not follow Him. Self-indulgence will not secure for any soul a citizenship in the better even the heavenly country. Those who will not be good and do good, as did their Master, those who covetously spend their all upon themselves, will lose the eternal riches. They will find no place for their selfish souls in the mansions Christ has gone to prepare for those who love [Him].
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 15)
The time is coming when every entrusted talent must be accounted for. The Lord has put into our keeping talents that we are to improve by wise investment. We are to increase and sustain the facilities for God’s worship, not by sociables, fairs, raffles, games, lotteries, or any such means. When money is obtained in this way to sustain the church, it is because the church members are self-indulgent, gratifying pride and appetite by using wine, beer, liquor, and tobacco. Thousands of dollars are expended in needless things, while the poor are suffering for food and clothing, and the cause of God is left to make shift to secure means to supply its numerous necessities.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 16)
God watches to see how His stewards fulfill their sacred trust, and when the cries of the widow and the fatherless come into His ears because of hunger and overwork, sickness and distress, it is written in the books of heaven, that the Lord’s stewards have embezzled His goods to gratify their selfish passions, and the needy have been left to cry unto God because of the conduct of hard hearted men, who are lovers of pleasure more than lovers of God. Every man in this world is using God’s money. Men would have been left to perish if Christ had not given His life for them. He is their Substitute, their Surety. He has given them a probation in which they may work out a perfect character by obedience to all God’s commandments. Thus they show that they appreciate the great offering made that through the Holy Spirit they might be converted and secure eternal riches by laying up their treasure in heaven and not on earth.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 17)
When in the great day of God each one is apportioned his own reward, not many great, not many wealthy, not many of the now extolled wise, will find mansions awaiting them. Christ says to them, You in your lifetime had those things which you chose for your happiness. But when your riches and fame perished, it was found that you had not put your treasure beside the throne of God. You did not lay up your treasure in heaven, but you sought to employ it for your own gratification. Your insurance was not in the banks of heaven. The poor members of the royal family have been left in poverty, unaided by the means of God left in your hands with which to do good.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 18)
You worked hard to glorify yourself, but the work which the Lord gave you to do, to love and serve Him, you refused to do. You had many disparaging remarks to make in regard to the poor and suffering, the homeless widows and the fatherless children as though they were made of different material from you. You despised my poor, those who loved Him who for their sake and yours became poor, that they and you might come into possession of eternal riches. “What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul? Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?” [Mark 8:36, 37.]
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 19)
I warn all to whom this letter may come that unless you follow where Christ leads the way, you will fall into Satan’s snares and lose heaven. Your houses, your lands, are talents for which you are just as responsible to God as for any He has entrusted to you. You may bury your talent as did the slothful servant, but your business is to enquire of God, and to watch for opportunities for doing good with your Lord’s entrusted money. His cause is to be advanced. Souls are to be saved, and the question should not be, How much will this effort cost? Will it pay to venture? It will pay if one soul is rescued. That soul is estimated as of more value with God than a world.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 20)
All have talents entrusted to them according to their several ability, and the Lord expects these to be used to His name’s glory. The warning must go to the world, whether men will hear, or whether they will forbear. It may be that by your efforts, a score of souls will be brought to the knowledge of Jesus Christ, and each become a worker for the salvation of others. No man should reckon his labor a failure if, through his efforts one soul has his name registered in the book of life. Eternity will reveal many wonderful histories in connection with the efforts made, which at the time seemed to be fruitless.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 21)
Talents that are not needed are not bestowed. But every talent given has a place where it can be used. The single talent is needed. God has a place for it. There are channels everywhere through which benevolence may flow. Needs are constantly arising, missions are handicapped for want of means. These must be abandoned unless God’s people awake to the true state of things. Wait not until your death to make your will, but dispose of your means while you live. Great necessities will arise and means will be needed to supply them.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 22)
Wherever there is an important field of labor which you see should be worked, there begin, your individual self, to work. There are portions of the Lord’s vineyard untilled because no means have been supplied. There are meetinghouses burdened with debt which should never have had a debt upon them if proper efforts had been made. To find means to put up a house of worship entirely free from debt is one of the greatest acts of benevolence that can be performed. The interest goes out yearly for an old debt, and no one feels the disgrace, but the hardest part is to redeem the blunder made at the first, to clear off the old debt, and stop the interest that is so difficult to raise. The Lord has need of the money He has lent to men to use in doing good.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 23)
December 17, 1897
I rise at a quarter after two o’clock. I could not complete that which I commenced several days ago. The Lord is working for His people in Stanmore. Brother Sharp lost a situation in a prosperous firm, where he has worked for fourteen years. During all that time no fault was found with him. When Brother Sharp told one of the partners of his decision to keep the Sabbath, he said they could work it all right, and was disposed to give him the day. It is the custom to work only three hours on Saturday, but Brother Sharp promised to make up that time fully by working over hours. But when the matter was brought before the associate partners, it was decided that they could not keep him if he kept Sabbath.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 24)
They gave him one month to decide the matter. As he was firm at the end of the month, he was asked to resign his situation, because they did not like to turn him off. He said, “Have you not been pleased and satisfied with my work?”“Perfectly,” they said, “Well, then, why should I act an untruth? I am very sorry to break connection with you, and I want to remain; but I must keep the Sabbath, and I could arrange to keep the Sabbath and do just as many hours work by giving more time. I certainly cannot resign.” Then they discharged him. When he rather abruptly told his wife, she was disappointed. Everything presented itself to her mind in the worst light. She saw her children suffering for want of food, and without clothing. She was completely overcome. She was taken with a spasm, and for some time it was uncertain that she would live. But the Lord brought her through.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 25)
I had a long talk with this brother. He was a bookkeeper and solicitor from the firm, and has kept everything in order. He is also a musician. I at once saw that an opening must be made for him. His employer was watching him, as were also several others. It was a test question, and we thought he might engage as bookkeeper and solicitor for the health home. They had no money. He had received £3.10 per week, and had several children to keep.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 26)
December 14 I received a letter saying that Brother Sharp had been sent for to come to an important firm and talk with the proprietor. This man said that he had let his bookkeeper go for a holiday, and in his absence had attended to the books himself. While doing so he found that he credited himself with £15 more per month than had his bookkeeper. He saw that he had been dealt with dishonestly. He told Sharp that he had heard that he had lost his place, not because of any failure on his part, but because he wanted to keep the Sabbath, and added, “I said, that is the man I want. I can trust that man. He has a conscience, and fears God.”“Well,” he said, “you may have the Sabbath;” and I think he has the same pay that he received from the other firm. So you see the hand of the Lord is in this.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 27)
His former employer said to one who was favorable to the Sabbath, “I felt bad at having that man leave; he was a faithful workman. I do not know who I can get to fill his place, but I did not want one in my employ who would always be poking the Sabbath down our throats.” Poor man! one day he will wish the Sabbath had not only been brought to his throat, but that he had taken it in, and eaten it as the Word of God. The best recommendation that Brother Sharp could have was that he would not dishonor God by breaking the Sabbath.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 28)
The interest in Stanmore continues to be good. Brother Wilson writes that they are finding new Sabbathkeepers every week. The work is advancing, and now a lot must be secured on which to build a meetinghouse. It will cost a good deal in this locality to get a piece of land 100 by 100 ft. But there is no other way but to build. We must have a house of worship in eight or ten weeks. I want you, my brethren, to help me all you can, by taking my shares in the Healdsburg school, and thus release me. I want to invest in this missionary work. We must pay the workers, and we must pay for a lot for the church. What will you do to help me? If the shares are sold to those who can buy them, and thus divided among the churches, each bearing a part, the load can be easily lifted, and I shall have means to invest here. It must be done. The house of worship will serve for several suburbs, and I will do my best that it may be dedicated without a penny’s debt upon it.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 29)
The interest in the camp meetings in Melbourne and Sydney has taken in the same features as did the proclamation of the Message in 1842. The interest is spreading far and wide. Those recently come to the truth will do what they can, for they have an enthusiasm that bears the signature of the Holy Spirit. My brethren, will you help me by taking the shares in the Healdsburg school? Will you also help me in the case of Brother Leininger? You are well acquainted with this matter, and can help me if you will.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 30)
I am now carrying a debt of £1,000 at five and a half per cent interest, besides £200 hired for the school building. But notwithstanding I am responsible for this, I make my donation of £25 toward the church in Stanmore. I have been walking by faith, and I shall continue to invest. Soon after I came to this country, I hired $1,000 from a brother to commence the school in Melbourne; then $500 more. This is aside from the sums I have already mentioned. We could not get means, and I walked out by faith. This $1,500 ought to be returned to this brother, who would, if he had it, use it in other places.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 31)
I want you to tell our people about the Scott case, and the case of Brother Leininger, and see what can be done for him. I must be released, that I may have means to open up new fields. The cities of Newcastle and Maitland, twenty miles from Cooranbong, are calling for labor. We must have means to start the work.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 32)
Much canvassing has been done in these places, but we have been waiting until the time should come when we could take hold of the work, and keep at it until these places are fully worked. Then there are large cities in Queensland calling for help and workers. But we have not had the means in the treasury to keep the workers paid. All round in these countries are cities that need to be entered. But the lack of means prevents it. I submit this matter to you. Forty have now commenced keeping the Sabbath in Stanmore, and still the interest is widespread. I believe we shall have a church of one hundred souls.
(12LtMs, Lt 20, 1897, 33)
Lt 21, 1897
My Ministering Brethren “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia December 19, 1897 See also Ms 161, 1897. Portions of this letter are published in OHC 236; LDE 233; 2MR 30-31. + My ministering brethren:
I beseech you to rise to your high calling in Christ Jesus. The prayer of Moses, “I beseech thee, show me thy glory,” is recorded for our benefit. [Exodus 33:18.] We need every day to present ourselves before the Lord, praying with earnest soul-hunger, “Show me thy glory.”
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 1)
What was God’s answer to Moses? “I will make all my goodness pass before thee.” [Verse 19.] “And the Lord passed by before him, and proclaimed, The Lord, The Lord God, merciful and gracious, longsuffering, and abundant in goodness and truth. Keeping mercy for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin, and that will by no means clear the guilty; visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children, and unto the children’s children, unto the third and to the fourth generation.” [Exodus 34:6, 7.]
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 2)
It is the glory of God to be merciful, full of forbearance, kindness, goodness, and truth. But the justice shown in punishing the sinner for his iniquity is as verily the glory of the Lord as is the manifestation of His mercy.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 3)
“Thou shalt worship no other God; for the Lord, whose name is Jealous, is a jealous God.” [Verse 14.] The Lord God of Israel is a wonder-working God; and He is jealous for His own glory. How then, we inquire, does He regard the inhabitants of this world, who live in His house, and are provided with food and clothing from His liberal treasury, but who never so much as say, Thank you, to Him. They are not mindful of His goodness. They are like the inhabitants of the antediluvian world, who were destroyed by a flood because they constantly worked in opposition to their Creator. “God saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually. And it repented the Lord that he had made man on the earth, and it grieved him at his heart.... And God said unto Noah, The end of all flesh is come before me; for the earth is filled with violence through them, and, behold, I will destroy them with the earth.” [Genesis 6:5, 6, 13.]
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 4)
When Christ gave the solemn warning in regard to His coming in the clouds of heaven with power and great glory, He said, “As it was in the days of Noe, so shall it be also in the days of the Son of man. They did eat, they drank, they married wives, they were given in marriage, until the day that Noe entered into the ark, when the flood came, and destroyed them all.” [Luke 17:26, 27.]
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 5)
God warned the inhabitants of the antediluvian world of what He purposed to do in cleansing the earth of its moral impurity. But Noah’s contemporaries laughed to scorn the supposed superstitious prediction of the preacher of righteousness. They mocked at his warning that the Lord would destroy them by a flood.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 6)
When Christ was upon this earth, He gave warning of what was coming upon Jerusalem because the people had rejected truth, despising the messages that the Lord sent. The Lord has sent us messages of warning, declaring that the end of all things is at hand. There will be those who will receive these warnings, but there will also be others who will not heed the words of truth which come from the lips of Christ’s ambassadors. When Lot warned the members of his family of the destruction of Sodom, they would not heed the message, but counted Lot as a raving enthusiast. They were unprepared for the destruction that came upon them. Thus it will be, when the Son of man is revealed. Farmers, merchants, lawyers, tradesmen, will be wholly engrossed in business, and the day of the Lord will come upon them as a snare. When men are at ease, full of amusement, absorbed in buying and selling, the prowling thief approaches with stealthy tread. So it will be at the coming of the Son of man.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 7)
Christ is represented as one taking a journey, who left his house and gave authority to his servants, and to every man his work. This point we wish to impress on every soul. To every man there is given a work. Each one who claims to be a child of God has a work to do in the interest of His cause. But while some are engaged in giving the last message of mercy to the world, others are living in indifference, careless of God’s requirements and eternal realities.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 8)
We are living in a time when it is our duty to watch and pray and work. There is to be no waiting and doing nothing. Our lives are not to be spent in idle expectation. We are not to idle away our precious time thus. Vigilant waiting and earnest watching is to be combined with faithful work in expectation of the solemn events so soon to take place. The end is near. The commission given by Christ to His disciples is to be fulfilled. The gospel is to be preached to all people.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 9)
It is a very sad matter to have idlers in the Lord’s vineyard. The man who was given one talent hid that talent in the earth. He did not improve his gift by trading upon it. His powers were given him that he might use them in blessing his fellow men. Had he done this, he would have become a channel through which the Lord would have transmitted light and grace. He himself would have been blessed in making the most of his capabilities, even though they were not so large as those of some others. The grace of God would have been given him in proportion to his capability to diffuse it. But in the place of doing what he could in a humble way, he revealed his lack of faith and love for God by complaining of Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 10)
According to the gifts received must be the gifts returned. All should do what they can, cheerfully, willingly, as doing service to God. Thus they improve their power to do, and go on from strength to strength. These receive God’s approval. But those who are slothful not only neglect the opportunity of doing the work appointed them, but through their neglect they become hindrances to others. They are channels of darkness, through which Satan works. He pours into hearts and minds the grievances he supposes he has against God. Inspired by Satan, the slothful, indolent, complaining servant says to God, “I knew thee that thou art an hard man, reaping where thou hast not sown, and gathering where thou hast not strawed.” [Matthew 25:24.]
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 11)
These complainers, who know so little, think themselves very acute. They claim to have great discrimination. They can, they pretend, see beneath the surface. They can arraign the God of heaven at their bar of justice, and condemn Him. They do it. They talk against the servants of God. Thus they show that they are working on the same lines that Satan worked when he tempted Adam and Eve to part with their faith in God and accept his version of the Creator’s character. When men, disobedient transgressors of God’s law, claim to know so much, they show their ignorance and foolishness.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 12)
Those who are satisfied with things that now appear, who fail to look at the future as well as the present [influence] of their course of action, act as blind men. They act like men who have put out their own eyes, who cannot see what is for their present and future interest. If they would reason with that genuine acuteness that it is for their interest to have, they would see that they are working so as to lose in every way.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 13)
A duty rests upon those who know the truth to make it known to others. All who are servants of Christ are in a large measure responsible for the honor, well-being, and salvation of the world. They are to be co-laborers with Christ. The church is to give an account to God for her stability and enlargement. The work given her is the gathering of souls to Christ. The members are to be Christ’s workmen, carrying forward His work on the earth.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 14)
Please read the fourth chapter of second Corinthians. The entire chapter is a lesson which should be carefully considered. The apostle urges all who have light from God to walk and work in accordance with the light. If they walk in the light, they will not give utterance to the sentiments of Satan by complaining of God. They will be workers together with God. “Therefore seeing we have received this ministry, as we have received, we faint not; but have renounced the hidden things of dishonesty, not walking in craftiness, nor handling the word of God deceitfully; but by manifestation of the truth commending ourselves to every man’s conscience in the sight of God. But if our gospel be hid, it is hid to them that are lost; in whom the god of this world hath blinded the minds of them that believe not, lest the light of the glorious gospel of Christ, who is the image of God, should shine unto them. For we preach not ourselves, but Christ Jesus the Lord; and ourselves your servants for Jesus’ sake.” [Verses 1-5.] Precious conclusion.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 15)
Self is not to be made prominent. But it too often interposes between the soul and God. It is made so prominent that the souls perishing out of Christ cannot fix the eye of faith on Jesus. Those who minister in word and deed are to exalt Christ. Those whose hearts are imbued with the love of Christ will manifest that love. Through them it will speak in its tenderness. They will reveal an abiding Christ, who is set forth crucified among them.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 16)
The lips of a speaker may move under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit. Thus the words of God find utterance in warnings, in appeals, in reproof, in correction in righteousness. This power is not in the speaker. It is a power put within him by God, that he may be enabled to reach those who are dead in trespasses and sins, and arouse them from their spiritual death to receive life from God.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 17)
God works for His faithful servants, who do not shun to declare the whole counsel of God by the power of the Holy Spirit. As messengers of God, we have His endorsement upon our work. The work of the faithful messengers of righteousness is to continue throughout their lifetime. The standard is to be held aloft till the hand is palsied by death, that all may see it. When they sleep in death, the places that once knew them, know them no more. The churches in which they preached, the places they visited to speak the Word of life from the living oracles, still remain. The mountains, the hills, the things seen by mortal vision, are still there. But all the things now seen must pass away. The time is coming when the mountains shall be shaken and removed as a cottage. But the thoughts, the purposes, the actions, of the faithful worker for the Master, although now unseen, will appear again at the great day of final retribution. Things that now seem a light matter will then appear as witnesses, either to approve or condemn.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 18)
If this be the case, and we know that it is, why does self seek for such prominence, even in the servants of Jesus Christ, who claim to know the Word? Why is there so much sowing to the flesh to reap only corruption? Why is not every hour used only for God, in and through the grace of Christ? Why do we not improve ourselves by cherishing the attributes of Christ, thus immortalizing goodness? Love, courtesy, amiability, are never lost. When men shall be changed from mortal to immortal, all the deeds of sanctified goodness done by them will be made manifest. These deeds will be preserved through the eternal ages. Not one, however small or simple, is ever lost. Through the merits of Christ’s imputed righteousness, they preserve their fragrance.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 19)
In order to fight the Christian battle, you need not hold so closely to yourself. Hold fast to Jesus. Do not talk unbelief, because you have no excuse for doing this. Remember that Christ has made a complete sacrifice for you, that in body, soul, and spirit, you may be wholly sanctified, and stand before the Lord complete in Him who gave Himself for you. The Lord is not pleased with our lack of faith, which always separates the soul from God. We look to self, as if we must furnish our own worthiness.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 20)
It is not praiseworthy to talk of our own weaknesses and doubts and discouragements. Each one is to say, I am, what I am; but I am seeking to obtain completeness of character in Christ. I am grieved that I yield to temptation, that my prayers are so feeble, my faith so weak. I have no excuse to plead for being dwarfed in my religious life. God calls me to a higher, nobler life, and I press on toward the things that are before, clinging to Jesus. My life is hid with Christ in God.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 21)
The sinner may say, “I have sinned, and yet I did love Jesus. I am sorry that I have grieved the heart of infinite love. I have fallen many times, and yet He has reached out His merciful arm to save me. I have told the Saviour all about it. I have confessed my shame and sorrow that I have dishonored my Saviour. I looked to the cross, and said, All this He suffered for me, for me. The Holy Spirit convinced me of my ingratitude, my sin in putting Christ to open shame. He who knows no sin has pardoned my transgression and forgiven my sin. I love Him, and will serve Him.” The sinner’s sin will not appear against him if he holds fast his faith and the beginning of his confidence firm unto the end.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 22)
The grace of Christ must stir the soul because the human agent beholds Him who is invisible. By earnestly striving for goodness, love, mercy, forbearance, and kindness, we bear precious fruit to the glory of Christ. In accordance with the Word, the Spirit witnesses with our spirit that we are the children of God. But if we bring our defective traits of character into our Christian life, and yet claim to be children of God, we bear the responsibility of testifying to a false character. To be a Christian means to be Christlike. “For God who commanded the light to shine out of darkness, hath shined in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ. But we have this treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellency of the power may be of God and not of us.” [Verses 6, 7.]
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 23)
Man is here cautioned not to boast in himself of anything. The Lord is his efficiency. God uses the human agent as His instrumentality, to do His work. Man’s capabilities and talents are all to be held in trust. They do not originate with the one who is commissioned to preach the gospel. These gifts are to be looked upon as coming from God. They are to [be] used as wholly His. They are to be consecrated to His service. To the one who does this, the Lord can give higher gifts. If he is called to do a work that demands self-denial, the spirit of consecration and entire self-surrender, leads him to deny self.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 24)
The humility that bears fruit on the tree of good emotions, stirring the soul with a living sense of the love of God, will speak for the soul in that great day when every one will be awarded according to his works, whether they be good or evil. It will be a wonderful commendation to hear the words, The Spirit of God never stirred this man’s soul in vain. He went forward and upward from strength to strength. Self was not woven into his life. He received each revelation of correction, warning, counsel, as a blessing from God. Thus the way was prepared for him to receive still greater blessings, because God did not speak in vain. Each step upward on the ladder of progress prepared him to climb still higher. From the top of the ladder the bright beams of God’s glory shone upon him. He never thought of resting, but sought constantly to attain the wisdom and righteousness of Christ, pressing on toward the mark of the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus. His thoughts were brought into captivity to Christ. He is one with Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 25)
This experience every human being may have and must have in order to reveal Christ. In the great day of judgment no man who has retained the frailty and imperfection of natural humanity, will be vindicated; for he could not enjoy the perfection of the characters of the saints in light. He who has not sufficient faith in Christ to believe that he can keep him from sinning, has not that faith that will give him an entrance into the kingdom of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 26)
Now, just now is our time of probation, wherein we are to prepare for heaven. Christ gave His life that we might have this time of probation. But as long as time shall last, Satan will strive for the mastery. He works with power to lead the minds of men to embrace every expedient for acquiring money, and he has just as many expedients for getting rid of money. He is inventing every kind of amusement and worldly business whereby he may engross the minds of men with pleasure, indulgence, eating, drinking, and dressing. He would have them forget all about the inward adornment of the soul, the adornment of a meek and quiet spirit, which is in the sight of God of great price. He is determined that every moment shall be filled with ambitious projects, love of money, and amusement. He is determined that men shall find no time to study the Word of God, no time to realize that they are not their own, that they have been bought with a price, even the precious blood of the Son of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 27)
Satan has used his voice and influence to drown the voice of God and the voice of conscience; and the world acts as if under the control of satanic agencies. Men have chosen Satan as their leader. They stand under his banner. They will not come to Christ that they might have life. They are infatuated with pleasure and amusement. Rather than engage in the good warfare for life eternal and a crown of immortality, they are striving for victories that are of no worth. Intemperance of every kind is corrupting the bodies and souls of men and women, making it impossible for them to give their attention to serious things and prepare for what is coming upon the world.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 28)
At this time the message of mercy and warning is to go forth to awaken the world from its sleep of death. A work is to be done today that will live through the eternal ages. We shall meet the Judge of both quick and dead at His appearing in His kingdom. Then we shall each receive according to his works. As ministers entrusted with a special message, we are to keep the day of judgment before the people. Shall we not walk by faith, and not by sight? “Wherefore we labor, that, whether present or absent, we may be accepted of him. For we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ, that every one may receive the things done in the body, according to that he hath done, whether it be good or bad.” [2 Corinthians 5:9, 10.]
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 29)
The Lord is calling for souls. Will they turn away from his call to serve Satan? The great day of the Lord is right upon us. We can see this by reading the signs of the times in the light of prophecy. Shall it be said of us in that day, This man was called by God, but he would not hear, he would not give heed. Time and time again the Spirit moved upon his soul, but it was bidden, Go thy way for this time, and when I have a more convenient season, I will call for thee. Often sinners are touched by the story of the cross. Often they are awakened to accept Christ’s matchless love. This man saw the Saviour’s sacrifice in a beautiful light. But some matter of minor importance came in, and his heart was captivated. When the Spirit spoke again, its call was not respected. Every gracious, heavenly influence was dismissed. The sinner flattered himself that he was not wholly hard-hearted, for he had thought upon things, and he was almost decided. But he turned away from Christ to the world.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 30)
How important that the ambassadors of Christ shall watch with unceasing vigilance and diligence, following up every advantage. In Christ’s stead we are laboring for the salvation of souls. We are to watch for souls as they that must give an account. Let God’s servants open the Word of God, and show distinctly that that Word is not yea and nay, but Yea and Amen in Christ Jesus. Bring the mind to a decision before the first powerful impression wears away. Let the messengers of God weep between the porch and the altar, crying, Spare thy people, Lord, and give not thy heritage to reproach. We must confront opposition. False witnesses will invent all manner of lies. But they cannot harm us if we will work with strengthened faith in God. The Lord Jesus is by our side, saying, “Be of good cheer; I have overcome the world.” [John 16:33.]
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 31)
We know of some poor souls who once rejoiced with us in the truth, who have made shipwreck of their faith. They have reduced themselves to a blank and cheerless spiritual condition, as did the inhabitants of the old world. They are without God and without hope in the world.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 32)
The Lord Jesus wants all to stand in their appointed place. He makes use of one believer’s influence, another’s wealth, and another’s attainments. On all is inscribed, Holiness to the Lord. All is sanctified and set apart for a holy purpose. All are to co-operate with God. Mind, heart, soul, and strength belong to God. We are His by creation and by redemption. “Ye are not your own; ye are bought with a price; therefore glorify God in your body and in your spirit, which are God’s.” [1 Corinthians 6:19, 20.]
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 33)
I wish to urge upon all the importance of keeping the Lord Jesus prominently and constantly before them. He is your Advocate in the heavenly courts. He is your Intercessor. Have you property, houses, and lands, have you influence and position? Do you feel that it is an honor for Christ to have you in His service? You can only say as did David, of thine own we freely give thee. All is the Lord’s, entrusted to you as a probationer. All that you call your own, you have received from God. And with a spirit of humility you should feel that you are most highly honored in being a co-laborer with Jesus Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 34)
Who is Christ? Whose Son is He? The only begotten Son of the infinite God. What distinction had He in the heavenly courts? He was Commander of all heaven. He laid aside His glory, His royal robe, His high position as Commander of the heavenly angels. He laid aside His princely crown, His majesty, and clothed His divinity with humanity, that humanity might touch humanity. Had He not done this, He could not have approached fallen, sinful man at all. John, full of faith and zeal, cries out, “Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sins of the world.” [John 1:29.] He was the Prince of life; but He came to represent humanity, to elevate and ennoble every human being that will come unto Him, that he might have life.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 35)
But as you behold Christ, do you see His meekness and lowliness? Do you see that He makes no lofty parade of His honorable distinctions, His lofty title, or draw Himself away from association with fallen, sinful human beings because of His heavenly extraction? He was the only begotten Son of the Infinite God. No man that ever walked our earth has been in any way His equal, or has in any way approached His exalted holiness. Ask Isaiah who He is, and he will tell you: “Unto us a child is born, unto us a Son is given, and the government shall be upon his shoulders: and his name shall be called Wonderful, Counselor, The Mighty God, the Everlasting Father, The Prince of Peace.” [Isaiah 9:6.]
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 36)
Yet purse-proud men, handling the Lord’s talents, speaking vanity, attach to their names “Reverend,” a name used only once in the Bible, and then applied to God. Poor finite men put on dignity, and claim every great and lordly title. But these men in their pride, are not considered of as much value in God’s sight as one of the lowliest little ones who believe in Him. Do these gods of the earth consider it a condescension on their part to attach their names to the church record?
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 37)
There was not in Christ that exaltation that man puts on. He did not exercise tyrannical power. He was Creator of the world. And do men whose lives are in His hands suppose that they are condescending and stooping down when they accept Jesus Christ? In accepting Christ they are raised to a high position.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 38)
“In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.... All things were made by him, and without him was not anything made that was made. In him was life, and the life was the light of men. And the light shineth in the darkness; and the darkness comprehended it not.” [John 1:1, 3-5.] Why do men take to themselves great power? Because they do not see Christ, or believe in Him. “He was in the world, and the world was made by him, and the world knew him not. He came unto his own, and his own received him not. 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.... And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us, (and we beheld his glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father,) full of grace and truth ... and of his fulness have all we received, and grace for grace.” [Verses 10-12, 14, 16.]
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 39)
Men put on power and greatness because property has been lent them by God. They pervert their trust and embezzle their Lord’s goods, using them in selfish indulgence, in glorifying their poor, weak selves. Are such men glorified by God? No; they are considered the weakest because they are lifted up in their human pride. The men who learn of Jesus will, through examination of His Word, correct such principles. They will avoid all display, all self-aggrandizement, and consider it the greatest honor to be called a child of God. They will learn that Christ’s kingdom is not of this world.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 40)
The disciples of Christ are composed of men of varied ability and talent. But the rich and the poor meet together in church capacity. They stand there as disciples of Christ. All distinctions are lost sight of. All embrace each other as Christians. If men are one with Christ, they will be one with each other. “All ye are brethren,” He said. [Matthew 23:8.] They are pilgrims and strangers, seeking a better country, even a heavenly; therefore God is not ashamed to be called their God; for He hath prepared for them a city.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 41)
Christianity is to be carried into elevated circles that will adorn the highest class of society. Here the child of God may show how His grace can make those who are converted poor in the estimation of themselves. While they may be in possession of earthly goods lent them by God, they will be humble though elevated, childlike though gifted with the most precious talents. What have you that you have not received from God? All is the Lord’s, to be wisely and judiciously disposed of. All you have is the Lord’s. Lay at His feet riches, honor, influence, not grudgingly, but as a freewill offering to His name’s glory. “For ye know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that, though he was rich, yet for your sakes he became poor, that ye through his poverty might be rich.” [2 Corinthians 8:9.] Yes; we may all know the fathomless, boundless grace of our Lord Jesus Christ. It was He who made us what we are, and He will make us what we may be—complete in Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 21, 1897, 42)
Lt 22, 1897
Brethren and Sisters in Cooranbong Stanmore, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia December 23, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 4MR 104-105. + Brethren and Sisters in Cooranbong:
We would be much pleased to be with you on the coming Sabbath, but we cannot do this. The work here is at that stage where every jot of influence is needed on the side of truth and righteousness. We are repeating the work that we were called to do in Cooranbong—“Arise and build.” [Nehemiah 2:20.] The work must advance now. Those newly come to the faith need our help. They come forward willingly, giving of their means to erect a house of worship. Brother Humphries has been moved upon by the Holy Spirit to pledge £25, and to loan £100 to start the work here. One man and his wife pledged £5 each. This was the first pledge that was made. They have since doubled it, and another sister has pledged £25. Thus the work is advancing. Still another family who have just taken their position on the truth gave £4. A general interest is awakened. The thought that a house of worship is to be built seems to work like leaven in meal.
(12LtMs, Lt 22, 1897, 1)
Yesterday Brother Haskell and wife and Brother Starr looked at two lots for building, and chose one. Afterwards Brother Humphries came along. He was shown the lots, and he decided on the same one that we had preferred. Now that the decision has been made, the work will go forward immediately.
(12LtMs, Lt 22, 1897, 2)
Just at this time we are needed here, and will remain. We would state further that the blessing of the Lord has rested upon Brother Humphries. His heart is softened and subdued as the heart of a child. He is now prepared to be greatly benefited by present truth. We desire that those who have been long in the truth shall be filled with the Spirit of God. The angels of God are at work for us.
(12LtMs, Lt 22, 1897, 3)
We have an interest for you in Cooranbong. We have manifested this interest, so you cannot doubt it. We desire that our brethren and sisters in Cooranbong shall hold the fort. Let every soul feel that he has a part to act and a work to do in making the meeting on the Sabbath interesting. Help Brother Hughes to help the rest. Let each one form a link which will connect one with the other in the work. Your individual course of action in your every day life has an influence upon those with whom you are connected or brought into contact. In a very real sense these influences touch the very root of a consecrated life. Every jot of your influence is a consecrated trust from God. When this question is settled, not only in theory, but in your practical life, you will seek most earnestly to find your place, your post of duty, and to keep it. Is your Christian life a reality, or is it a pretence? Are you individually enlisted as servants of Jesus Christ to fight the battles of the Lord? The Lord has given to each his work.
(12LtMs, Lt 22, 1897, 4)
Christ has said, “Where two or three are met together in my name, there am I in their midst.” [Matthew 18:20.] Let the meetings held on the Sabbath of the Lord be meetings of deep interest. Those who claim to be children of God are to act with unswerving fidelity. You are not called upon to attend the services on the Sabbath of the Lord to take a nap.
(12LtMs, Lt 22, 1897, 5)
You are to act as if in the presence of a holy God. You would not fall asleep when engaged in your temporal business, because you have an interest in your work. Will you place the service of the Master, which involves eternal interests, on a lower level than the temporal business of life?
(12LtMs, Lt 22, 1897, 6)
Think of these things. You are in God’s service, and you must act as if you understood your business. Brother Hughes is not the only one who is to make your meeting a profit to you, although he has a special part to act in feeding the flock of God, giving to every man his portion of meat in due season. This is the work appointed him. Just now he has a part to act in the cultivation of the soil, and you have your part to act in various lines of business. But never, never allow the temporal to encroach upon the spiritual. You must realize that Friday is the day on which we are to prepare for the Sabbath.
(12LtMs, Lt 22, 1897, 7)
Through the week the energies are not to be so completely exhausted that on the Sabbath, the day on which the Lord rested and was refreshed, we shall be in a tired, worn out condition. Thus we miss the blessings that the Lord designs us to have. We need the refreshing showers of grace on the Sabbath. We need to realize that all heaven is keeping the Sabbath, but not in a listless, do-nothing way. On this day every energy of the soul should be awake, for you are to meet with God and Christ your Saviour. You do not see Him with your natural eyes; you see Him by faith. He is longing to refresh and bless every soul. Spiritual work is to be done. Wide awake energy is to be used in making the Sabbath a time of refreshing, because the Saviour’s presence is in your midst.
(12LtMs, Lt 22, 1897, 8)
Is the Sabbath to be a day of useless idleness? No; a spirit of service is to be manifested in the home and in the church. The Lord has given the human family six days in which to do their own temporal work. But He has sanctified and blessed the seventh, and set it apart as a day on which man is to do His service. On this day the Lord will bless all who appreciate it as a day in which they may in a special manner consecrate themselves to His service. It is to be the happiest and most pleasant day of our lives. Our thoughts are to be brought into captivity to Christ. We are to meditate on the things of God. From beginning to end, Friday should be a preparation day. All disagreeable things between brethren are then to be removed. In a humble spirit confess your faults one to another, and pray for one another. Let all bitterness and wrath and malice be expelled from the soul.
(12LtMs, Lt 22, 1897, 9)
How are you serving the Lord? Have you had the companionship of Christ every day through the week? Have you prayed that the sanctification of the Sabbath might rest on you? Is the Sabbath a blessing? It is if you will make it thus by whole-hearted service. If the Sabbath has indeed been made a sign between you and God, how do you treat that sign? Do you show in your observance of the Sabbath a true sense of how you regard it? Do you show by your actions that you know it to be a sacred day, on which you know that the Lord sanctified you, that He gives you special grace, that all heaven is interested in the people who worship the living God on the Sabbath?
(12LtMs, Lt 22, 1897, 10)
Let the Sabbath be to us all what God designed it should be. “The Lord spake unto Moses, saying, Speak thou also unto the children of Israel, saying, Verily my Sabbaths ye shall keep; for it is a sign between me and you throughout your generations, that ye may know that I am the Lord that doth sanctify you. Ye shall keep the Sabbath therefore; for it is holy unto you: everyone that defileth it shall surely be put to death: for whosoever doeth any work therein, that soul shall be cut off from among his people.
(12LtMs, Lt 22, 1897, 11)
“Six days may work be done; but in the seventh is the Sabbath of rest, holy to the Lord: whosoever doeth any work in the Sabbath day, he shall surely be put to death. Wherefore the children of Israel shall keep the Sabbath, to observe the Sabbath throughout their generations, for a perpetual covenant. It is a sign between me and the children of Israel forever; for in six days the Lord made heaven and earth, and on the seventh day he rested and was refreshed. And he gave unto Moses, when he had made an end of communing with him upon Mount Sinai, two tables of testimony, tables of stone, written with the finger of God.” [Exodus 31:12-18.]
(12LtMs, Lt 22, 1897, 12)
Read these verses, and understand them in a different way than you have heretofore done. Far more sacredness is attached to the Sabbath than we give it, and our neglect in this is the reason why we do not realize its sanctifying power upon our own hearts, or obtain that peace and rest that we should have. We do not realize that it is a day wherein the Lord delights to reveal Himself to His people in a marked manner. Every moment of the Sabbath is consecrated, holy time. On that day all secular, irreligious papers should be put out of sight, that the eyes may not be diverted, that the ears may not hear harsh, discordant words. The Lord would have every one respect the Sabbath. “Ye shall keep the Sabbath,” He says; “for it is holy unto you.”“Verily my Sabbaths ye shall keep; for it is a sign between me and you throughout your generation, that ye may know that I am the Lord that doth sanctify you.” [Verses 14, 13.]
(12LtMs, Lt 22, 1897, 13)
It is because of our own perversity of spirit that we do not receive the rich blessings of God. The Lord has peace and rest and joy for us if we will co-operate with Him in keeping our own souls in the love of God. We must not cherish unbelief. It was because of unbelief that all the adults of the children of Israel perished in the wilderness and failed to enter upon the inheritance God designed for them. We must be on our guard lest, through our careless inattention to the counsels of the Word of God, we lose our connection with heaven, and Satan comes in as our counsellor. When we allow carelessness, self-seeking, self-indulgence, self-esteem, or impatience to come in, we are brought into captivity to Satan. We sin, we stumble, when we might, by self-control make straight paths for our feet, lest the lame be turned out of the way. We dishonor God because we are not Christians in practice.
(12LtMs, Lt 22, 1897, 14)
Brethren and sisters, you all need to keep the Sabbath day holy unto the Lord. If we are to be for signs and wonders in the earth because we are a peculiar people, we must be altogether different from what we now are. We do not now correctly represent the truth for these last days. We are not sanctified through the truth. We do not practice the truth. Again I say to you, you must reach a higher standard in the observance of the Sabbath and the manner of your service to God. We are within reach of the strong arm of the Lord, and His arm is pledged for our safety if we will look to Him in earnest prayer and faith. The Lord has us always in remembrance. He sympathizes with our trials and makes a way for our escape if we seek Him with all the heart. “God is faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above that ye are able to bear, but will with the temptation make a way of escape.” [1 Corinthians 10:13.]
(12LtMs, Lt 22, 1897, 15)
But I cannot leave you here without saying to Brother Hughes, Brother Hare, and Brother James, and every one of the believers, The Sabbath is not having its sanctifying influence upon you as it should have. You do not make it what it should be, holy unto the Lord. Those who occupy a leading position in the church must not exhaust their physical and mental strength, so that on the Sabbath they are unable to bring any of the vivifying influence of the gospel of Christ into the Sabbath meetings. Do less temporal, every day labor; but do not rob the Lord by giving Him service on the Sabbath day which He cannot accept. You should not be as men who have no spiritual life. The people need your help on the Sabbath. Give them food from the Word, if not in a discourse, in an interesting Bible reading.
(12LtMs, Lt 22, 1897, 16)
Brethren, put your talents to work for the Lord on the Sabbath. Brother Hughes, do not use all your strength and talent in the cultivation of the soil. You need to bring your choicest gifts to God on the Sabbath. The precious life of the soul is to be given to God in consecrated service. I call upon you who have had such great privileges during the first term of our school to know the truth, to reveal what that knowledge has done for you by being received and appropriated. I call upon you in the name of the Lord to “arise, shine; for thy light is come, and the glory of the Lord is risen upon thee.” [Isaiah 60:1.] God is not pleased when you do not lift the standard higher and still higher.
(12LtMs, Lt 22, 1897, 17)
There is to be no apathy, no sleeping, in the house of God. Awake from your inactivity; find missionary work to do for souls that are ready to perish. You have a meager experience and little influence. This should not be so. The fault is in yourselves. Have you individually made use of the knowledge you have? Arouse you to a holy determination. Exert an increasing, persevering influence for Christ, who is formed within, the hope of glory. Do not, I beg of you, keep the Sabbath as you have done. Clothe it with that sacred influence that God has given it. Then the Holy Spirit will work with you and for you to make of you a channel of light.
(12LtMs, Lt 22, 1897, 18)
You draw too much apart. Draw together. Pull in even cords. Are you not branches of the same vine? Then be one. Love as brethren; be strong, yea, be strong. Your good impulses and missionary efforts will grow if you use your talents. Talents grow by exercise, and open before us new fields of usefulness. The one talent may become a talent of the highest order by being properly appropriated. But as you work, do not suppose that your talents are the production of your own energy. They are the gift of God. The good hand of the Lord is upon you. In your personal feelings toward one another, be straight-forward and unselfish. The Lord will be with you if you follow the instruction of His Word.
(12LtMs, Lt 22, 1897, 19)
There is no excuse for any who have not improved their capabilities and increased their influence for good. You are privileged to keep in very close contact with God. Here is your power. All your knowledge and aptitude is as nothing without an indwelling Saviour to sanctify you, soul, body, and spirit. If Christ is formed within, you will individually represent the character of Christ. It is not enough that you have once been converted. You must be converted daily.
(12LtMs, Lt 22, 1897, 20)
God knows the use for which He wants each one of you, and He will supply work for your several abilities; whereby you may best do Him service. But you must keep, not your own way, but the way and will of the Lord, to do justice and judgment. All your life is to be consecrated to the service of God. He endows you with talents, but the manner in which they are employed decides the character. “Ye are not your own,” He says, “ye are bought with a price; therefore glorify God in your body and in your spirit, which are God’s.” [1 Corinthians 6:19, 20.]
(12LtMs, Lt 22, 1897, 21)
I leave this with you in the name of the Lord. You will not be happy and enjoy your Sabbaths unless you are sanctified through obedience to the will of your heavenly Father. Awake, awake to the time in which we live! Make diligent work for eternity. We are not ready for the appearing of our Lord. Exercise all the energy of your character to improve. Cherish the attributes of Jesus Christ, and you will rise to higher positions of trust. I can write no more now, but will write again if I have time.
(12LtMs, Lt 22, 1897, 22)
Lt 23, 1897
Bolton, Fannie Refiled as Lt 9, 1895.
Lt 24, 1897
Bolton, Fannie “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia June 25, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in FBS 76-78. My Sister Fannie Bolton:
Yesterday my attention was called to your articles now going through the Review. I have not read any articles in the papers for some time, for I have been so thoroughly employed. But as I read these articles, I thought it a very wrong thing for you to put in the Review the history of the McKenzie family. Did you think that such productions from your pen concerning a family with whom you have been connected, were right? If that family reads our church paper, think you, will it be the means of converting or destroying?
(12LtMs, Lt 24, 1897, 1)
Your representations can be easily recognized. You place in the worst light the McKenzie family. Is this to be the tone of all the articles you put into the paper? All can easily see that Miss Ashbury, who is placed on the pinnacle of perfection, is a revelation of the way in which Miss Fannie Bolton regards herself. As I read these articles I was more distressed for you and ashamed of you than I can express. Should you caricature so vividly your own history while you were in Battle Creek and Australia, putting things in as vivid a light as you have regarding the McKenzie family, we would have some most striking articles. But such productions should not be immortalized by being put in print. You are certainly doing as you would not be pleased to have any one do by you.
(12LtMs, Lt 24, 1897, 2)
That history will certainly be placed in the hands of the McKenzie family. What kind of an influence will it have upon them to see that you have represented family secrets in the very worst light?
(12LtMs, Lt 24, 1897, 3)
“And unto the angel of the church in Sardis write: These things saith he that hath the seven Spirits of God, and the seven stars, I know thy works that thou hast a name that thou livest and art dead. Be watchful, and strengthen the things which remain, that are ready to die; for I have not found thy works perfect before God. Remember therefore how thou hast received, and heard, and hold fast, and repent. If therefore thou shalt not watch, I will come on thee as a thief, and thou shalt not know what hour I will come upon thee.”“I know thy works that thou art neither cold nor hot. I would thou wert cold or hot. So then because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spue thee out of my mouth. Because thou sayest, I am rich and increased with goods, and have need of nothing; and knowest not that thou art wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked: I counsel thee to buy of me gold tried in the fire, that thou mayest be rich; and white raiment that thou mayest be clothed, and that the shame of thy nakedness do not appear; and anoint thine eyes with eyesalve, that thou mayest see.” [Revelation 3:1-3, 15-18.]
(12LtMs, Lt 24, 1897, 4)
All who are acquainted with your history in Australia will be nauseated by your representation of yourself. And this is the one that expressed herself as having an unwillingness to handle private testimonies of reproof. Yet without any appointment of God, you take hold of a family, and lay bare the things you have seen and heard in that family in a most exaggerated light. How could you ever do such a thing? I am very much astonished that you should dare to do it. You have been very much afraid to have anything go to America, even to my son Edson, in regard to yourself.
(12LtMs, Lt 24, 1897, 5)
It is a great pity that this very wonderful Christian woman, so mild, of such excellent judgment, could not have revealed her character in such beautiful lines when in my family, connected with me. How mild and Christlike were your words to Emily Campbell, when you supposed her to be making a mistake, but when you yourself were doubly at fault? If these things were represented in a story and given to the world, it would be quite sensational. What do your mean? Are you unbalanced in mind? If so, for Christ’s sake do not make striking proof of the fact by letting every one know that it is so.
(12LtMs, Lt 24, 1897, 6)
What could have beclouded Brother Tenney’s perceptive faculties, to lead him to accept such articles from your hand, I cannot conceive. If you want to write sensational novels, put your articles in papers that will appreciate such matter. Do stop and think what you are about.
(12LtMs, Lt 24, 1897, 7)
I send you this matter, written from a sense of duty. Do not exhibit Fannie Bolton in such angel’s garments, because it is not the Fannie Bolton we are acquainted with. I advise you to let your tired brain have entire rest, while you do some kind of work besides writing. You said that you loved to do housework. Why not do something of this kind, using the muscles of your body in proportion as you have used your mind. Cannot you be satisfied to use your talents in this way? I advise you to do this, and see if you cannot become a Christian in thought and in character.
(12LtMs, Lt 24, 1897, 8)
I hope and pray that your transgressions may be pardoned. Do not, I beg of you, parade before the world the history of those who are not guilty of doing one hundredth part of the harm that you have done. If you ever truly feel this, you will have such a sense of your wicked course of action that you will never, never seek to remove the mote from your brother’s or sister’s eye till the beam had been removed from your own eye.
(12LtMs, Lt 24, 1897, 9)
Your words regarding me and my writings are false, and I must say that you know them to be false. Nevertheless, those unacquainted with you take your words as being the words of one who knows. Because you have been acquainted with me, and connected with me, you can state what you please, and you think that your tracks are so covered that they will never be discovered. But my writings have not stopped. They go out as I have written them. No words of my copyists are put in the place of my own words. This is a testimony that cannot be controverted. My articles speak for themselves.
(12LtMs, Lt 24, 1897, 10)
When I heard that McCullagh had apostatized, I said, I am glad that all my connection with him has been of the tenderest character. I thought that there was nothing they could have to say against me. But both he and his wife bore the same report that Sister Malcolm bore to me. McCullagh stated in a large congregation that it was reported by one who knew that I picked up things written in books, and sent them out as something the Lord had shown me. At the Bible Institute in Cooranbong, McCullagh told me that you had made a statement to him and his wife similar to the statement made to Sister Malcolm. Your sowing is producing its harvest. Many in Melbourne have been repeating the same things, things which you have told them, and which they thought must be true.
(12LtMs, Lt 24, 1897, 11)
I will now only say further that I forgive you, and will continue to pray, as I have done, that you may be converted. The articles in the Review give me more discouragement over your case than I have ever had, for I see you clothed in garments of pretentious light, and this is a terrible deception. May the Lord anoint your eyes with eyesalve, that you may see yourself as you are, and that you may have that repentance that needs not to be repented of.
(12LtMs, Lt 24, 1897, 12)
Lt 25, 1897
Bolton, Fannie “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia April 11, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in FBS 73-75. + My Sister Fannie Bolton:
The work which you have done here in Australia has yielded a harvest which is widespread. You denied having said to Sister Malcolm that which they told me, and insisted upon, you had said. You afterward visited Sister Malcolm, and denied having said that Sister White was a very ignorant woman, who could not write, and whose writings you had to make all over, and that it was your talent in connection with the work that made the articles in the papers and books what they were. My only course has been to dismiss you from my employment several times. I did this while you were at my home at Preston, but because of your apparent repentance, I foolishly consented to let you work with me again.
(12LtMs, Lt 25, 1897, 1)
Then, after the Brighton camp meeting we had that long, soul-disheartening revelation made to us that you thought that Marian and yourself should be recognized as the ones who were putting talent into my works. I had a talk [with] Sisters Colcord and Salisbury, when I related to them the trouble I had experienced with your perversion of facts in regard to your work on my writings. These sisters told me that you had told them the same story. You also told it to Sister Miller. The same words which Sister Malcolm told me you had said to her, you repeated to Sister Colcord. At first Sister Miller said you had said nothing to her; but Sister Salisbury said, “I heard Fannie say these words to you,” (repeating what you had told Sister Malcolm). Sister Miller then said that she had forgotten, but now remembered what you had said. Now these words were untrue, and as the result of your report, Sister Miller has repeated them to the Andersons. You have also, I learn, repeated the same to others. You claimed that it was your superior talent that made the articles what they were. I know this to be a falsehood; for I know my own writings. You yourself have adopted much of them, and interwoven them with your own articles, which I recognize.
(12LtMs, Lt 25, 1897, 2)
I have met this again in the work you have done in your misrepresentations to Brother McCullagh. I ever treated Brother McCullagh and his wife as tenderly as I would my own children. But the leaven has been at work, and the talk of him and his wife have done great harm in the church in Sydney.
(12LtMs, Lt 25, 1897, 3)
After the instruction given me of the Lord at North Shore, I did just what He told me to do. I took you from Brother McCullagh’s, and did all in my power for you, although I could not tell what such a movement meant. But in your influence in Australia, in bearing false statements against me, I have been repeatedly shown that my adversary, working against me. Why I was directed to take you to my home, I do not know. But the Lord understands all about that, and that which I do not know now, I shall know hereafter.
(12LtMs, Lt 25, 1897, 4)
The work in Adelaide was left for Brethren McCullagh and Hawkins to finish, and I think it was a finish. Brother McCullagh has given up the truth, largely, and taken Brother Hawkins with him. The whole church had gone with them, but had not fully taken sides when these brethren sent in their resignation, saying that they did not believe in Mrs. White’s visions or mission.
(12LtMs, Lt 25, 1897, 5)
This called Brethren Daniells and Colcord to Adelaide. On arriving there they found that McCullagh and Hawkins had appointed a meeting, where they made their tirade upon me. Brother McCullagh has reported your words of information from house to house, saying that I have very little to do in getting out the books purported to come from my pen, that I had picked out all I had written from other books, and that those who prepared my articles, yourself in particular, made that matter that was published.
(12LtMs, Lt 25, 1897, 6)
When Brethren Colcord and Daniells visited from house to house, they met these very same statements. In the meeting appointed by Brother McCullagh, he said he would have nothing to say against Adventists; but Brethren Daniells and Colcord were present, and heard him make similar statements in public, before believers and unbelievers. Brother Daniells asked if he could make a few remarks, but they positively refused to let him speak. Then he handed McCullagh a notice to the effect that he would review these statements the following Monday evening, and asked them to read it. Brother McCullagh handed it to Brother Hawkins; but as the people were leaving the house, Brother Daniells arose and read the notice himself, remarking that he had asked these ministers to read it, and they had refused to do so. Brother Hawkins said, “I was going to read it, but you did not give me time.” But already the people were passing out, and some had gone.
(12LtMs, Lt 25, 1897, 7)
Now, this is the state of things. You can see by this what a harvest your leaven of falsehood and misrepresentation have produced. You opened your mind to Brother and Sister McCullagh, which has changed their feeling toward me. The leaven worked, until it carried with it one whole church. But thank God they are recovered. And now my way is clear to make statements just as they have been coming from you, and I will cut off the influence of your tongue in every way that I can.
(12LtMs, Lt 25, 1897, 8)
I will say that much of the time that you were in Australia, you surely did not know what manner of spirit you were of. Satanic agencies have been working through Fannie Bolton. Again and again as I have been placing some article in your hands, there seemed to be a hand stretched out between you and me. I can understand all about matters now as others have come to me with confessions. I know now that every article coming in the paper cannot be claimed as Fannie Bolton’s ideas, Fannie Bolton’s sentiments.
(12LtMs, Lt 25, 1897, 9)
You asked if you could come back again and connect with me in my work. If you should regain your health, the light I have from the Lord is, “She is not converted. She has no power to prevent Satan from working with her mind to exalt self, and make statements that are false in order to receive praise. The seed that she has sown will bear its harvest.”
(12LtMs, Lt 25, 1897, 10)
I was shown that by your coming to my home, the Lord would give you an opportunity to clear your soul of its guiltiness in connection with me and my work. Your words had created, in others, ideas that would be communicated to still others. But the opportunity was granted you to make straight and thorough work, to clear your soul, and place me in a clear light before the people to whom you had spoken. You had acted as my adversary, and that it was not the will of the Lord that you should have the least connection at any time with me and the work which God had given me to do. Shall I be compelled to publish this matter in order to uproot this influence? My mind is forever settled, Fannie, in regard to having one page of my written articles go into your hands. I do not regret taking you into my home when I did, I can see the reasons more clearly now. May the Lord pity and save you. I am sorry for you, indeed I am, and would do anything to save your soul.
(12LtMs, Lt 25, 1897, 11)
I thank the Lord that I have two good editors in Maggie Hare and Minnie Hawkins. They are doing good work. The writings come from their hands with my own ideas, and I know it. Who makes the articles now? All can see that they are just as full of Bible truth as they have ever been. Your “inspiration” has not touched them, and never will again as long as I shall live. In the place of my articles bearing your ideas, your articles have the ideas that the Lord has given me. You have grafted them into Fannie Bolton’s stock. I wish you no harm; but I will not keep quiet. Your misrepresentations shall not mislead other minds if I can possibly prevent them.
(12LtMs, Lt 25, 1897, 12)
Lt 26, 1897
Belden, Frank “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, Australia December 10, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 1MR 269-270. Dear nephew Frank Belden:
I sent you letters not long since; but I feel a deep love for both you and your wife. I have a soul-hunger that you should not remain in your present spiritual condition. You will not be accepted by God until you seek Him with all your heart. Let not your spirit remain sour and hard. Cease to criticize every one. If you had only stood in the light, what a help you could be to me in my bookmaking. I am seventy years old, Frank, and yet my faculties are good and my memory excellent, except when through overwork, nervous prostration comes upon me. I have been very sick for three weeks, but am better now.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 1)
Last Sabbath and Sunday Sara and I were in Stanmore, where our camp meeting was held. I spoke both afternoons to large assemblies. On Sunday I was compassed with infirmity, but I pleaded with the Lord for strength, and His sweet peace flowed into my soul. I was strengthened, and was able to speak to the people. The blessing of the Lord came upon me in large measure, and I bore the testimony the Lord gave me with power. I have been growing stronger ever since. I know that if you would cease your accusing and fault-finding, if you would take up your work humbly, meekly, in lowliness of mind, you would find plenty of work to do, and you would not have a dyspeptic religion. You have a soul to save or a soul to lose. If you are wise, you will cease your faultfinding. None are what they should be; neither are you what you should be. Would it not be better for you to humble your pride, and open the door of your heart to Jesus Christ? God has not asked you to be a church tinker.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 2)
A precious opportunity is now allotted you, before your probation closes, to prepare to meet your God. If your life should close now, you could not join the family above. If the Lord should now gather His saints together, you could not enter in through the gates into the city. Hattie, your wife, could not enter in. Will you please forgive everyone who, you think, has injured you, because you have injured yourself and others to a far greater degree than any one has injured you.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 3)
While you look at other people’s faults, you do not see your own mistakes and errors. You do not go humbly to your Saviour, asking Him to pardon your transgressions and receive you and cover you with the robe of His righteousness. You are spoiling your own life and spoiling the life and character of your wife. Is it not time for you both to come as humble penitents to the feet of Jesus, and lay this burden of sin down?
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 4)
You will not live long, Frank. Unless you stop now and give your poor, sinsick soul to Jesus, you will surely die in your sins. It is a terrible burden to live to self. There is no peace in such a life, no assurance, no confidence. You are like a lost sheep. Can I help you to return? Will you now, just now, this very hour, as you read this, remove the stumbling blocks you have placed in your own way? Will you, with all the sacred vows upon you, give the Lord all you have and are, all the faculties of mind and body? Will you pledge them irrevocably to your Saviour, who gave His life for you? Day by day you have drawn around your soul an unholy atmosphere. You find fault with others. Will you not consecrate yourself to God, and let Him use you to His own name’s glory? You are bowed down; you are carrying a heavy load of other people’s mistakes. Will it pay you in the end? Throw off the miserable load you have been accumulating. This is a life and death question with you.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 5)
As you were presented to me, you were bowed down like a man of years, and under a load that Christ never asked you to carry. You cannot be a sin-bearer. You cannot bear your own infirmities and sins. Why then gather up the sins and mistakes of others? The Lord has given you talents, but you have decided that you could use these yourself. You would not permit the Holy Spirit to work you. To do this, you would have had to sacrifice your self-esteem and pride. This you need to do.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 6)
You are growing in years, but you are not gaining a precious spiritual experience, therefore you have had to wrestle with yourself, and struggle with an unsubdued, natural temperament, and inherited and cultivated tendencies, which present appalling difficulties. You sink into despondency, and at times feel desperate.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 7)
You and Hattie separated from God. Hattie does not help you, or you her. When you fall all broken at the feet of Jesus, you will help one another, and then you can see the wrongs of others, and in the Spirit of Christ try to help them. You ought to feel sorrow because after Christ has given His own life that you and Hattie and the whole world might be saved, He sees so many who have no inclination to give up self and choose Jesus. Christ’s own nation, for whom He had done so much, too much for human minds and pens to transcribe, rejected Him. When Pilate asked them whom they would have released to them, they cried out Barabbas. “And what shall I do with Christ?”“Crucify him, crucify him.”“Shall I crucify your king?” Then came the shameful answer, “We have no king but Caesar.” [Matthew 27:22; John 19:6, 15.]
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 8)
I ask you, Frank Belden, “What think ye of Christ?” [Matthew 22:42.] You are dear to my soul, and I ask you, “What think ye of Christ?” Every man and woman is making his or her choice of their leader. Will you have this man, Christ Jesus, as your personal Saviour? Will you own Him? Will you have Him as your Ruler? Then look unto Jesus and live. I ask you, “What think ye of Christ?” Whose Son is He? If you say He is the Son of the living God, and to whom shall I go but unto my Saviour, He will receive you. Looking unto Jesus, the Author and Finisher of your faith, you will be changed into His likeness.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 9)
But when you look at the imperfections of others, and eat and think and drink this stale rubbish, your spiritual experience will be of the same quality as the food upon which you subsist. Will you not come into right relationship to God? Beholding Him, you will be changed into His image. His character will then become your character. But while you feed upon the faults of others, you are changed into the same similitude. By beholding, you become changed into the same image.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 10)
The Lord has given you talents, and you know that you possess them. Yet they are perverted to a wrong use. Influence is a talent. Have you not perverted it? Do you not continue to pervert it to a wrong use? You will have to give an account of the use you have made of the Lord’s entrusted talents. Almost every question connected with each detail of outward life comes in before the Christian as a matter of influence on others about him. In a very [real] sense, it touches the very root of a consecrated life. You are to recognize the fact that all influence is a heaven-given trust. It does not originate with you; it is given to the human agent by God, to be accounted for to God. When this is accepted, not merely as a theory, but as a reality, very different sentiments from those that now prevail will be cherished by you.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 11)
Placing you in the Review and Herald office, in connection with the men that were there, was a mistake. Neither you nor Captain Eldridge were prepared for the position. Your eyes were not anointed to see and understand that your wisdom and his wisdom was imperfect. Your experience there did not help you. The position of influence you gained did not help you. It would have been better for you to have been in the lowest place than in the highest. You became self-important, and you did not grow in the meekness and lowliness of Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 12)
You began to regard your position as the result of your talents, natural energy of character, which had made impressions upon others. In many respects your tongue might better have cleaved to the roof of your mouth than to have been heard in councils and assemblies, giving utterance to sentiments directly opposed in principle to the Word of God. But when these sentiments were applied to you, you thought they did not fit, and neither were they appropriate in any place, or for any one.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 13)
I would counsel you to dwell on no man’s wrongs, for guilt rests upon you for doing a work directly contrary to the will of God. You say, I repented of that, and the Lord forgave me. Did you forgive your brethren, who hurt you? United with others, you brought in the condition of things that now exists, the injustice of which you complain. It is the result of the very same principles you yourself brought in. The Lord did not work a miracle to prevent these sentiments and unchristlike principles, which you brought into the office of publication, from reacting upon yourself. You are feeling the sting which you, and those who pursued the same course that you did, have made others feel—sore, wounded, and deprived of their rights. It is a shame, and makes my soul ashamed that these things should be done.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 14)
I tell you this as God has presented it to me. And now I beg of you not to gather up objectionable things which touch you personally, but remember that these things are the result of your own policy. Sentiments and resolutions which should never have seen the light of day have prevailed.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 15)
I beg of you to repent. Confess your sins, and have that repentance that needs not to be repented of. I strike at the very root of the matter. Your self-conceit has been a snare to you, and the sooner you cleanse your soul and life from it, the clearer will be your spiritual eyesight.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 16)
I wish now to speak a word upon the responsibility of so employing the talents, not only to obtain a full reward when the Master returns with His servants, but to increase these talents by use and the improvement of them. This should be recognized as a solemn obligation due to the One who entrusted the talents to you. You are faithfully to guard the entrusted endowments, improving them by keeping the glory of God in view. You are not to look at yourself as if you had created these talents by natural energy of character. You are to regard them all as coming from God, to be returned to God again.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 17)
Influence, if consecrated to God, will make itself a way. God is the One that is to be praised for this. I am pained beyond measure because there are so many who do not look upon talent in its true bearing. They have activity, energy of character, which might be turned to good account if they co-operated with Jesus Christ, but it simply runs to waste, a jot here and a tittle there, and is not gathered up to do good and only good. Many fail to appropriate their God-given powers in blessing others, and glorify not themselves, but God. How few give back to God His own talents, having gained other talents, and won to Christ’s side other persons, who have been brought to the knowledge of the truth. The work may be enlarged by accumulated influence.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 18)
Oh, my brother, we are living in solemn times. How many use all their influence in doing no special work for the Master. They engage in some kind of business, women in the household, in the schoolroom, others in a variety of ways; but many amuse themselves, and use their time in folly and vanity. It is God’s time that they use thus. They have offered sacrifice on Baal’s altar, because they do not see or realize their responsibility. They do not live so close to God that they see the reality of spiritual things. They are not among the number of whom Christ says, “Ye are my witnesses.” [Isaiah 43:10.]
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 19)
There are those who think that they have but few talents, and that therefore they can do as they please. Is not the fault in themselves the reason that their talents remain few? Have they sought to use, day by day, that which they call their little influence? Have they not themselves to blame for not having more cultivated abilities? Have they realized that a special season of probation is granted them to improve their influence for good? Have they said, I will use that which I have, and learn of the great Teacher [how] I can best serve Him with one talent? God help us to be wise unto salvation.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 20)
Hattie, dear child, these words are written for you. You have an individual case pending in the courts of heaven. May the Lord touch your heart, and lead you to see that you are not your own, but that you are the property of Jesus Christ. You are bought with a price, and what a price! “For God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.” [John 3:16.] “Therefore glorify God in your body and spirit, which are God’s.” [1 Corinthians 6:20.]
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 21)
Have a holy determination that you will seek the Lord while He may be found, that you will call upon Him while He is nigh. “Let the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts, and let him return unto the Lord and he will have mercy upon him, and to our God, for he will abundantly pardon.” [Isaiah 55:6, 7.]
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 22)
God is calling you, just now. “Come out from among them, and be ye separate, and touch not the unclean, and I will receive you; I will be a Father unto you, and ye shall be my sons and daughters, saith the Lord of hosts.” [2 Corinthians 6:17, 18.] Come, before your eternal destiny shall be forever fixed. Come with your husband, come. You can come if you will. You can both now consecrate yourselves to God. Make Him your Friend, your Alpha and Omega, your sure Refuge.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 23)
My brother, Frank Belden, what are you preparing to do? There are places enough demanding help. For a time let your composition of music and various inventions be laid aside. There is need of help everywhere, need of help here in Australia. Consecrated ability is needed here. If both of you were only consecrated, what a help you could be in this field. There is an acknowledged dearth of ministers. You could minister in various lines. But you need first to come out of the spiritual condition you are in, and let the Holy Spirit work upon your mind and heart. When you are transformed in character, when you consecrate all your entrusted talents to God, then there will open to you fields where you can engage in active labor.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 24)
The original talent employed multiplies itself, for it grows by exercise. So to every true, honest worker who would do God service is opened new positions of special influence. If we faithfully use what talents we now have, we are entrusted with more talents of a higher order. One talent properly used will make a place for itself and increase in individual influence. But men look upon this as a product of their own energy.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 25)
Will you come out to this field, first giving yourself to God? The Lord is dealing with us as individuals. Our talents are measured out and proportioned to each according to his ability to rightly use these talents. The Lord must be sought for. He knows the use he can make of each of us for our best good and His name’s glory. He will co-operate with all sincere workers. If they trust in Him, He will supply the points of character which are essential in doing the work.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 26)
Hattie, you have no time to lose. The Christian must make the best use of all her sanctified energies. Thus she grows up into Christ. Fields of work are presented to you, when you give your heart unreservedly to God. The Lord has given you opportunities. You are thrown in contact with people who might be a spiritual help to you. You could receive good from their influence. But avoid frivolous company. You may be the means of helping some souls who are connected with you. If you were under the Holy Spirit’s guidance, they would have help from you. You could speak words for Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 27)
There are many ways in which we can help souls if we will. The opportunity is given you to manifest a Christian spirit under provocation. In your conversation, remember to treat your heavenly Guest courteously by introducing his name. Introduce something besides unprofitable talk. Witness for Christ in a winning way, opportunities are constantly passing out of your reach, never to return. Be guarded in your words. A real and abiding sense of responsibility will lead you to speak and act wisely.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 28)
My appeal is to the church. The Lord Jesus calls the church the light of the world. [Matthew 5:14.] I call upon you, Frank Belden, and Hattie McDearmon Belden, Christ is inviting you both to come to Him. “Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.” My dear, tempest tossed souls, will you heed the call? “Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me, and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.” [Matthew 11:28-30.]
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 29)
Christ never invited the sinner to come to Him to find sanction or vindication of sin. He invited them to come because He felt so sorry that they were unhappy and full of unrest, without a knowledge of His great mercy and abundant love. All that come unto Him, He will save from their sins. This is the only way man may be rescued.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 30)
The precious Saviour loves you. He is throwing the bright rays of hope across your pathway, to guide you to a heaven of peace and rest. Christ, the good Shepherd, misses His sheep when they stray from the fold. He is represented as leaving the ninety and nine and going forth to seek the sheep that is lost. He finds it. He bears it upon His shoulders. He brings it with rejoicing to His fold.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 31)
Oh, how God looks upon man’s indifference, his coldness, his lack of love, compared with the love evidenced by the world’s Redeemer. He comes to seek and save that which was lost. They are the purchase of His blood. The church is blending with the world, notwithstanding all the light and warnings given. They do not stand out, a peculiar and holy people. A description of the state of the matter in the publishing house may be expressed by the words of prophecy, “How are the things of Esau searched out! how are his hidden things sought up.” [Obadiah 6.] The condition of things that has existed has dishonored God. There is much that my pen might trace, but I forbear. The sins of selfishness and covetousness are as idolatry before God.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 32)
The Lord has a controversy with His people, because they have not heeded His Word. Grave sins rest upon those who have held positions of trust, and at the same time have brought in false principles. This has corrupted your judgment, and blinded your eyes, and now you have set the stumbling block before your feet. You have lifted up your heart unto vanity, and this has covered you with darkness and confusion. You will never find rest and peace until you come back to your first love.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 33)
At times you have known the moving of the Spirit of the Lord, but self has been too much for you to handle. Will you not now bring your great burden of other’s misdoings, which you have been gathering up, and lay it and yourself at the feet of Jesus? Relieve yourself of your burden. Break from the enemy at once. Sin prevails. The wicked shall do wickedly, and none of the wicked shall understand. You can now remember that you are not a sin-bearer. You are having a very hard time to carry your own sins. Do not, I beseech of you, load yourself down with the sins of others. Lay them down, lay them down! You will only have to answer for your own sins.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 34)
I would give much could I see you. But this is not possible unless you make us a visit. I wish you would. But it would be useless for you to come and bring with you your baggage of all the misdeeds and misdoings of your associates in the publishing house and out of it. You were wrong in bringing in false principles and working upon the plan that is condemned by God. You have suffered much from the very line of action that your influence, with that of others has brought in. God sent warnings and reproofs, but they were brushed aside as a cobweb. Satan was determined to pervert judgment and take the field.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 35)
You cannot measure your influence in these things. You have been left to feel that false theories, wrong and corrupted principles, hurt. When sin strikes inwardly, it assails the most noble part of a man’s being. It makes terrible confusion and havoc with man’s Godlike faculties and powers. While physical disease prostrates the body, the disease of selfishness and covetousness blasts the soul.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 36)
The walls of protection that God has raised for His people’s safety have been battered down. The lines of protection of individual rights and interests have been confused through human policy, and a host of satanic agencies have rushed in to make the most of their opportunity.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 37)
Every plan brought in to obtain advantage for self opened the door wide for dishonest practices. You know this just as well as did the men whom you condemn for taking from God’s treasury higher wages than they earned by honest effort.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 38)
The Lord has shown me that this system of high wages is directly contrary to justice and righteousness. The plea is made that those who carry responsibility are always awarded higher wages than those under them. But those who were supposed to be doing important work in the Review and Herald office were being tried and tested, and every phase of their work was swinging the publishing house in false paths, contrary to the instruction given by Christ in the Old Testament and the New.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 39)
Such a masterly confederacy united to carry things its own way that a work entirely human has been mingled with the handling of sacred things. Each felt pledged to sustain and work for the interest of the other. A system of robbery toward God was brought in. “Shall I not judge for these things?” God asks. [Jeremiah 5:29.] The Lord has opened the matter to me, and my heart has burned with indignation. Light has been given that the Lord would in His own time make these men a spectacle to the world, to angels, and to men. It has been shown me that men, confided in and trusted, looked upon as trustworthy, would betray the cause of God in an emergency, under the inspiration of the enemy.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 40)
I cannot mention names, because I have been advised by the Lord that the very ones who have been the most strenuous in carrying out their own plans would show under whose control they had been working while in the cause of God. Spiritual blindness has led to such perversity of principle that the Lord declared He would not bless those who kept these wrongdoers in position when they knew that they had not the right spirit, and that truth was not cherished in the heart.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 41)
I will scatter them, saith the Lord. I will blow upon the means they receive, and it shall be as nought. I will take away judgment from them, and forsake them utterly, unless they repent and serve me, not for gain, but because the work and cause is Mine. They are unfaithful stewards. I have given them My only begotten Son, but they have walked away from My statutes, and I will judge for these things.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 42)
Frank, clear your own soul, I beg of you.
(12LtMs, Lt 26, 1897, 43)
Lt 27, 1897
Belden, Brother and Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia November 10, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in Ev 335-336. Dear Brother and Sister Belden:
I arise some time before day to write you a few lines to go out in the mail. I know not when a steamer for Norfolk leaves. I have written to you by every steamer that I learned was going to Norfolk. I was told that the last steamer went by Auckland and that you would not get your letter for three months. I will send this at once, but I do not know when the steamer will leave.
(12LtMs, Lt 27, 1897, 1)
I have been quite sick since the camp meeting. This meeting was very like our American camp meetings. How I did wish that Brother Nobbs and your two selves were with us.
(12LtMs, Lt 27, 1897, 2)
Some weeks before the meeting word was sent by Elder Daniells to set all the forces possible in operation to circulate the Echo, and work zealously in various ways to advertise the meeting. Thus we have been accustomed to do to wake up a lively interest in the meeting, and secure an attendance. But my mind was deeply impressed that this was not the best thing to do in this case. We must not always keep the very same routine of working. We must not make a stir, but keep as quiet as possible.
(12LtMs, Lt 27, 1897, 3)
When armies are preparing for battle, the generals and officers do not give publicity to their movements. In quiet and secrecy they make known to a few trusted men who have charge of the enterprise their plans and the manner of conducting the battle. Should they lay open their designs to all, there would be plenty to meet them. Others would be enlightened as to what methods to set in operation to defeat the plans made. It is considered a betrayal of important trust to our enemies as to how the battle is to be conducted.
(12LtMs, Lt 27, 1897, 4)
We should be careful and close when entering new fields to proclaim the truth, and more so in localities where the truth has been presented and opposed from the pulpit and by mob raids.
(12LtMs, Lt 27, 1897, 5)
I knew that the very best way would be to secure the ground, and then surprise the people by rapidly building our city of tents, having sufficient help and facilities to do rapid work, and giving as little time as possible for the ministers to commence their warnings from the pulpits and push forward the circulation of their false statements.
(12LtMs, Lt 27, 1897, 6)
We must devise and plan wisely, that the people may have an opportunity to hear for themselves the important message of warning to be given to all that will hear. It is the last message of mercy to the world. The people should be warned to make ready for the great day of God, which is right upon them. We have no time to lose. We must do our utmost to reach the people where they are. All that can be done should be done without delay. The great day of the Lord is near; it hasteth greatly. The world is now reaching the boundary line in impenitence and disregard for the laws of the government of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 27, 1897, 7)
In every city of our world the warning will be proclaimed of its sure ruin, because the inhabitants imagine and practice evil, and that continually. Horse racing, gambling, betting, drunkenness, and all kinds of lasciviousness is seen on all sides, almost without limit. “The wicked shall do wickedly, and none of the wicked shall understand; but the wise shall understand.” [Daniel 12:10.]
(12LtMs, Lt 27, 1897, 8)
Now every soul who has a knowledge of the truth should practice the truth, and appreciate and rejoice in the truth, that they may shine amid the moral darkness that is covering our world like the pall of death.
(12LtMs, Lt 27, 1897, 9)
Our meeting has ended. From the very first day, October 21, up to the present time, the interest has not abated. At the first meeting the large tent was crowded, and a wall of people stood round the outside.
(12LtMs, Lt 27, 1897, 10)
I spoke six times on Sabbath, Sunday, and Wednesday afternoons to the crowd that assembled, and five times in various lines to our people. We had the best of ministerial labor. Elders Haskell, Daniells, Farnsworth, Robinson, Hare, Colcord, Baker, Starr, Professor Hughes, and Brother Crothers were present. The word was spoken in no faltering, hesitating manner, but in the demonstration of the Spirit, and with power. The interest was superior to anything we have seen in any camp meeting in this country. We feel very grateful to the Lord for this opportunity of making known the light of present truth. As in Christ’s day, the people listen, and are astonished and captivated. They say, “We never heard anything like this. O how I wish I could have heard all these things before. I never knew such things were in the Bible. I see that the work before me is to search the Scriptures as I have never done before.”
(12LtMs, Lt 27, 1897, 11)
The Word of God has indeed been like a sword, quick and powerful. The crowds of people listened interestedly for one and nearly two hours without showing any appearance of weariness. O I am so glad, so thankful. I praise the Lord with heart, and soul, and voice.
(12LtMs, Lt 27, 1897, 12)
Brother Haskell and wife, Brother Starr and wife, and several workers are keeping up the interest in Stanmore. This interest does not flag. The big tent has been taken down and sent to Melbourne. The forty foot tent is being spliced in the center, so that it will seat as many as possible, and will be used here. A house has been rented to accommodate the workers. A room has been prepared for me, and if I am able, I shall probably go to Sydney this week to join the workers. We must do all we possibly can to make this effort a success. Elder Haskell writes cheeringly in regard to the work there and the unflagging interest.
(12LtMs, Lt 27, 1897, 13)
Lt 28, 1897
Belden, Brother and Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia July 29, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in HP 245; 2SM 84; LDE 33, 76; 10MR 275. + Dear Brother and Sister Belden:
I wish, if it were for the best, that you lived within a little distance of us, for it would please us very much to have an opportunity to converse with you. But if the Lord has a work for you to do in Norfolk, He will certainly open ways before you. He will strengthen and sustain you, that your influence may be for good.
(12LtMs, Lt 28, 1897, 1)
We are having interesting times for all in Australia. The pressure of the Sunday law has come and is coming. It has been ordered that all stores shall be closed on Sunday, and this is being rigidly enforced. The government is trying to have God acknowledged in the constitution. Our people are making just as vigorous a stand as possible that it shall not be. They have been securing names to a petition to this effect. We can see that that which we have been talking about for the last thirty-five years—this law causing the Sunday to be exalted and making human inventions take the place of God’s holy day—is now being fulfilled. There is much excitement now in regard to these matters.
(12LtMs, Lt 28, 1897, 2)
The second epistle of Paul [to the Thessalonians] should be read in connection with these things. The same work of oppression and persecution which was suffered by the saints of God in Paul’s day is soon to come to all who believe in this age.
(12LtMs, Lt 28, 1897, 3)
“Paul and Silvanus, and Timotheus, unto the church of the Thessalonians, in God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ: Grace be unto you, and peace, from God the Father and our Lord Jesus Christ. We are bound to thank God always for you brethren, as it is meet, because that your faith groweth exceedingly, and the charity of you all toward each other aboundeth; so that we ourselves glory in the churches of God for your patience and faith in all your persecutions and tribulations that ye endure: which is a manifest token of the righteous judgment of God, that ye may be counted worthy of the kingdom of God, for which ye also suffer: seeing it is a righteous thing with God to recompense tribulation to them that trouble you.” [2 Thessalonians 1:1-6.]
(12LtMs, Lt 28, 1897, 4)
Here we see the interest of these churches for one another. The persecution they endured drew all hearts together and bound them together. They were scattered abroad. The errors and superstitious faith and doctrines of the Jewish nation so bitterly opposed to Christ left the little flock as sheep without a shepherd. But the seed was being sown. Christ was lifted up as the One crucified among them, and efforts were constantly made to alleviate the poverty and oppression of the brethren because of their faith.
(12LtMs, Lt 28, 1897, 5)
Directions were given to offer prayer to God that the seeds of virtue and truth sown by His appointed servants, the prophets, might not be in vain, that a rich harvest might reward their efforts, and that other laborers might be raised up to reap the harvest.
(12LtMs, Lt 28, 1897, 6)
In doing this work there was great opposition. It was no light task to carry forward the work, and many suffered for their belief in the truth of the gospel. With all kinds of persecutions Satan inspired human beings to annoy and distress the conscientious souls who loved God and kept His commandments.
(12LtMs, Lt 28, 1897, 7)
“And to you who are troubled, rest with us, when the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with his mighty angels, in flaming fire taking vengeance on those that know not God, and that obey not the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ: who shall be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord, and from the glory of his power. When he shall come to be glorified in his saints, and to be admired in all them that believe (because our testimony among you was believed) in that day.” [Verses 7-10.]
(12LtMs, Lt 28, 1897, 8)
In sowing the seeds beside all water, we are to meet the same difficulties that the followers in Paul’s time encountered. But the Lord did not then leave His persecuted ones to be overcome. He gave them the opportunity and privilege of being overcomers. “Wherefore also,” said Paul, “we pray always for you, that our God would count you worthy of this calling, and fulfil all the good pleasure of his goodness, and the work of faith with power; that the name of our Lord Jesus Christ may be glorified in you, and ye in him, according to the grace of our God, and the Lord Jesus Christ.” [Verses 11, 12.]
(12LtMs, Lt 28, 1897, 9)
It is just such epistles as this that we will be privileged to write, strengthening and encouraging one another, “building up one another in our most holy faith.” [Jude 20.]
(12LtMs, Lt 28, 1897, 10)
We are living in a very solemn period of this earth’s history. Then how appropriate for this time that we watch unto prayer. In prayer for our oppressed ones who will feel the most severely the opposition and test and trial of persecution we shall find comfort and consolation. We are to keep the lamp of faith burning brightly. We are to watch for opportunities of doing good to those who are called to suffer, for our afflicted brethren will need our words of consolation, of courage and hope.
(12LtMs, Lt 28, 1897, 11)
Christ said, “Woe unto you who laugh now, for ye shall mourn and weep.” [Luke 6:25.] This does not contradict the apostle’s statement when he enjoins upon Christians the necessity of rejoicing in the hope set before them in the gospel. The cheerfulness of the Christian is created by the consideration of the great blessings we enjoy because we are children of God. “Therefore, my brethren dearly beloved,” he says, “and longed for, my joy and crown, so stand fast in the Lord, my dearly beloved.” [Philippians 4:1.] The cheerful enlightenment of the mind and the soul temple by the assurance that we have reconciliation with God, the hope we have of everlasting life through Christ, and the pleasure of blessing others, are joys which bring no sorrow with them. Those who indulge in chaffing, mirth, levity, and vanity of spirit, which arise from a superficial, cheap experience, have no real, solid foundation for hope and joy in the love of God and belief of the truth. The giddy, the heedless, the gay, the jovial spirit is not the joy which Paul is anxious that Christ’s followers shall have. This class spend their time in frivolity and excessive levity. Time is passing, the end is near; yet they have not laid up for themselves a good foundation against the time to come that they may lay hold on everlasting life.
(12LtMs, Lt 28, 1897, 12)
We need not encourage that mirth which dissipates reflection, leaves no time for consideration, and establishes habits of lightness and cheap talk, which grieve the Holy Spirit of God and unfit us for the contemplation of heaven and heavenly things. This is the class that will have cause to mourn and lament because they are not prepared for the elevated joys of heaven. They are banished from the presence of God. But by the light of God’s presence, the righteous are enlightened and made supremely happy.
(12LtMs, Lt 28, 1897, 13)
“Now we beseech you, brethren, by the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, and by our gathering together unto him, that ye be not soon shaken in mind, or be troubled, neither by spirit, nor by word, nor by letter as from us, as that the day of Christ is at hand.” [2 Thessalonians 2:1, 2.]
(12LtMs, Lt 28, 1897, 14)
In this view of the final gathering together unto Christ, there would be erratic movements and a danger of deception. Paul would have the church looking for Christ’s appearing, and preparing for that day when He shall send His angels with a great sound of a trumpet, and they shall gather His elect together from the four winds, from one end of heaven to the other. God’s people must not only be waiting and watching, they must be diligently working as well. There will always be false and fanatical movements made by persons in the church who claim to be led of God—those who will run before they are sent, and will give day and date for the occurrence of unfulfilled prophecy. The enemy is pleased to have them do this, for their successive failure and leading into false lines cause confusion and unbelief. There is enough revealed and substantiated by the Word of God to show the lines upon which they can work. The labor performed in harmony with the mind of Christ will produce most healthful impressions and a genuine experience.
(12LtMs, Lt 28, 1897, 15)
The secret things which belong to God are to be left with Him; but the things which He has revealed are for us and for our children. We are not now back in Paul’s time. We are nearing the great day of God. The signs are fulfilling. And yet we have no message to tell us of the day and hour of Christ’s appearing.
(12LtMs, Lt 28, 1897, 16)
The Lord has wisely concealed this from us, that we may always be in a state of expectancy and preparation for the second appearing of our Lord Jesus Christ in the clouds of heaven. We are to search the prophecies that point to the roll of fast fulfilling events, and which Christ has plainly told us will take place prior to the end of this earth’s history. We are to watch and pray, wait patiently, and work faithfully to save perishing souls. Time is a most precious talent, and every moment is to be improved in doing our work wisely and well, so that if we are suddenly called to lay off the armor, we may be prepared to give up our account to God.
(12LtMs, Lt 28, 1897, 17)
“Be ye also ready, for in such an hour as ye think not, the Son of man cometh.” [Matthew 24:44.] The day and hour of Christ’s coming is pronounced by lips that speak the truth and the truth only, to be beyond the ken of man. Even the angels, the heavenly intelligences, are not informed of this. “But of that day and hour knoweth no man, no, not the angels of heaven, but my Father only.” [Verse 36.]
(12LtMs, Lt 28, 1897, 18)
Satan is watching his chance to destroy those souls who have not developed such characters as will fit them to rise in the first resurrection and be numbered with the redeemed, with those who have appreciated the great privilege of washing their robes and making them white in the blood of the Lamb.
(12LtMs, Lt 28, 1897, 19)
The emotional nature of some is easily affected. Christ would have every one educate themselves to calmly contemplate His second appearing. They are to search the Word of God daily, but not neglecting present duties. There were some who had listened to the earnest teaching of Paul in regard to the soon coming of Christ, and had overlooked their present duties to provide for their daily necessities, and in thus doing were a burden to their brethren.
(12LtMs, Lt 28, 1897, 20)
“Let no man deceive you by any means; for that day shall not come, except there come a falling away first, and that man of sin be revealed, the son of perdition; who opposeth and exalteth himself above all that is called God, or that is worshipped; so that he as God sitteth in the temple of God, showing himself that he is God.” [2 Thessalonians 2:3, 4.] Who are studying this portion of the Word among the churches of today?
(12LtMs, Lt 28, 1897, 21)
Lt 28a, 1897
Those in Responsible Positions in our Publishing Houses “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia January 9, 1897 Portions this letter are published in CW 172; PM 216-217; 8MR 349. To Those in Responsible Positions in Our Publishing Houses:
I am troubled in regard to the use of pictures in our publications. Some of our papers seem bent in using them in season and out of season. And some of the cuts used are very inferior, and poorly illustrate the subjects represented. I hope our publications will not come to resemble a comic almanac. I would not altogether condemn the use of pictures, but let fewer be used, and only such as are good illustrations of the subject.
(12LtMs, Lt 28a, 1897, 1)
On one point I wish to speak decidedly; that is in regard to using in the papers cuts from my books. Who has given the publishing houses permission to do this? Such use makes the pictures so common that it hurts the books. Is this right? Let it be understood that hereafter the cuts from my books are not to be used in the papers.
(12LtMs, Lt 28a, 1897, 2)
*****
For many months I have been waiting for a copy of Mount of Blessing, that I might see what changes have been made in the illustrations. If the publishers have sent out the book as first printed, I think it a great wrong to the book and to me. I accept no such pictures. The publication of this book has been delayed more than a year in order to get the pictures, which do injustice to the subject. If the book had appeared without cuts, I should have been much better pleased. I asked for this, but it was not thought best. One thing I insist upon: that hereafter there shall be no printing on the back of the cuts. I have been compelled to lose confidence in the taste and judgment of those who could accept such productions. I dare not trust any of them with the illustrating of my books. I should feel conscience-stricken should I have produced such miserable representations. As I have received no copies containing anything better, I fear you are selling the edition with those shameful cuts.
(12LtMs, Lt 28a, 1897, 3)
I think our publishing house has gone about crazy over illustrations. It is a shame for such cuts as those in Mount of Blessing to be put in a book. Keep out of the books illustrations of auto de fe, Catholic pictures of persecution and burning. It is enough to read of these wicked deeds, without trying to bring them in all their terrible details before the eyes. When I was a child Fox’s Book of Martyrs was given me to read. I saw the pictures representing various horrible acts of cruelty. I could scarcely eat or sleep. Day and night I was passing through the horrors, identifying myself with the suffering ones. I almost lost confidence in God because He allowed such things. It was a long time before I could overcome the impression made on my mind. Whenever the Book of Martyrs, or any other book of like illustrations, finds its way into my library, I hide it, that no child may be caused to suffer as I did. Such pictures do not increase faith. Let not one appear in my books.
(12LtMs, Lt 28a, 1897, 4)
The cut in Gospel Reader,—Moses Viewing the Promised Land—does great injustice to the subject, and great discredit to those who accepted it for the book. What sort of an impression will it make on the readers of the book? It is not in any sense a correct representation of Moses. It looks more like a picture of the great deceiver, Satan, after he had lost Paradise.
(12LtMs, Lt 28a, 1897, 5)
Page 52, same book—The Ark Standing in the Midst of Jordan—see the cherubim on either end of the ark. What a misrepresentation of the heavenly angels looking with reverence upon the mercy seat, the cover of the ark. A child might take the representation as a bird hunched up. But when the ark was removed from the sanctuary, the cherubim were never exposed to view. That sacred ark, which represented Jehovah amid His people, was always covered, that no curious eye might look upon it. Let it ever be covered.
(12LtMs, Lt 28a, 1897, 6)
*****
Brother Reaser speaks of the need of new illustrations for Patriarchs and Prophets. I am not decided, but fear it is not best to expend a large sum of money on new pictures for this book. Again, suggestion is made in regard to sending Brother Reaser to Jerusalem to obtain sketches for The Life of Christ. This will not be done at my expense. The Lord has presented to me that the time and money expended by our people in making long journeys around the world was spent for naught. Whatever may be the opinion of the canvassers upon this point, I cannot sanction the sending of anyone to Jerusalem to obtain cuts for my books. O, if we only had the money that has been no better than thrown away in many, many such enterprises, I would bless the Lord and take courage.
(12LtMs, Lt 28a, 1897, 7)
My soul is sick at the mismanagement of means when I see in this country how much good could be accomplished with it. If you choose to have a few pictures and good ones, I do not object. Let illustrations be choice rather than numerous.
(12LtMs, Lt 28a, 1897, 8)
Lt 29, 1897
Belden, Frank; Belden, Hattie “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia January 1, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 2MCP 376-377; 8MR 293-294. My dear nephew Frank and niece Hattie:
I wish I could write to you as I greatly desire to write—encouragingly, hopefully. But, my nephew, from the light that the Lord has given me, I regard you as a man that has been confused and bewildered in regard to principle, a man who has lost his clear spiritual vision. This is not because light has not been given to lead and guide you, for God has spoken, saying, “This is the way; walk ye in it.” [Isaiah 30:21.] It is because you have listened to other voices. By so doing, you have gone astray yourself, and have led others astray.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 1)
God has given you talents. They are His gifts; but they have not been under the control of His Holy Spirit. You can talk fluently, much more than is for your good, of others’ wrongdoings. You have turned from Christ’s character to the defects of human beings, and by beholding, you have become changed into the same image. You think evil and talk evil, criticizing sharply and sarcastically. This is the work that Satan is doing.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 2)
Your expressions of bitterness, your illustrations, your condemnatory spirit have poisoned your home life, and bring you no relief. You may have cause for the sentiments you express against individuals, yet it is greatly to your own detriment to harbor such strong feelings. I am so sorry for your wife, for she is becoming more and more under the deceiving power of Satan. She is without the attributes of Christ—tenderness, compassion, meekness, and lowliness. Imperceptibly, you are introducing poisonous, malarious elements into her mind that will educate your daughter.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 3)
From the light which God has given me, I know that spiritual deformity is being developed in you. In the place of giving a faultless exhibition of right principles and correct habits, you are gathering to yourselves sentiments and principles which will exclude you and all who partake of the same spirit from the heavenly courts. Your mind is becoming deformed by the way in which you treat it. I entreat of you to change decidedly about. Check all exaggerated language, for it destroys the harmony of the mind.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 4)
The body needs careful culture, that it may be kept in a healthy condition. So the mind needs to be strictly disciplined, lest it shall be unduly developed in some things and insufficiently developed in others. Because these susceptible organs are not in your sight, where you can see the harm that you are doing to your intellectual powers, and how much they need regulating, you are not conscious of the harm you are doing them. You entertain unsound theories, and your mind is made to serve these theories. The way in which you are mismanaging your mental machinery is wearing it out. But you cannot see what harm this is doing. Sooner or later your friends with you will see the unfavorable development of your thoughts and actions. Your stomach is beginning to testify to the action of the mind. A symmetrical and well-disciplined mind would change for the better the powers of digestion.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 5)
I cannot forbear telling you that you are as a piece of machinery that has been put out of order by an erroneous course of development and discipline. Your only hope is to place yourself in the channel of light shining from the Sun of Righteousness, closing every avenue that encourages wrong tendencies in the development of character. You need to remove from the [mind] scenes which have been as a training school to destroy your confidence in almost every one. No longer choose the malarious atmosphere you have hitherto lived in. You need to become a Christian in word, thought, and action. You need to be converted. The Holy Spirit alone can renovate and transform you. This Spirit alone can keep you from making your mind and heart a vineyard that Satan will cultivate. As soon as possible you should place yourself as a little child at the feet of Jesus, that you may receive the Holy Spirit’s molding. Then your mental faculties will be invigorated and will bear taxing in right lines.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 6)
You are now like a broken down machine. You do those things which harm mind and body, and unless you make a change, a decided change, your life will be sacrificed on the altar of an unwisely conducted and unsanctified ambition. God cannot put His blessing upon you. A continual deception is spoiling your whole life. You have put your mental powers under exhausting taxation! Your mind is already over-stimulated by devisings and plans that have failed. Thus you are wearing away your life forces, making your talents productive of no good to yourself or to others.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 7)
Time is golden. We are to be wise in employing our time and talents to the very best purpose. My dear nephew, you are acquainted with individuals whose minds are stored with knowledge of various kinds, politics, history, theology. They have gathered up an accumulation of learning, and this is massed together in a mind that is not under the sanctifying influence of grace. They do not co-operate with God to bring this mass of matter into appropriate action. Therefore they continually lose time by devoting it to matters that bring no satisfactory returns. Should the life of these men cease now, they would never hear the words, “Well done, good and faithful servant: ... enter thou into the joy of thy Lord.” [Matthew 25:23.]
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 8)
There has been presented before me, as an illustration, a class that has had every opportunity and privilege, as compared with another class that has far less qualifications and information, but who keeps the fear of God before it. Those who belong to this latter class regard their talents as entrusted to them. Their opportunities are limited, but they try to comprehend the grand lesson inculcated in the parable of the talents. They strive to use well their probationary time, vigilantly working in the contemplation of Christ’s coming. By a thorough training in the educational lines within their reach, they discipline themselves, that they may be prepared to learn and digest all true knowledge. Under a sense of accountability to God, they strive to make the most of the gifts entrusted to them.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 9)
This constitutes the ideal of Christian character, the all-round man, the perfect man in Christ. He does not spend his life in prayerful meditation only, neglecting to do earnest work for the Master. Neither is his life all outward bustle. He does not engage in active work to the neglect of personal piety. There is a happy blending of both qualities. He is “not slothful in business, fervent in spirit, serving the Lord.” [Romans 12:11.]
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 10)
The greatest work humanity has to do is to keep the lamp of the soul trimmed and the vessel filled with the oil of grace. You need to make every effort to prevent spiritual declension, lest the day of the Lord come upon you as a thief in the night.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 11)
I speak to your wife. Is it not time for you to take heed how you build? Is it satisfactory for you to become a woman pleased with attractive dress, but with no pleasure in the white robes of Christ’s righteousness? Is it not your only safe course to use well your God-given power by trimming the inner lamp, that its light may shine forth to others? If you continue to follow the course you have pursued, you will never see God’s face. No infidelity should be cherished or uttered. But the talent of speech is frequently used by you in a way that is dishonoring to God. Unless the root be holy, the speech is not sound, and no sweet fragrance is offered to God.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 12)
Frank, what can I say to you? From the light I have received from God, I know that you have a prayerless home. The time of your sojourning here is short. You think that you have surrendered yourself to God, but you have never yet fully given up your bitter feelings against others. You have used your talent of speech to lead them into temptation. Your words have encouraged them in wrong methods and wrong principles; and then, because they develop the ideas and principles which you have inculcated, and as the result injury is done to you, as the Lord designed it should be, to show you the sure result of such actions, you feel wronged.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 13)
All are to be workers together with God. All have been entrusted with talents, to use for the glory of God and not for selfish purposes. This capital is the Lord’s; He will require again both principal and interest. Every natural advantage is a talent. The responsibility of each human agent is proportionate to the amount of gifts received from the Lord. On the one blessed with the largest amount of talents rests the heaviest responsibility.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 14)
Frank, you and Hattie have not one moment to lose. You are not ready to die, and you are not ready to live to be a blessing to your own family and to others. You are not prepared for the Lord’s coming. The day of reckoning is not far distant. What account can you render to God for the neglect of your appointed work? Give yourselves to the Lord, and then you will have grace to work and watch. Trade diligently on your Lord’s goods, whatever may be the amount, pounds, pence, or farthings. Through the merits of Christ’s grace, consecrate all your talents to God’s service. Thus you can acquire growing, increasing talent.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 15)
Your moral responsibilities are not small. Can you continue to trifle with these responsibilities? Will you continue to surround your soul with an atmosphere that is a spiritual malaria? Will you not realize that your words are either right or wrong, that they are either a savor of life unto life or of death unto death?
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 16)
Frank, will you take the position that you should? You know not your spiritual blindness. You seem to think that you understand the failures of your brethren and that you know just where they made their mistakes. You think you can see the stone over which they stumbled to make the crooked paths they have made. But you do not feel that repentance for your own stumbling course of action that will not need to be repented of.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 17)
By beholding the defects of others, and talking of them, you are doing the very thing the Bible has told you not to do. While you do this work of criticizing, you are creating a malarious atmosphere in your home which is a savor of death unto death.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 18)
Our works, our present conformity or non-conformity with the principles of the law of Jehovah, will decide our future destiny. “By thy words thou shalt be justified,” said Christ, “and by thy words thou shalt be condemned.” [Matthew 12:37.] “A good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth good things, and an evil man out of the evil treasure of his heart bringeth forth evil things.” [Verse 35.] Those who have had a knowledge of the Word of God, and have not complied with that Word, but by word and deed have revealed that they are indifferent to the great salvation presented, are of that class who knew their Master’s will, yet did it not.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 19)
The Lord plainly states that all our actions are to be brought into review before God. The two mites given by the widow, the cup of cold water in the name of a disciple, the visiting in the prison, is registered as done to Christ in the person of His saints. The neglect of doing the very work which needed to be done and was not done, the unkind words, all have their weight in the scale. Nothing is insignificant that is as a thread in the great web we are all weaving in point of influence. Every transaction is important upon which holiness and truth has impressed itself, though in faint characters.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 20)
Nothing in sin is accounted as unworthy of notice that Satan has brought to the heart of man, and worked out in some shape. We have the statement that there is nothing covered that shall not be revealed, and nothing hid that shall not be known. These things that now appear as nothing to man will have their weight in the great tribunal of God, for or against. It is as the mote discerned in the sun’s rays, for the truth in behalf of righteousness, or against the truth in the working out of unrighteousness. The sinner will not merely be condemned for his own impenitence, but he will be judged for the way in which his impenitence has led others in the same evil work. Every soul will be accounted guilty in proportion to the light which God has let shine upon his pathway, and which he has rejected. Those who have had less light, and have accepted the plan of salvation, will lay hold of eternal life.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 21)
Those who have had light and evidence, but who have rejected it, will find that in accordance to their measure of light will be their condemnation. These will find themselves confronted by the men of Sodom and Gomorrah, by the men of Tyre and Sidon and Nineveh. The whole world will rise up in judgment to condemn those who have shown that they have despised the day of salvation. There is not an impenitent hearer of the gospel but will be condemned according to the light he has not improved and appreciated, for this light cost the life of the only begotten Son of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 22)
The judgment is to set, the books are to be opened. Then every man will be judged according to the things written in the books. In that great day of judgment every motive that led to action will be tested. The law of Jehovah will be exalted. The Lord God will reveal the character and power that His law has always possessed. That character is as infallible and unchangeable as the character of the God who sitteth upon the throne of heaven. The force and dignity of this law is only understood by the magnitude of the offering made to compass the redemption of man. Sooner than that one jot or tittle of this law should be changed, God’s only begotten Son died upon the cross of Calvary.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 23)
In His lessons Christ laid open the value and greatness of truth in its spiritual importance, and cited all who listened to His teachings to the high and holy principles in the Old Testament Scriptures as the germ in which was the whole legislation of the new economy.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 24)
In the last great day, Jehovah’s law will triumph. Then shall the scales fall from all eyes. What now is regarded by the transgressors of the law of God as of no special consequence, or of but little importance in the standard of morality and holiness, will appear as it is, holy, just, and good. It will be seen as taking immeasurable compass. The law of the Lord is perfect, converting the soul. Then character and law alone will seem to be as large as eternity. The reign of appearance and deception will cease. Semblance and pretence will drop their mask. People will see themselves just as they are, obedient or disobedient, loyal or disloyal to the law of Jehovah. Then the division of the whole family will be made.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 25)
There will only be two classes, the obedient and the disobedient. There will be no middle class. Only two classes will stand in that day, to be rewarded according to the deeds done in the body. The only class [saved] are the chosen of God, the subjects of His grace, exercising in their experience faith and repentance, and revealing to others the light that God has reflected upon them. They are God’s witnesses, and have indeed been, in their obedience to the law of God, a condemnation to the world.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 26)
“When the Son of man shall come in his glory, then shall he sit upon the throne of his glory. And before him shall be gathered all nations, and he shall separate them one from another, as a shepherd divideth his sheep from his goats; and he shall set the sheep on his right hand, and the goats on his left hand.” [Matthew 25:31-33.] Then will be decided the destiny of every soul. All judgment is committed into the hands of the Son of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 27)
Dear Nephew and Niece:
You have both made a mistake in not being that help that you should have been to each other. Frank, you have not been in your family a light, a comfort, a blessing, a houseband, working diligently to prepare yourself, and then co-operating with God to prepare your family to be wise virgins, [with] their lamps trimmed and burning. You have been so self-confident, so full of the idea that you possess talent. But your talents have not been sanctified. They have not been properly disciplined or used to the glory of God. The end of the world is near. What are you and Hattie going to do? I cry in the name of the Lord, Awake, awake to your peril!
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 28)
You are deceived and unhappy. Give up your faultfinding. Stop speaking the sarcastic words that Satan delights to hear. You have yourself, by your confident assertions, done more to bring into the Review & Herald office a questionable condition of things than any other one person. You stepped out. Those left went on, and the course of action developed by these methods and plans has reacted upon yourself. For your soul’s sake, do not begin to justify yourself, for you had light. Consider, be wise, repent, and confess for yourself, and not for any other soul.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 29)
You now have the warning. Will you heed it? I want you to be saved. The salvation of your soul is precious. But God alone can break the spell, and show you the mass of rubbish that you have accumulated about your soul. Make haste. Get ready. Wash you, make you clean. Then the angel of the Lord will touch your lips, as he did Isaiah’s, with a live coal from off the altar, and say, “Be clean.” [Isaiah 6:6, 7.] God will give you a clear cut message, burning with holy fire.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 30)
Redeem the time, for God has a work for you to do. It is a sacred work. But all this talking in regard to others’ treatment of you will not help your case one whit. Let it cease, that the holy coal from off the altar may touch your lips, and that God may say, “Be clean.” Then pure words of love will be spoken.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 31)
O sister Hattie, sister Hattie, your soul is precious; it is bought with a price, even the precious blood of the Son of God. A change of heart must take place in you. You are a worldly woman. If sickness should cut you off from this life, you have no well-grounded hope for the future immortal life. Can it be that you will not see the importance of a thorough conversion, that by your influence you may help your husband and daughter?
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 32)
Let it be the steadfast purpose, both of you and of your husband, lose or suffer what you may, to wage eternal warfare against the errors and sins that have a hold upon you. My heart is drawn out to you. I do not want either of you to stand in your own light, seeing others through your defective glasses. Take heed unto your own selves. And as you shall carefully study the holy law of God, the great standard of character, plead for grace that you may meet that standard. Take yourselves in hand. Turn not your sarcasm even upon your own individual selves. This would be wrong, because you are bought with a price. You are of value in the sight of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 33)
You are carrying out your own way, and when you do this, you lose sight of the Lord’s way, the only way that is pleasant and satisfying. Give to those who know you an evidence of the transforming power of the Spirit of God upon your heart and mind. Walk as intelligent, humble human beings who are saved by the grace of God alone and who are wholly dependent upon His matchless grace for their perfection of character. When you stop wrestling for your own way, the Lord will teach you how much better is His way and will. Then you will manifest a greater desire to show yourself approved by God, workmen that need not to be ashamed.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 34)
My brother, will you turn to the Lord with all your heart? Will you bring the simplicity of truth, the meekness and lowliness of Christ into your life? Will you enter the kingdom of heaven stripped of the idea of your smartness or talent? Will you come as one whose life is hid with Christ in God, not as a director, but as one to be directed? When you undertake to direct, you manifest a spirit that is not acceptable to God. Divest yourself of yourself and come to God as a little child, else you will never see the kingdom of heaven.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 35)
God bless you and enlighten your eyes, that you may see all things clearly, is the prayer of your aunt.
(12LtMs, Lt 29, 1897, 36)
Lt 30, 1897
Barren, Brother and Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia December 30, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother and Sister Barren:
I write to you, my brother, at this time, because I learn that you think of going to New Zealand. I think I would wait and at the present time obtain all the instruction possible. You are not well-versed in a knowledge of the Scriptures. You need to have a much better understanding of the Word than you now have. Study your Bible. You now have a good opportunity to secure the light that you need wherever you are and in whatever work you engage. You need a closer criticism of self, that you may not put your trust in self, but place your whole reliance upon the strong Helper.
(12LtMs, Lt 30, 1897, 1)
The evil heart of unbelief is the result of not seeking the Lord most earnestly. You need a much more sensitive conscience and a closer guarding of self. Draw nigh to God, and He will draw nigh unto you. Wherever you are, uplift your soul to God, making your requests known to Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 30, 1897, 2)
To every man the Lord has given his work. But wherever you may go, the Lord would have you more thoroughly prepared to do the work given you of God. If you should now seek to obtain a knowledge of how to treat the sick, it would be a blessing to you. Then wherever you went, you could give instruction to others by precept and example. There will be work to do in this line.
(12LtMs, Lt 30, 1897, 3)
I hope you will not move unadvisedly. Seek counsel from your brethren before making any hasty move. Carefully consider every step. The Lord Jesus Christ is not to be kept at a distance from us. He is the light and life of His people. The whole world lieth in darkness. The prince of darkness will ever exert to the uttermost his ability and strength in the defense and support of his own cause. His willing subjects are faithful and active. They are united in one common object, which is to magnify transgression and sin. If the Lord’s servants were as zealous, wide awake, and persevering in the cause and work of God as Satan’s servants are in his cause, there would be many more souls added to the Lord of them that believe.
(12LtMs, Lt 30, 1897, 4)
The present is a time of scourging and purifying, a time of warfare and trial. If the truth is allowed to possess the soul, it makes a place for itself. It is a necessity that it abide in the soul, a living, working agency. But the truth is not brought into the very life and character as it should be. Self occupies altogether too much space. The Lord will hear your earnest heart-longings after Him. But self has not been crucified in you. Now make a change. Let the Holy Spirit work you. Humble your heart before God, and obtain what you most need—true godliness. Seek the Lord most earnestly. Always bear in mind, of myself I can do nothing. In Christ is my efficiency.
(12LtMs, Lt 30, 1897, 5)
The question arises, “When shall thy people be reconciled to Thee, and live and move in harmony with Thy mind and will?” All are now taking sides, binding themselves in bundles through their own course of action. The Lord help you to humble your own heart, and open the door of your mind and let Jesus in. You will then have a treasure house from which to draw. You will be able to speak words to others that will be in season, that will impress their hearts.
(12LtMs, Lt 30, 1897, 6)
Consider the subject of taking a nurses course of instruction, learning how to work for the sick.
(12LtMs, Lt 30, 1897, 7)
Lt 31, 1897
Colcord, W. A. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Australia February 28, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in 19MR 378-384. Dear Brother Colcord:
I received your letter with the manuscript evening after the Sabbath, February 27.
(12LtMs, Lt 31, 1897, 1)
I have felt the movings of the Spirit of God. Sunday and Monday nights I could not sleep past one o’clock. I was in an assembly where the very sentiments you referred to in your letter were expressed. The “exclusively” was dwelt upon, and urged as a contract in the sale of our publications, pamphlets, and books.
(12LtMs, Lt 31, 1897, 2)
I was constrained to write out the principles that were set before us in that assembly as truth. These “exclusive” principles should not have place in the work of God. They should be cut out of your business arrangements and your councils in connection with the workers in the Lord’s great moral vineyard. My mind has been much exercised in regard to having this “exclusively” come in among those who are handling our papers and pamphlets in any line in your branch office. They are unworthy of being voiced or traced with a pen. It is a human device entirely with which God has had naught to do. Its origin is selfishness. The word should be cut out, for it is not inspired of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 31, 1897, 3)
The charge given to Timothy was, “I charge thee therefore before God, and the Lord Jesus Christ, who shall judge the quick and the dead at his appearing and his kingdom; preach the word, be instant in season, out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort with all longsuffering and doctrine.” [2 Timothy 4:1, 2.] And this charge is for all who are acting a part in the ministry, who are following the example of Christ. They must snatch the opportunities as they come. Let all be fully prepared to disseminate the light by word and by pamphlet. There should be hundreds of little tracts scattered as the leaves as autumn.
(12LtMs, Lt 31, 1897, 4)
Many Echoes have been sold. This is well so far as it goes, but light on many more subjects is to come before the people. There is a great need of leaflets and tracts, some containing short articles, others presenting the messages of warning, the second advent of our Lord Jesus Christ. The Sabbath, treated in brief, and its relation to the truth of the doctrines substantiated by the Scriptures should be circulated. It is not enough to merely sell the Echo. There is a world to be warned. Health subjects in clear, forcible, spirited articles, health and temperance principles, and experiences of faith and hope—all should be presented to the world. The branch office in the city may do a good work in this line. These silent words will make impressions on minds, and will awaken an interest in the truth of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 31, 1897, 5)
Light! Light! Let it shine forth everywhere. It is to be diffused in jots and tittles, here a little and there a little. It is to be diffused in contrast with error. There is a dense darkness upon human minds, and everything possible should be done to rend it away and let the true Light shine forth.
(12LtMs, Lt 31, 1897, 6)
There is too much limiting, too much setting of boundaries, altogether too much withdrawing ourselves from our own flesh. Workers in Melbourne are needed in every line. The Echo is a small paper, and should have a large circulation. Every advantage possible should be taken of the establishment of a now branch of the publishing house. Let the office carry all the advantages that if possibly can to meet its obligations. This need not create any jealousy in the minds of those who are engaged in the work in the same line.
(12LtMs, Lt 31, 1897, 7)
Let there be light: let it shine forth in clear, distinct rays. Let there be no question in this matter. It is essential that our works on present truth shall be displayed, and that when needed there may be no delay in sending to another locality to obtain them. There is need of workers in season, out of season, those who will confess the truth in every place. The branch office should be made a light bearer to the world. If the Lord’s workers are “sanctified,” His blessing will attend the work.
(12LtMs, Lt 31, 1897, 8)
While the Tract and Missionary Society has its work to do, it is not to hold itself “exclusively.” It is not to be a separate kingdom, and have a jurisdiction of its own. From the light which God has given me, He desires that His people shall improve every opportunity for disseminating light. They are to sow beside all waters. Our publications should be represented by the office in the city. It should be well supplied with tracts and publications for use at once. Many through curiosity will desire to know what these tracts and pamphlets contain, and if they are right at hand they can be sold, and the money used to carry forward the work of God for which the office is to be used. In any case they should not wait to refer to the International Tract and Missionary Society.
(12LtMs, Lt 31, 1897, 9)
This “exclusiveness” is not to have any place in the work, for it is not the inspiration of God. Wherever we can advance the truth, wherever we can enlighten minds in regard to our literature, we should do so. This world is corrupted by sin, and the thick darkness of error which enshrouds it is supposed by many to be truth. Those who are considered the most talented cannot remove the darkness and ignorance which, like a funeral pall, covers the world and the people. But there are bright truths which should appear in our Echo in short articles right to the point. It should contain simple, religious experiences which will remove the blindness from the eyes of the supposed most gifted men.
(12LtMs, Lt 31, 1897, 10)
One reason why the branch office should be in the city is that it may be a light, shining forth to those who would not otherwise discern it. The bright truths put forth in leaflets and pamphlets should be abundant. “Exclusiveness” should not restrain this work. The truth of God should not be hampered. There is not half being done that should be done. Your faith is too small, your methods too narrow and circumscribed. There is a grand work to be done of which just now you hear the echoes only. There is a brightening glory beyond the horizon of your present view of which you may now catch occasional sparks. Your faith does not yet grasp the future beyond. “We see” says the apostle, “as through a glass darkly.” [1 Corinthians 13:12.]
(12LtMs, Lt 31, 1897, 11)
Bear in mind that concerning the advocacy of truth there should be no jealousy. If this spirit is indulged, your plans, if not killed, will grow into selfishness of large proportions. You must not grasp in your finite control the things that God has in His own hands. You are to do service for God. But you are far behind. The night is far spent. But when the day is fully come you will discern more fully your neglect of the work which the Lord has appointed to be done by His human agencies, because of your “exclusiveness.”
(12LtMs, Lt 31, 1897, 12)
Cut out this exclusiveness wherever it may be. The light of God has given us for the world. It is not to be put under a bushel or under a bed. The devil is far from being narrow and prescribed in his work. This is plainly revealed by the rapidly increasing darkness, the multitudinous errors, heresies, misconceptions, and delusions of these last days. Creeds and false doctrines are popular and all pervading to leave the minds of the world with the drinking of the wine of Babylon, the most deadly heresy. The neglect of plainest warnings will place us on the guilty list. Yes, we have plenty of evidence of Satan’s might. We have evidence also that the day of work is nearly ended. Let every power that God has entrusted to His agencies be now employed. Restrict no one’s labor in any line if they are established in the truth, but let all work who will.
(12LtMs, Lt 31, 1897, 13)
The great apostasy is working to a point, and will develop into darkness deep as midnight, impenetrable as sackcloth of hair. This is the time to employ any system that can be devised to discover and counteract the leaven of error. Let there be light. There should be one hundred light bearers in our world where there is one today. Darkness will become more dense in human minds after the truth has penetrated and been rejected. But there are some minds where the darkness will be removed. They recognize the light.
(12LtMs, Lt 31, 1897, 14)
The apostasy will exist in this night of spiritual darkness. It will be destroyed by the brightness and exceeding glory of Christ’s coming. O, what a day of gladness for the righteous that will be! What a breaking up of the spell of fanaticism and delusive sentiments when Christ shall shine forth before His ancients gloriously! Then the system of satanic delusion, which souls have preferred to the truth that involves a cross, will be broken up.
(12LtMs, Lt 31, 1897, 15)
Satan has come down with great power to work with all deceivableness of unrighteousness in them that perish. The powers of deception are working upon minds in every country to gain a foothold. Satan is seeking to hedge up our way in this country. The night of trial, the night of weeping, the night of persecution for the truth’s sake, is not far distant. It is through much tribulation that we shall stand as faithful sentinels for God, not swerving one hair from truth and righteousness. Famines will increase; pestilences will sweep away thousands. Dangers are all around us from the powers without and Satanic workings within, but the restraining power of God is now being exercised.
(12LtMs, Lt 31, 1897, 16)
“Satan hath desired to have thee, that he might sift thee as wheat,” is applicable to very many souls. Yet we are not left helpless. The Lord spreads his covering hand over us, saying, “I have prayed for thee, that thy faith fail not.” [Luke 22:31, 32.]
(12LtMs, Lt 31, 1897, 17)
The church militant is not the church triumphant. We are enjoined, “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 against the wiles of the devil. 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. Wherefore take unto you the whole armor of God, that ye may be able to withstand in the evil day, and having done all, to stand. Stand therefore, having your loins girt about with truth, and having on the breastplate of righteousness; and your feet shod with the preparation of the gospel of peace; above all, taking the shield of faith, wherewith ye shall be able to quench all the fiery darts of the wicked. And take the helmet of salvation, and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God.” [Ephesians 6:10-17.]
(12LtMs, Lt 31, 1897, 18)
The night of trial is nearly spent. Satan is bringing in his masterly power because he knoweth that his time is short. The chastisement of God is upon the world to call all who know the truth to hide in the cleft of the Rock and view the glory of God. The truth must not be muffled now. Plain statements must be made. Unvarnished truth must be spoken in leaflets and pamphlets, and these must be scattered like the leaves of autumn.
(12LtMs, Lt 31, 1897, 19)
But let all walk and work circumspectly, under the molding influence of the Holy Spirit. There is little wisdom in binding about the work in any line. God has not given His sanction to any branch of His work being bound about. But unbelief has strengthened, and those who have not been sanctified through the truth will be subjects of Satan’s temptations. They will be his most successful allies to criticize, to speak evil, and work unrighteousness. There are now those who will show just what they will do under temptation and in an emergency. They cannot depended upon. The Lord has given them great light but they choose Barabbas rather than Christ. This is being reacted in our very midst. They crucify afresh the Son of God, and put him to an open shame. But the unsetting Sun of Righteousness is to shine forth, and those who have worked to counterwork what God has appointed will be gathered in bundles with the tares.
(12LtMs, Lt 31, 1897, 20)
“Thou hast a few names even in Sardis which have not defiled their garments; and they shall walk with me in white; for they are worthy. He that overcometh (his own inherited and cultivated tendencies) the same shall be clothed in white raiment: and I will not blot out his name out of the book of life; but I will confess his name before my Father, and before his angels.” [Revelation 3:4, 5.]
(12LtMs, Lt 31, 1897, 21)
The clouds with which human agencies have covered the truth will soon be dissipated. The truth that has not been clearly discerned will be opened before those who search for it as for hid treasure. The Holy Spirit will descend in power upon His people, explaining many mysteries. “And they shall teach no more every man his neighbor, saying, Know the Lord; for all shall know him from the least to the greatest.” [Jeremiah 31:34.] The Sun of Righteousness shall beam forth and penetrate to all depths, and reach to all heights, and the earth shall be filled with His glory. Let all dissension and strife and selfish thoughts be cherished no longer. “The night is far spent, the day is at hand.” [Romans 13:12.]
(12LtMs, Lt 31, 1897, 22)
Lt 32, 1897
Collins, Br. Refiled as Lt 23, 1896.
Lt 33, 1897
Collins, Gilbert “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia June 9, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in WM 332-333; 2BC 1010; 7BC 918-919; CG 41-42; 7MR 252-255; CTr 310; 4Bio 295-296. Dear Brother Gilbert Collins:
I was very sorry to hear of your illness. I hope that your entire trust is in Jesus Christ. The Word of God is your anchorage ground. For a long time we have waited for the signs to be hung out to our view, that we might understand that we are living in the closing scenes of this earth’s history. Little did I suppose that time would linger till I should be nearly seventy years old. The 26th of next November, dear Gilbert, I shall be seventy years of age. I have had a wrestling life, and when we were holding meetings in private houses, when only a few believed the truth, I did not think that time would last, or that my life would be spared, long enough for me to visit Europe and Australia.
(12LtMs, Lt 33, 1897, 1)
I have been engaged in missionary work in this new field for about six years. I did not come here from choice. I did not want to come, for I saw an abundance to do in America. But the conference decided that I had better come, and the people here were very anxious that I should come; so I am here, to do the Lord’s work in lifting the standard of truth in new localities. He has greatly blessed me in this work, and wherever I go, I have a message for the people.
(12LtMs, Lt 33, 1897, 2)
We have begun to clear our land here in the woods. One year ago last August Mrs. May White, Ella and Mabel White, and myself kindled the first brush fires, beginning to clear the land. It was very interesting work for the children; they enjoyed it ever so much.
(12LtMs, Lt 33, 1897, 3)
Four tents were then pitched, and the men began the work of felling trees, and preparing the land for cultivation. A breaking-up plough, drawn by sixteen oxen broke up the land. The land was simply ploughed. We could not then afford to do more than this.
(12LtMs, Lt 33, 1897, 4)
There were many here who were poor and in need. Men who were trying to serve the Lord, and keep His commandments could not provide food for their families; and they begged us to give them something to do. We employed them, and they ate at our table. We gave them suitable wages until their families were fed and comfortably clothed. Then we let them go to find work somewhere else. Some of them we had to provide with a suit of Willie’s clothes, to make them fit for Sabbath meetings. The failure of the banks here made many families poor.
(12LtMs, Lt 33, 1897, 5)
In this way we employed men who had worked at the cabinetmaker’s trade, carriage builders, and painters. They were in poverty and great need, and some had large families to provide for. We paid them not less than a dollar a day, and fed them. In this way we have worked to get a few acres cleared and planted in peaches, apricots, plums, pears, nectarines, apples, figs, oranges, and lemons. These trees were planted in the furrows the last of September and the first of October. The next April the entire orchard was ploughed again. By the next August, the trees were fragrant with blossoms. In November there was beautiful fruit on the peach and nectarine trees. These trees had been loaded with fruit, but most of it had been picked off when small. It was thought best for the trees to do this. With the blessing of God, by the coming November we shall have plenty of fruit.
(12LtMs, Lt 33, 1897, 6)
Our school is located here. Their land was cleared and planted with trees at the same time that my orchard was planted. This coming season we expect that it will bear fruit for the school. Our people are settling in this place. Here students are to be educated in books, and are also to be taught how to do all kinds of manual labor. The Lord will help us in this work. This is the first term of school. There are sixty students in attendance. Thirty of these come from a distance, and live in the home. All the students are young men and young women of excellent capabilities.
(12LtMs, Lt 33, 1897, 7)
We have located here on missionary soil, and we design to teach the people all round us how to cultivate the land. They are all poor because they have left their land uncultivated. We are experimenting, and showing them what can be done in fruit raising and gardening.
(12LtMs, Lt 33, 1897, 8)
For the benefit of our school we knew that we must get away from the cities, where there are so many holidays, and where the interest taken in ball playing, horse racing, and games of every kind amounts almost to a craze. In the woods we are just where we should be. Not that we expect to get away from Satan and from temptation, but we do hope to be able to teach the youth that there is something satisfying besides amusement.
(12LtMs, Lt 33, 1897, 9)
Two plain, simple, substantial buildings have been erected for school purposes. The main building is not yet built. We are using a wing, which will answer until we can get means to advance on the main building. We will soon be compelled to build a chapel. We are so thankful that we have been able to make a beginning; and we earnestly desire to have this school such as the Lord shall approve.
(12LtMs, Lt 33, 1897, 10)
The school commences at nine o’clock in the morning and closes at one. Then comes the dinner hour, and then three hours of physical labor, for the mental and physical powers must be proportionately taxed.
(12LtMs, Lt 33, 1897, 11)
We are favored with excellent teachers. Brother and Sister Hughes have lately come from America. Brother Hughes is principal, and his wife is one of the teachers. Brother Herbert Lacey and his wife are teaching in the school and are doing good work. Brother and Sister Haskell fill very important places in our school in giving Bible lessons. Sister Haskell is matron, and also teaches a Bible class. Brother Haskell also teaches a Bible class. He has a whole treasure house of knowledge to give to the school. The Bible is made the foundation of all the education. Religious education is the foundation of all proper education.
(12LtMs, Lt 33, 1897, 12)
Brother Haskell is a man of experience, and is respected and honored by all. His wife is a woman of rare ability as a manager. She takes hold most earnestly, not afraid to put her hand to any work. She does not say, “Go,” but she says, “Come, we will do this or that;” and they cheerfully do as she instructs them. We have had most precious instruction from the Word from both Brother and Sister Haskell.
(12LtMs, Lt 33, 1897, 13)
All are pleased with the location, and with the plain, simple, healthful diet. No meat is used. Butter is too expensive to be purchased. It is winter now; midwinter comes in July; but we have not had any severely cold weather.
(12LtMs, Lt 33, 1897, 14)
We have an excellent cook for the school in Brother Skinner. He prepares an excellent table. His wife is connected with the school Brother Skinner is also teaching the best methods of preparing food. Some feel the want of meat at first, but they soon acknowledge that their excellently prepared food is the best diet.
(12LtMs, Lt 33, 1897, 15)
O how anxious we are in behalf of the youth. We think of Joseph, how the Lord was with him in his youth, and of Samuel. The Lord accepted the offering of Hannah, while He passed by Eli, the aged priest, because he had neglected to properly train his sons to keep the way of the Lord. The Lord warned him, but he did not heed the warning. Eli neglected his duty to his children, and, although connected with the sacred work of God, they misrepresented and dishonored God and His truth by their wicked course of action. Eli knew of their sins, but he did not do his duty as a judge in Israel by separating them from holy office. The Lord spoke to the youth Samuel, and made known to him that because of the wickedness of the sons of Eli, He would not pardon their transgressions, He would not bless the house of Eli, but would cut them off in their sins. By this we see that the Lord will pass by old, experienced fathers connected with His work if they neglect their duty in their home life.
(12LtMs, Lt 33, 1897, 16)
Again we find most sacred lessons in regard to Timothy. He was a mere youth when he was chosen by God as a teacher. But his principles had been so established by a correct education that he was fitted to be placed as a religious teacher, in connection with Paul, the great apostle to the Gentiles. He was a mere youth, yet he bore his great responsibilities with Christian meekness. He was faithful, steadfast, and true, and Paul made him his companion in labor and travel, that he might have the benefit of his experience in preaching the gospel and establishing churches. Lest the churches should slight Timothy’s youth, Paul wrote, “Let no man despise thy youth.” [1 Timothy 4:12.] He could safely do this, because Timothy did not go forward in a self-sufficient spirit, but worked in connection with Paul, always seeking his advice and instruction as a learner.
(12LtMs, Lt 33, 1897, 17)
Paul loved Timothy because Timothy loved God. His intelligent knowledge of experimental piety and of the truth gave him distinction and influence. The piety and influence of his home life was not of a cheap order, but pure, sensible, and uncorrupted by false sentiments. The moral influence of his home was substantial, not fitful, not impulsive, not changeable. The Word of God was the rule which guided Timothy. He received his instruction line upon line, precept upon precept, here a little, and there a little. Impressions of the highest possible order were kept before his mind. His home instructors co-operated with God in educating this young man to bear the burdens that were to come upon him at an early age.
(12LtMs, Lt 33, 1897, 18)
There are many who move from first impulse, rather than from experience and judgment. But Timothy exercised consideration and calm thought, inquiring at every step, “Is this the way of the Lord?” There was nothing novel in the mind and work of Timothy. He had no specially wonderful talents; but his work was valuable because he used his God-given abilities as consecrated gifts in the service of God. The Holy Spirit found in Timothy a mind that could be molded and fashioned to become a temple for the indwelling of the Holy Spirit, because he submitted to be molded.
(12LtMs, Lt 33, 1897, 19)
The highest aim of our youth should not be to strain after something novel, but to place themselves under the teaching of the Holy Scriptures. Then they may possess the attributes classed as highest in the heavenly courts. They will hide themselves in God, and in all their teaching will simplify the original truth, so that it will not appear strange, but familiar to other minds. They will weave it into their daily thoughts and practical life.
(12LtMs, Lt 33, 1897, 20)
We see the advantage that Timothy had in a correct example of piety and true godliness. Religion was the atmosphere of his home. The manifest spiritual power of the piety in the home kept him pure in speech, and free from all corrupting sentiments. From a child Timothy had known the Holy Scriptures. He had the benefit of the Old Testament Scripture, and the manuscript of part of the New, the teachings and lessons of Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 33, 1897, 21)
I present these things, which my pen has traced by lamplight in the early morning hours. I feel deeply in regard to those youth who have not the advantage of proper instruction in the home, who are not brought up in the fear and love and admonition of the Lord. The lessons of the Bible have a moral and religious influence on the character, as they are brought into the practical life. Timothy learned and practiced these lessons. The great apostle often drew him out, and questioned him in regard to Scripture history. He showed him the necessity of shunning every evil way, and told him that blessing would surely attend all who are faithful and true, giving them a faithful, noble manhood. A noble, all-round manhood does not come by chance. It is the result of the molding process of character-building in the early years of youth, and a practice of the law of God in the home. God will bless the faithful efforts of all who teach their children as He has directed. But the bell rings for breakfast, seven o’clock and I must stop.
(12LtMs, Lt 33, 1897, 22)
I now resume my writing. My brother Gilbert, I wish to ask you if you would be pleased to make a donation to help to build a church. We are now occupying a room in the school building, but as there are now sixty students, thirty of whom occupy the present building, we see that we will have to give the room to the school. Our funds are exhausted; we have no means in the treasury.
(12LtMs, Lt 33, 1897, 23)
I do not urge you or any one to do that which you cannot do, but if you can do something to help us, it will be gratefully received. We are in a new field. There is much to be done in many lines, and poverty, poverty stares us in the face. I sent to South Africa for the loan of one thousand pounds, five thousand dollars in American currency, on which I pay interest. With this we have erected two plain, unadorned buildings. But the main building is not yet erected. We had the building that was to serve for the dining room, kitchen, and store room partly erected when our means gave out.
(12LtMs, Lt 33, 1897, 24)
When I saw how cramped we would be in this building, I advised that this building be carried a storey higher, making it a two story building. Then we could reserve a room for the school room below, and a room for Sabbath meetings above, and there would be sleeping rooms for the young men. But the argument came, “We have no money.” I said, “We must have that second storey, and I will be responsible.” This was put up, and now all say, “What would we have done without the second storey for this building? We could not possibly have got along this winter without the main building.”
(12LtMs, Lt 33, 1897, 25)
But our small meeting room accommodates only very few, and more students are expected. We have need of means, and if you or any of our New Bedford or Dartmouth friends feel it a privilege to invest the Lord’s means, lent you by Him, we will thank the Lord for any help you can render. In doing this work you will be laying up treasure in heaven. May the Lord strengthen and bless you, Gilbert, and give you His Holy Spirit in large measure, is the prayer of your sister in Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 33, 1897, 26)
Lt 34, 1897
Collins, Gilbert “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia June 8, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother Gilbert Collins:
I have heard that you suffer, especially in the cold winter weather, with long difficulty. I would be pleased could I visit you in Dartmouth. I remember when I used to come to your home when your father and mother were living, and Deborah and yourself, their children, composed the family circle. Do you remember when your life was in peril, when apparently there was no possibility of your recovery, how we presented your case to the Lord in prayer? My husband took you up, a frail youth, hardly anything more than skin and bones, and walked the room with you, praying that the Great Physician, the Mighty Healer, would undertake your case. Your coughing fits were so severe that it seemed as if you could not breathe, and your father took you out of doors in his arms twice that you might recover your breath.
(12LtMs, Lt 34, 1897, 1)
Well, we continued to wrestle in prayer with God, and we realized that in the room there was One who could stay the hand of the destroyer. Heaven seemed very near that night. My husband and I never forgot that occasion. With our spiritual eyesight we could discern the Great Physician who had taken you in the arms of His mercy. His presence was in that room, and His power was sensibly felt. Our faith did not fail, neither were we discouraged, when we had the evidence before us that Satan was the destroyer. Christ the Lifegiver, the Restorer, rebuked his power, and victory came. By faith we rejoiced, and by faith we left you in the hands of God, the greatest Physician the world has ever known.
(12LtMs, Lt 34, 1897, 2)
The next day we went on our way in answer to an appeal from Brother Nichols to come to Boston. Sister Temple needed help from the Lord. She was afflicted with cancer of the arm. She had tried physicians, but had received no help, and the disease had now reached the lungs. Unless the Lord should hear prayer in her behalf, she would soon go into the grave.
(12LtMs, Lt 34, 1897, 3)
We had also received another letter from Brother Hastings, urging us to come at once and visit them. Their family was in a most distressed condition. His wife had a baby about six weeks old, which almost unceasingly was crying at the top of his voice. The mother was sick, and it seemed that she could not recover. The children were all afflicted with erysipelas and their home was a place of great suffering.
(12LtMs, Lt 34, 1897, 4)
We immediately responded to the calls, and went to our old home at Father Nichols’. He took us in his carriage to Boston, and we entered the hired rooms occupied by Sister Temple. There were present Brother Nichols and wife, my husband and myself, and one other person. When Sister Temple greeted us, she could scarcely speak a sentence without coughing most severely. She was seated in a chair, and her arm was examined. The arm—a little space from the wrist to the shoulder—had a most terribly sore appearance like a rose cancer. It was a most distressing sight. We could not touch it; but laying a cloth beneath the arm, we anointed it with olive oil. All were bowed in prayer while the anointing was taking place. This was our part, according to the direction of God through His servant James. We followed the Word of God as directed, and this is all the service we could perform. Then we presented the case to the Great Physician, and we believed He would hear our prayers. The Lord came very near. We knew that He was in that humble room, and praised the Lord for it.
(12LtMs, Lt 34, 1897, 5)
Before we rose from our knees, Sister Temple was working that arm backwards and forwards, and praising the Lord, saying, “It is healed; it is healed. There is a little soreness as I use it; but the Lord has heard prayer. My lungs are relieved; the pressure is removed; and my heart is filled with gratitude and thankfulness to God.” We were indeed greatly blessed of God, and felt His sacred, solemn presence.
(12LtMs, Lt 34, 1897, 6)
This sister’s husband was a confirmed drunkard. In form he was a noble specimen of man; but his whole system had become permeated with liquor; his will power had become dead. This sister was very poor; she was suffering, without a real home, and without sympathy except from her two young children. We felt that if we could only bring some power to take hold of the father, so that he should by his labor support his wife and children, what a happy family this might be. But we knew the force of habit to be so strong that unless the power of a new life could enter into him, and vitalize his whole nature, there was no hope. He was doomed to go into a drunkard’s grave. In order for a drunkard to change his course, he must lay hold of a power out of and above himself. We knew that the only hope for this man was for him to become a Christian. We knew that no human power could be brought to bear upon that slave of sin, in whom years of indulgence had created and strengthened the appetite for spirituous liquors, and deadened all sense of moral obligation to God and to his helpless family. If he could only be brought in touch with God, in touch with the power that worketh righteousness, there was hope. But an awakening could not take place while he kept his system under the influence of liquor, for the whole man was transformed; he possessed the attributes of Satan.
(12LtMs, Lt 34, 1897, 7)
Leaving the family under the influence of the Spirit of God, we went on [to] the Hastings’. Here we found a distressed family indeed. A girl who had visited them had come from a house afflicted with erysipelas. She had used the comb from the comb case, and the members of this family, using this comb, had contracted the disease. Their faces were swollen; their hearing affected; and they were a pitiful looking set of children. The mother was very sick. We prayed for the entire family, and we knew that the Lord Jesus was in our midst, and that our prayers would bring the returns.
(12LtMs, Lt 34, 1897, 8)
We were very weary, and retired to rest. But I could not sleep for the wails of the infant, the smallest speck of humanity I had ever looked upon, but perfect in form and feature. I could not feel that our work was done. I must not stop now. My husband and I dressed, and after seeking the Lord in prayer, went into the room. The mother was in a great worry over the continual crying of her little one. My husband said, “Let us pray.”
(12LtMs, Lt 34, 1897, 9)
The father and mother, with her babe in her arms, kneeling upon the floor, we united in prayer. I took the little one in my arms, and presented it before the Lord. We all felt His presence in that room. Then I presented the case of the mother, worn out for want of sleep, and her bodily affliction. “O, for the Healing Touch upon the infant. Let its crying cease. Let peace and the rest of Christ come to that afflicted home,” was our prayer. “Take the little one in thine own dear arms and give it peace and quiet.” Our prayers were heard. The “Peace, be still,” was spoken. [Mark 4:39.] The disturbance was at an end. Comfort and peace came to the home, and then the crying babe was healed.
(12LtMs, Lt 34, 1897, 10)
We remained here eight days, seeking to help not only this family, but the church. And the Lord’s blessing attended our efforts. We then returned to Boston, and to visit Sister Temple. We found her washing, to earn means to sustain her family. For many months she had been an invalid; but now the first words from her lips were, “Bless the Lord, O my soul; and all that is within me bless his holy name.” [Psalm 103:1.] The Lord is good. He whom the Lord blesses in answer to prayer is blessed indeed.
(12LtMs, Lt 34, 1897, 11)
I asked in regard to her arm. Said she, “It was healed in answer to prayer.” A new tender skin had formed over the rough surface. Her husband had come in drunken, and not knowing what he was doing, had laid hold of her arm with a firm, cruel grip, and there were the prints of his fingers, marring the tender skin. “There,” said she, “is that arm that has been helpless and hopeless as far as human remedies are concerned. I shall never distrust the Lord. I have a deeper knowledge of His mercy and His loving kindness. He has performed a miracle upon me, and I am a wonder to my neighbors. O, if my husband would only treat his family as he should. He is kind; but when he is full of liquor, he is dead to all affection. Reason is gone, and he does not know what he is doing.” We had a season of prayer with her, offering up to our heavenly Father our grateful thanks for His wonderful mercy and love for all those who seek Him with the whole heart.
(12LtMs, Lt 34, 1897, 12)
We returned to New Bedford—I think it was about four weeks from the time we left. As we approached the house of Dartmouth, we saw Gilbert Collins at the door, splitting wood. We were greeted heartily by the family, and as we bowed together before God, our hearts were melted into tenderness and love for our Saviour for His goodness, His mercy, and His loving kindness to all those who seek and serve Him with the whole heart. Gilbert began to amend from that night and had no relapse.
(12LtMs, Lt 34, 1897, 13)
Lt 35, 1897
Chapman, Brother; Bell, Brother “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia January 22, 1897 Previously unpublished. + Dear Brethren Chapman and Bell:
I have been passing through a painful experience, both in Melbourne and in Cooranbong. Rebellious feelings have been cherished by Brethren Shannon and Lawrence. They have greatly dishonored God; and you have been leavened by and participated in this spirit, especially Brother Bell. His words have been sharp and critical. Did he think that God was moving upon him to talk as he has done? Your course will bring darkness to your souls and to the souls of those to whom you communicate your spirit. The leaven of evil has done its work in Melbourne in various lines. Its evil influence has retarded the work both in Melbourne and in Cooranbong.
(12LtMs, Lt 35, 1897, 1)
All this work has been done because men have felt at liberty to indulge in evil speaking and passionate words. But had all been as they said it was, they would not have been justified in talking as they have done. Who has set you to do this work? Not the Lord, but an enemy. You are not at liberty, under any circumstances, to think and speak evil, as it has been represented to me you have done. Words have been spoken that you will be ashamed to have appear before the heavenly universe.
(12LtMs, Lt 35, 1897, 2)
Brother Bell, your spirit is not right with God. How could you think that you were instigated by the Spirit of Jesus? Truth and righteousness have no part in the spirit that you have entertained. It has been represented to me that Satan was by your side, regarding you with exulting satisfaction as bitter words issued from your lips.
(12LtMs, Lt 35, 1897, 3)
You are not compelled to help in any line in advancing the school, but the Lord will not sanction your spirit or your influence in seeking, by pen or voice, to represent that which really you know nothing about, except by the reports of men who have greatly dishonored God. You may have thoughts and feelings that are not in accordance with the truth. Would it not be well to restrain these angry and extravagant feelings? Do not give expression to your feelings in words that show that you have lost Christ out of your soul.
(12LtMs, Lt 35, 1897, 4)
I tell you, my dear brethren, you know not what you are doing, or what manner of spirit you are of. Ignorantly, you have placed yourself on the same side as Satan to annoy your brethren, and the root of bitterness is springing up, whereby many will be defiled. Why cannot the people of God act like sensible Christians? Why do they, when brought into circumstances of trial, act hastily, like insubordinate children? Do you know that the Lord’s Watcher was by your side when you spoke your bitter words and uttered your hard speeches? But those who have started this leaven of bitterness, have the greater sin.
(12LtMs, Lt 35, 1897, 5)
I reprove you in the name of the Lord, and I ask you if such a spirit is becoming to a child of God. I ask you to repent of this spirit, and be converted, and ask the Lord to heal your soul, which is His property, which He has purchased with His own blood. The Spirit of God will not abide with you unless you will cast out the evil spirit. You cannot yoke up with Christ and yet connect with evil agencies, and discourage those who are trying as faithful servants to do the will of God. Brethren Shannon and Lawrence have acted a disloyal part. Do you choose to sustain this kind of spirit? If you do, God will not sustain you.
(12LtMs, Lt 35, 1897, 6)
The work on these grounds can be done only by self-sacrificing efforts. The treasury holds but very limited means, and in building we cannot work on the plans that they do in Battle Creek. We must make the most of every sixpence, every shilling, and every pound. They have nothing in the treasury except that which I have brought in by hiring money from Africa, on which I pay interest. High-priced carpenters cannot be employed. It is simply an impossibility to do this. Where to draw from, we know not. We are distressed at the drouth of means. If men expect us to pay them the usual carpenter’s wages, every dollar would be laid out in this way, and the work would be left half done.
(12LtMs, Lt 35, 1897, 7)
The Lord has heard the representations that Brother Shannon has made of this work. He has proved himself a traitor. Thus God calls him. That which you have heard against W. C. White has been as cruel as the grave. He has worked for Brother Shannon’s interest, to give him work, when I was not in favor of employing him, for fear his precise carpenter ideas would involve me in a great deal more money than I could afford to spend. But Willie prevailed, and I employed him.
(12LtMs, Lt 35, 1897, 8)
Did you know that the false tirade and accusations that you brought against Willie and against his management and work stands registered in the books of heaven? When men stand, after a work has been done, and pour out their accusations against the one whose whole life is a continual sacrifice and devotion to the cause of God, let them remember that their words are written in the books of heaven. You were simply carried forward by the inspiration of Satan and his agencies. Now, we do not ask for your money; we do not ask you to manifest any interest in the school; but we do ask you to stop your accusing, for in doing this, you place yourself on Satan’s side. Had you carried the many burdens and perplexities W. C. White has carried, you would have felt that you needed sympathy.
(12LtMs, Lt 35, 1897, 9)
Satan is opposed to every movement to advance the school, but if this were all, it would not be so formidable to meet. But when those who ought to stand by as a strength and support, as counsellors, join the enemy’s ranks, and turn their weapons against our own burden-bearers, when our own soldiers act and talk like our enemies, I feel like leaving the field for them, in their great wisdom, to manage.
(12LtMs, Lt 35, 1897, 10)
You have grieved the Spirit of God. You have built up difficulties. May God forgive you, for you are working, not only against me, but against all God’s servants who are praying and studying, who deprive themselves of sleep and rest, who are carrying heavy loads that you do not dream of.
(12LtMs, Lt 35, 1897, 11)
I write this because I want you to call a halt before you advance farther in this line. This matter has been opened to me, and the burden that you have brought on me, you cannot measure, because I see that you, with others, are making our labors tenfold harder.
(12LtMs, Lt 35, 1897, 12)
Lt 36, 1897
Davis, N. A. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia August 16, 1897, Monday 3 a.m. This letter is published in entirety in 13MR 1-5. + Brother Davis:
As we were bowed before God in prayer before you left on Sunday night, the only petition, you remember, that I offered was that you might be delivered from the power of satanic agencies that were determined to hold control over you until they should bring you down to their own lowest depths. I advised you to open everything to Elder Daniells and our leading brethren, and solicit their prayers in your behalf that Satan might be rebuked.
(12LtMs, Lt 36, 1897, 1)
You answered me that you had not been troubled with the temptations you had when canvassing, that since you had been circulating the petitions you had been free from these horrible temptations. But when we were bowed before God I could see you surrounded with demons, all ready to take you under their control and lead you wherever they chose.
(12LtMs, Lt 36, 1897, 2)
There is danger in having the least connection with theosophy or spiritualism. It is spiritualism in essence, and will always lead in the same path as spiritualism. These are the doctrines that seduce the people whom Christ has purchased with His own blood. You cannot break this spell. You have not yet broken it.
(12LtMs, Lt 36, 1897, 3)
August 17, 2:30 a.m.
There have been some matters opened to me during the past night. Your case is one that no one can help you. To trust in human help will be to fail. You are not free from Satan’s power to do even the things you purpose to do. You have vile thoughts, and have corrupted your ways before God. The sentiments which you have once accepted are ever present with you.
(12LtMs, Lt 36, 1897, 4)
August 19
I was called away from this letter, but will add, Your case is a very perilous one. You are under the control of an unclean spirit. Will you look, and see the course you have pursued in borrowing money of others, and spending money that has come into your hands from any source? Your ideas, and plans, and thoughts, and actions, are all demoralized. You should never again attempt canvassing. You have had a chance, as others have had, but you have appropriated the money in many ways. Will you tell how? You have evidenced that a man may have advantages in education, in pleasing abilities, and this gives him opportunity to be received, to be trusted, and yet disappoint most cruelly, as you have disappointed those, both men and women, who have been deceived by an apparent honesty.
(12LtMs, Lt 36, 1897, 5)
I was on the point of saying that I would help you with money to tide over your difficulties, but the Spirit of the Lord teaches me that as you now are this would be using the Lord’s money to hurt yourself and other souls. From the light given me of God, there is entrusted to you talent for which you are responsible; but to trust you with money would be to put it into a bag with holes, and you would be no more relieved than before you received it.
(12LtMs, Lt 36, 1897, 6)
But not only is upon you the sin of wasting your Lord’s goods in the money line, of robbing the treasury of God by wasting the means which should be used at this time in getting the truth before other souls that would receive the truth had they a chance, but your course is immoral. You are bringing disgrace upon the cause of truth. Whatever may have been your past course of action, you have not been converted to the mind and character of purity and cleanness and truthfulness before God. You have not only brought misery and distress and shame upon those who have trusted you with money, but you have brought moral corruption upon souls. You are a dangerous man to be left to yourself anywhere.
(12LtMs, Lt 36, 1897, 7)
The Lord has given you a clear insight into His Word. He has blessed you with powers to communicate that Word in an acceptable manner. But through your polluted ideas and impulses you seem to have no moral power to resist. Until you are converted from your evil course of action unto the Lord, you cannot be trusted to handle books or to have any money from the treasury to be used to flow into channels that will help you to multiply evil.
(12LtMs, Lt 36, 1897, 8)
There is only one hope for you. You must come to Christ as a poor sinner ready to perish, humble your soul before God, exercise that repentance that needeth not to be repented of, and God will receive you. You are constantly under remorse when you are communicating from the Word light and truth to others. If that truth sanctified your own life, you would be a blessing and not a curse. Your only hope is to seek the Lord while He may be found, to call upon Him while He is near. “Let the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts, and let him return unto me, and I will have mercy upon him; and to our God, for he will abundantly pardon.” [Isaiah 55:6, 7.]
(12LtMs, Lt 36, 1897, 9)
Why do you not make thorough work? Why do you remain an agent through whom Satan will work to decoy others to lend you money which you have no prospect of repaying? Why do you transgress the law of God while professing to keep it? If you determine to break the power of satanic agencies that is upon you, present your case before the servants of God, humble your heart before God, and ask them to pray for you that God will have mercy upon you. Unless you are transformed day by day by the grace of Christ, your connection with the sacred work of God must end. In pursuing the course you have, your influence is a reproach to the Seventh-day Adventists as a body.
(12LtMs, Lt 36, 1897, 10)
In your letter you complain of the yoke of debt. But there is no excuse for your being in debt. If you would be led by the Lord, you would not incur debt, but led by the devil you will draw money from the treasury which is needed to forward the work in its various branches. You should not trust yourself in managing business which will place money in your power to handle. Why? Because you distress others. Your freedom in borrowing, with no reason to suppose that you will be in a position to repay it, is doing great injustice to others, robbing them of their little all, and bringing reproach upon the cause of God. If you realized what you were doing at the time of your action, you would stop. You would see the sinfulness of robbing men, believers or unbelievers, and bringing them into strait places in order to relieve your present necessities.
(12LtMs, Lt 36, 1897, 11)
This case of yours, Brother Davis, is not a small affair. In the course you have pursued you will leave upon the track of other canvassers a blighting influence, difficult for you to efface. You will have closed the door to other persons who would canvass and do the work honestly, but who will be regarded as untrustworthy. To those who really need to have some indulgence and favors in the line of trust, because of the wrong course some canvassers have pursued, they dare not venture. And with the experience they have had, in the loss from the treasury of hundreds of pounds, why should they not be afraid to repose confidence in men who so manage as to draw from the treasury and leave them minus the means they so greatly need to sustain the work of God for this time?
(12LtMs, Lt 36, 1897, 12)
I am sorry, so sorry, for you, but I dare not draw from the Lord’s entrusted money to help you out of your present difficulty. Those whom the Lord has made stewards of His means must be faithful to their trust, for God holds them responsible. They are to be faithful stewards.
(12LtMs, Lt 36, 1897, 13)
Lt 37, 1897
Davis, Marian Stanmore, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia November 19, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in 12MR 345-362. Dear Marian:
I feel very grateful to my heavenly Father for the strength He has given me to reach this place. At Morisset we got into a ladies’ compartment, in which were three women, one young girl, and one well behaved baby. The seat was hard, and I had to sit up, but I was not tired. When we reached Gosford, we changed into a second class compartment, and the seats were in every way as good as in the first class car.
(12LtMs, Lt 37, 1897, 1)
The change of trains at Strathfield was rather hard for Sara, but she got all fixed up nicely. After the change was made, we had to wait about three quarter of an hour for a train to Stanmore; and at Stanmore we could find no conveyance to take us the short distance up the hill to the home for the workers. Sara had to find a cart that would take all our luggage, and then I took her arm and walked slowly up the hill.
(12LtMs, Lt 37, 1897, 2)
Oh, how pleased I was to enter the room that was waiting for us. It is a very pleasant room, with two windows and two doors, one door opening into the hall, the other onto the piazza. I lay down at once, and then heard a little about the meetings here. I have written a few words to Brother Wilson, which I wish you and the family to see.
(12LtMs, Lt 37, 1897, 3)
Last Sunday the tent was not only crowded, but the people stood ten feet deep on the outside. From what little I have heard, the interest seems to me to resemble that which was manifested in 1844. The work of the Spirit of God upon hearts has indeed begun. All the heavenly intelligences are waiting for channels through which they can communicate the light of truth, and to help in the work to be done in human hearts. The whole community is stirred.
(12LtMs, Lt 37, 1897, 4)
Mrs. Gorrick is keeping the Sabbath. One of her neighbors, a member of the High Church, wished her to meet Cardinal Moran at her house, and she consented to do so. When he came in, the lady of the house fell on her knees before him and kissed first one hand and then the other. This both astonished and disgusted Mrs. Gorrick. She was then introduced to him. He began questioning her and entered into conversation with her, giving a lengthy talk in regard to the church and its delegated power and authority. He then spoke of a very desirable piece of land they were anxious to purchase, telling her that he thought Mr. Gorrick could in some way secure this land for them, without letting the owners know for what purpose it was to be used. He asked her if they could not help them. She told him that they were deciding to unite with the Seventh-day Adventists, and would help them build a church; she had accepted the seventh-day Sabbath, she said, which was the Sabbath of the Bible. The first day was not the Sabbath.
(12LtMs, Lt 37, 1897, 5)
Cardinal Moran told her that all Protestants should keep the seventh day, that they had no reason for keeping Sunday as a holy day. The Roman Catholics, he said, had a right to keep Sunday; but Protestants had nothing to base their faith upon in their observance of that day. She told him that she had been considering this matter very thoroughly, and had come to the true church.
(12LtMs, Lt 37, 1897, 6)
They had, I believe, a very earnest talk, but Mrs. Gorrick is more firm and decided than before this interview. She can see plainly that the authorities of the Catholic church set themselves above God, assuming the place of God, and speaking with the authority of God. This interview will not only enlighten her eyes, but, through her, the Lord can enlighten the eyes of many others.
(12LtMs, Lt 37, 1897, 7)
The people act as if they had never read their Bibles. Many are thoroughly aroused. Sister Haskell has just come in, and tells us that another lady has been found keeping the Sabbath. This lady begged that her husband might be visited. She wants him to be converted as she has been. They promised to visit him. Every day new Sabbathkeepers are found. Some have been keeping the Sabbath since before the camp meeting closed.
(12LtMs, Lt 37, 1897, 8)
I will tell you more when I learn more. This is a wonderful interest. The Holy Spirit is working on human hearts. The people are apparently greedy for the truth. They appreciate the Word of God; it seems so wonderful to them.
(12LtMs, Lt 37, 1897, 9)
I can see more clearly now why the light was given me to give to our people in regard to advertising the camp meeting. Elder Daniells wrote to Brother Baker, saying that there should be a company of workers begin labor in Sydney and its suburbs some weeks before the opening of the camp meeting. He wrote me in regard to the matter. That night, after receiving Brother Baker’s letter, enclosing a copy of the letter from Brother Daniells, the Lord gave me light. I saw that it was not the best thing to do [to] make our plans known and advertise the meetings to be held, for in doing this we would prepare the way for the ministers of the churches to arm themselves with all their implements of warfare, and by their falsehoods in their publications make the people bitter opponents to the truth. I was shown that the best plan on this occasion was to come on the people as a surprise, and let them have an opportunity to hear for themselves before the ministers of all denominations should rally their forces to misinterpret our work and pour in their false reports.
(12LtMs, Lt 37, 1897, 10)
Well, Brother Baker carried out this instruction to the letter. The cautions given were heeded. The light given was, When the seed of truth has been sown in the hearts of the people by the laborers at the camp meeting, then those who remain to follow up the work will, through the Spirit’s power, be prepared to ripen off the work and gather in the harvest. The means used before the camp meeting would not be one-third as successful as the same expense and labor put forth after the influence of the meeting had been felt. In many cases such large advertising and distribution of publications hedges up the way instead of preparing it. Now we see a large, deep interest, and if the working forces will walk softly before God; if they will walk humbly, and pray, and watch unto prayer, they will have the co-operation of heavenly angels. Christ will work by His Holy Spirit upon human hearts.
(12LtMs, Lt 37, 1897, 11)
The work is advancing, and all are of excellent courage in the Lord. I am so glad, so thankful to God for all His benefits and blessings. I felt the peace of God in my heart in coming to this place. Now in my weakness I speak to the people on the morrow (Sabbath). After three weeks of sickness, I go forth in the name of the Lord. He has given me a message to bear to the people, and He will give me strength to bear it. My heart cries out after the living God. I shall pray, I shall believe and praise God, because I believe He will help me.
(12LtMs, Lt 37, 1897, 12)
I have been thinking that it would be a good thing to send down all those little books by Brother Haughey on the coming of the Lord. I have saved some to carry to different places, but will now have them sent down here. Then there are our papers, Present Truth, the Signs of the Times, Youth’s Instructor, and our church papers. Gather up what you can find in my room, and send them down. We will try to get subscribers for some of these papers. I want to see those who are interested furnished with reading matter.
(12LtMs, Lt 37, 1897, 13)
Now comes the donation of perhaps fifty or one hundred of my books, just as necessity demands. I have brought some with me, and have several others in mind. I must have Patriarchs and Prophets, and The Great Controversy. I do so want that book on temperance. I need also books on the life of Christ. I want to get these things in the hands of those who do not have them. Will you see if there are some of the best bound books in my stock? Let there be quite a box of books—a variety of what I have on hand—sent. This is the time I can show liberality to some purpose, to help establish souls in the truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 37, 1897, 14)
But the Sabbath is drawing on, and I must close and mail this. Believers and unbelievers are all deeply interested. They say, You are going to build a meetinghouse, are you not? And they are all ready for the proposition. Next Sunday night the matter of building will be laid before the people. All will be given an opportunity to donate. The time has come to, “Arise and build.” [Nehemiah 2:20.] We need much more faith to stir us up to zeal and good works. Now the time has fully come for a house to be built for the Lord. God will help all those who are pushing forward and not holding back. The Lord has a great work to be done in the city of Sydney. We will advance as long as we hear the word, “Go forward.” May the Lord bless you all.
(12LtMs, Lt 37, 1897, 15)
Much love to all.
(12LtMs, Lt 37, 1897, 16)
Lt 38, 1897
Daniells, A. G. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia January 10, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in BTS 03/1909. Elder A. G. Daniells
North Fitzroy, Melbourne Dear Brother:
I received your letter with the enclosures. I was much relieved. I do have an appreciation of human souls, and shall be rejoiced if the brethren that left the office will come back under the conviction of the Spirit of God. I want to see them happy in the love of God, and in the very place where the Lord has appointed them. He has given to every man his work, and to those who are connected with His special service He will give grace and power, if they will ask for it.
(12LtMs, Lt 38, 1897, 1)
For the past week I have been drawn out in our seasons of family prayer, in a special manner, in behalf of our Brethren Miller and Woods. I have felt that we should see the four who left the office in their positions again, doing service to God.
(12LtMs, Lt 38, 1897, 2)
On Sabbath I again bore my testimony decidedly in favor of the church searching their own hearts. We must bear in mind that Satan is a wily foe, and he will work with the greatest diligence to hedge up the way of every soul who will give to the Lord his service. We are none of us free from his temptations.
(12LtMs, Lt 38, 1897, 3)
At times I am severely distressed as I see the wicked course that Brother and Sister Shannon have pursued. These souls are precious, but to see them so unreasonable and wicked and accusing, makes my heart ache.
(12LtMs, Lt 38, 1897, 4)
I feel so sorry that we cannot have any minister here or in Sydney. I tell you it is trying for me. I shall go to Sydney this week. I have now let Brother Semmens have £35. He wrote me that he had eight patients, and must do more purchasing. I hope that they will drive me out of my room, and Brother and Sister Baker out of their rooms, in a few months. I am anxious to see something done. I have had no thought but that it was the best thing that could be done for Brother Lacey to go out according to the plan which you proposed. It certainly is the best that can be done, so I have decided to make the best of the situation. I hope that Elder Haskell will come ere long, and this will relieve the situation.
(12LtMs, Lt 38, 1897, 5)
I am praying for you in Melbourne, that the enemy will be defeated. The Lord would have His people labor for unity, and to answer the prayer of Christ. Here is our greatest hindrance. When we read, “The whole multitude of them that believed were of one heart and one mind,” we understand that the agency of the Holy Spirit was doing its work on human hearts. [Acts 4:32.] Until the Holy Spirit is accepted and allowed to do its office work upon the heart, each individual will strive to become a center of influence for himself. But we know, in our experience, that harmonious subordination to the Spirit of God is rest and peace and joy. Then think of the positive necessity of coming under this molding, transforming power, in order to enjoy heaven in this life and eternal blessing in the future life.
(12LtMs, Lt 38, 1897, 6)
We are never to get above the simplicity of the work. It is a power in its simplicity. A consistent life, and fervent zeal, a meek and quiet spirit mingled with a heart overflowing with love for perishing souls, is Bible religion. We cannot but speak the things which we have seen and heard. The Lord help us all to follow Jesus. He will teach us the art of overcoming obstacles, of supplanting rivals, and winning hearts. I am sure we need Jesus at every step.
(12LtMs, Lt 38, 1897, 7)
Much love to Sister Daniells and the saints in your house.
(12LtMs, Lt 38, 1897, 8)
January 11
Yesterday evening I called a meeting, and the workmen on the building, Father Lacey, Brethren Hare, Anderson, and the Lamplough’s were present. I read and said some plain things. Brother Lawrence’s case was the subject matter, and I told them I could not by silence sanction his course of action. For myself, I could not discern what possible benefit he could be to the school. His whole aim and plans are centered in himself. He has so thoroughly cultivated selfishness that he seems to be unable to consider that he is in this world to minister to poor, deceived, deluded men.
(12LtMs, Lt 38, 1897, 9)
Our meeting, which was held in the upper part of the mill, lasted from half past seven o’clock till after ten. I think the man is blinded to all spiritual things. If he has been a Christian in the service of God, he certainly has no connection with God today. He is the most selfish man I ever came in contact with. There is no break yet. If he should fall upon the Rock and be broken, then a change could take place; but he is so self-complacent, he thinks he is such a capable man, he esteems all that he lays his hands upon to do as of the highest value.
(12LtMs, Lt 38, 1897, 10)
But it is of no use to write more about this; for it is better imagined than described. I am sure Satan, with his hellish agencies, is striving his best to dishearten and discourage; but we must not be discouraged, neither must we fail. We must suffer loss, and be spoken against; and have false witness borne against us, and take it patiently for Christ’s sake. One thing is sure—God is true. We may lean heavily on Him, and we shall not become confused amid the babel of voices. We must put the armor on, and keep it on. Then what? Fight manfully the battles of the Lord, and “having done all, to stand,” ready for another conflict. [Ephesians 6:13.] We must keep in harness, the whole armor of God. We must have increased faith, and move forward, carrying this banner of truth—the commandments of God and the faith of Jesus. We must not think that we are the generals, but that we are under the mighty General of armies.
(12LtMs, Lt 38, 1897, 11)
O, let us pray as never before. Let us believe with heart and soul the words of John, “Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sins of the world.” [John 1:29.] It is a poor time, when in the fierce conflict, to show one particle of cowardice. We have a General who never lost a battle. Have faith in God, and we shall gain the victory.
(12LtMs, Lt 38, 1897, 12)
I believe the Lord will work in behalf of Brethren Miller and Woods, and bring them back to the office. Our Saviour is the Restorer. How He longs to gather his children together as a hen gathers her brood under his wings. “O that his people had hearkened unto him, and Israel had walked in his ways.” [Psalm 81:13.] It is blinding unbelief and self-sufficiency that will not permit those that are in error to know Him. Then they would not crucify to themselves the Lord of glory and put Him to an open shame. We must cultivate faith. We must believe at every step, and talk courage and hope. Light, precious light is for the people of God who will see it.
(12LtMs, Lt 38, 1897, 13)
In love.
(12LtMs, Lt 38, 1897, 14)
Lt 39, 1897
Daniells, A. G. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia August 31, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in 15MR 338-344. Dear Brother Daniells:
I have greatly desired to write to you, but have been very much hindered by the many things that are pressing in upon us just now. The building of the chapel has been one of the important matters. We saw the necessity of having this building, and night after night the message came to me, “Arise and build; Now is the time to arise and build.” The whole church was awake upon this point, and the whole school enthusiastic over it. The room we now occupy cannot be ventilated without opening windows, thus exposing someone to the risk of taking cold. There were those who would sit through the discourse, and for want of air would sleep.
(12LtMs, Lt 39, 1897, 1)
I have no time to dwell long on this part of the subject that has required much thought and much prayer. We thought the thing could be accomplished, and we have undertaken the matter. The foundation will be laid today, and then the work will progress as fast as possible. If the Lord’s blessing rests upon the planners and workers, the building will be ready for dedication within five or six weeks. Then the delegates can be accommodated in the house built for the Lord. Should there be any lack of means for this work before we receive the donations we expect, means from the school fund must be appropriated. This money was solicited with the statement that it was for the erection of school buildings and a chapel in which to worship the Lord in a proper manner. I should have no hesitancy in appropriating money for the church from this fund that has been so long in the Echo office, and a portion of which is still in Battle Creek.
(12LtMs, Lt 39, 1897, 2)
We may receive sufficient for the meetinghouse without touching the fund that we wish to use for the main school building. But I am calculating only for a time of emergency and dearth of means. I know that Brother Haskell is not in a condition to do much in the money line. I should have money to return to him, for he loaned me $1,000 to be used in the Australian mission until he should need it to invest in a home for himself. Since that he has loaned me $300 more, and just before coming to Australia, he furnished $300 more. All this has been invested in the cause of which I am made steward.
(12LtMs, Lt 39, 1897, 3)
Brother Haskell said that you asked him what he would do. Now, in consideration of what he has done, I would not say anything to him on this point. It would be out of place when others, who are situated where they could do equally with him, cannot show that they have done as much. It is not best to urge him. He is strangely situated. For some reason he has not received his money for labor during the year 1896, and he is not in a situation to do much, if anything, unless he draws from me the money I have invested in various ways to advance the work here in Australia. He will not place me in trying circumstances, in order to raise the money and return it to him, unless he is compelled to do so.
(12LtMs, Lt 39, 1897, 4)
I shall return to him the money invested in Australia just as soon as means come in to me from my book. Then the gifts will have come from me, and not from him. The money was given by him to be used until he called for it. Every dollar of personal donation in my own behalf, I have invested in meetinghouses and in advancing the work in different lines. I have invested no less than $500 that have been sent to me as a personal donation to be used for myself. Not one dollar of it have I used for my own personal interest.
(12LtMs, Lt 39, 1897, 5)
Now a few words in regard to camp meetings. I thought we were assembled for consultation as to the best way to do in reference to our camp meeting in Sydney. One listened to the counsels given in reference to making large efforts previous to the meeting, and the propriety of being at a heavy expense to distribute notices and papers before the camp meeting. Preparations were being made to do this when One who is wise in counsel made remarks which I cannot now repeat, but which convicted all minds. He said, “Set your tents, commence your meeting, then advertise, and more will be accomplished.”
(12LtMs, Lt 39, 1897, 6)
I understand that Brother Baker will send you a copy of that which I sent him. I gave directions to have a copy sent to you, and you must have it ere this. The word spoken was, It is not the best plan to follow one line of efforts year after year. Change the order of things. Satan is prepared when you give him time and opportunity to rally his forces, and he will work to destroy every soul possible. It is best to change the order you are devising. Do much more work after the meeting. Follow up the interest then rather than before. The spoken truth will have much greater influence than papers containing articles in vindication of the truth. But both combined will have greater force.
(12LtMs, Lt 39, 1897, 7)
In consideration of that which I have already written, I will not dwell longer on this point, but will speak on another subject in reference to our meeting. If, after the meeting has commenced, a press could be secured, to be worked during the meeting preparing leaflets, notices and papers to be distributed, it would be as a living thing in their very midst. But to do that which was done at previous camp meetings in Sydney will not answer the purpose now or have similar results.
(12LtMs, Lt 39, 1897, 8)
Great efforts are to be made. Every soul that believes the truth is to stand in his lot and place, saying, “Here I am; send me.” [Isaiah 6:8.] Our camp meetings in Sydney and Melbourne must not show a dearth of laborers. There should be far more personal effort made in practical lines to reach souls.
(12LtMs, Lt 39, 1897, 9)
Brother Baker has visited us, and he has received the impression that ministers such as Elder Farnsworth and others coming to the Union Conference in Sydney must hasten back to their fields of labor to carry on the work in their special conferences. This is not wise calculation. Our ministering brethren are at great expense in coming, and should work together to have the camp meeting thoroughly manned with efficient workers. One or two must not do all the preaching and all the teaching in Bible lines. At times greater good can be accomplished by breaking up the large congregation into sections. Thus the educator in Bible truths can come closer to the people than in a larger assembly.
(12LtMs, Lt 39, 1897, 10)
O, that God would help in this crisis of our work is my daily prayer. In Sydney, after the camp meeting is over, there should be the most discreet workers. Wise men should be left in charge to do personal work. Strength should not be wasted in the coming meeting by stretching them into the night and exhausting the vitality of the ministerial workers. They are thus left shorn of spiritual and physical vitality.
(12LtMs, Lt 39, 1897, 11)
If men will walk with God, He will hide them in the cleft of the Rock. Thus hidden, they can see God in the way that Moses saw Him. With the presence and the light that God gives, they can comprehend more than they have deemed it possible to do. In walking with God and not with self, they will endure the seeing of Him who is invisible. All our workers have too slight a hold on God and eternal realities. The ministerial force in all our camp meetings must be as strong as possible. Preparations must be made for them to leave their fields of labor if possible in safe hands, with those who will leave the work of preaching, and will labor from house to house as missionaries. In God many can do valiantly, and receive for their labor returns the richness of which will surprise them. God now calls for workers, not only for the work of preaching, but in coming close to individual souls, thus revealing an aptitude to watch for souls as they that must give account.
(12LtMs, Lt 39, 1897, 12)
It is not in the order of God for ministers to come to the Sydney camp meeting, and then return to their fields of labor. We must receive decided strength from God to engage in the work that is to be done. We must not let self swell to large proportions. We must consider the words of Christ, “Without me, ye can do nothing.” [John 15:5.]
(12LtMs, Lt 39, 1897, 13)
Brother Baker read to us Brother Palmer’s proposition to come to Cooranbong to hold a canvassing institute. But this is not a favorable time. The meetinghouse, if it is finished, will require all our thought and all our time. The students have all they can carry in their program of study and work, and Brother Palmer would be disappointed in the work he wishes to see accomplished. Those who attend camp meeting will have to work most earnestly, preparing to move to the point of interest in Sydney. The people here will have all they can possibly do to prepare for the meeting. Therefore this would not be a favorable time for Brother Palmer’s efforts to tell to the best account. Those in his class could not retain the instruction they would need to have. On the campground he can have his class, which will embrace more than those in the school who wish to enter the canvassing field. Many more will be benefited by having the class in Sydney than here.
(12LtMs, Lt 39, 1897, 14)
I wish to guard against laboring in a rush when there is little chance of doing the work to the best possible advantage. I can only write briefly on these points. We would enjoy nothing better than to have Brother Palmer come up here to labor in the line he proposes, but it would not be best under the circumstances. He would not be satisfied himself, and those he would teach are not prepared just at the close of the school for this work.
(12LtMs, Lt 39, 1897, 15)
Brother Daniells, I wrote you a few lines in reference to Brother Davis. Evil angels are all about him, and at times have control of him in a strange, revolting way. I did not mean to speak of this to any one, but I have the word from the Lord that he is possessed of an evil spirit, and “has no power from the snare to go.” His case is like the cases of ancient times. At times he thinks, speaks, and acts under the influence of satanic agencies, and does revolting things. This casts him into despair. His only hope is to present his case before his brethren who have a living connection with God. The spell will be broken only by most earnest wrestling with God, and this I present to you. Why I spoke of his remaining in Sydney was that he could be in connection with those that could help him during the camp meeting. As soon as possible, this demon-tempter’s power must be broken. The more Brother Davis is pressed into the work of God with those that are connected with God, the less power will Satan have over him. But Satan must be rebuked, as in olden time, in the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth. This in faith we must ask the Lord to do, and He will fulfill His word. The Lord will hear prayer. Brother Davis’ connection [with] spirits, his experience in theosophy, is his curse. Labor we must to have the man dispossessed.
(12LtMs, Lt 39, 1897, 16)
I can write no more on this line. The mail goes now.
(12LtMs, Lt 39, 1897, 17)
Lt 40, 1897
Daniells, A. G. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia March 16, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in 13MR 281-286. Dear Brother Daniells:
I send you this morning a letter written for America, and sent there yesterday morning, which will show you how I regard the tithe money being used for other purposes. This is the Lord’s special revenue fund, for a special purpose. I have never so fully understood this matter as I now understand it. Having had questions directed here to me to answer, I have had special instruction from the Lord that the tithe is for a special purpose, consecrated to God to sustain those who minister in the sacred work as the Lord’s chosen, to do His work not only in sermonizing, but in ministering. They should understand all that this comprehends. There is to be meat in the house of God, a treasury well supplied, and it is not to be diverted to other purposes. There is to be special labor given to awaken the people of God, who believe the truth, to give a faithful tithe to the Lord, and ministers should be encouraged and sustained by that tithe.
(12LtMs, Lt 40, 1897, 1)
That there will always be a temptation to divert the tithe money to other channels, we know! But the Lord has guarded this, His own portion, to be sacredly used for the support of the gospel ministers. There may be measures taken as will reduce the working force that bears the message of truth, as is being done, and in America has been done, to meet the measurement of the tithe in the treasury; but this is not the Lord’s plan, and if entered upon and continued will reduce God’s blessing to the churches that work upon such a plan. There may be a great dearth of means if there is a departing from the Lord’s plan.
(12LtMs, Lt 40, 1897, 2)
The Lord regards the tithe as His own, to be used for a certain purpose, and it is an easy matter, in the place of practicing the self-denial that we should, to help in educating students, or in the temporal matters, as providing conveniences for the church, which is necessary, to dip into the Lord’s consecrated portion which should be used only to sustain the ministers in new fields as well as in other places. And this should not be done in a niggardly way. All the inconveniences that the laborers must wrestle with in these new fields should be taken into consideration. The expense of living is greater in some localities than in others.
(12LtMs, Lt 40, 1897, 3)
Special efforts should be make for those who are where fruit is scarce, for they could live so much cheaper it they were where they could get fruit. When they are sent to fields where they are deprived of nearly everything because of the expense, a careful consideration should be make of these matters, and the lack should be supplied as far as possible, but not be withdrawing from his salary for these extra things. Those who are more favorable situated should share their prosperity with those who are in need of the very things that they are abundantly supplied with in their locality.
(12LtMs, Lt 40, 1897, 4)
We shall become very narrow, conceited, and selfish if we are not guarded and do not watch against the foe we have to meet and contend with. I shall do something for Brother Robert Hare. I will supply some things which will relieve the situation, of want of fruit. I will get a couple of hundred pounds of grapes, and make [them] into jelly that they can use on their bread. Now see what others can do. Each can do a little, and send to Brother Hare. When you visit the place, you can take some things, and we will prepare some things for them and send [them] before that time. We will make this a thank offering to God because we are permitted to live in localities where we can obtain these things, and enjoy them. I think the Lord would bless us in doing this.
(12LtMs, Lt 40, 1897, 5)
Now in regard to educating students in our schools. It is a good idea; it will have to be done; but God forbid that in the place of practicing self-denial and self-sacrifice our individual selves, to do this work, we should subtract from the Lord’s portion, specially reserved to sustain the ministers in active labor in the field, and to [keep] at work those who are already ordained for the work. We can easily consider these matters, how much it requires to support our own families according to the members of that family. They let those whose business it is act in accordance with this rule. Look not upon our own things but upon the things of others. Let us practice the golden rule, and do unto others as we would that they should do unto us were we in like circumstances.
(12LtMs, Lt 40, 1897, 6)
The fibrous roots of selfishness will root themselves wherever they are given a chance. We want to cut out and exterminate every fiber of the root of selfishness.
(12LtMs, Lt 40, 1897, 7)
If one is appointed to a field where he is deprived of many things, and is sent into that field by the decision of the conference, that same power is to bear its share of the burden of making this messenger of God in that field as nearly as possible as comfortable and as pleasantly situated as the members of this power are in their several localities. The Lord will bless all such love expressed toward His workers in hard places.
(12LtMs, Lt 40, 1897, 8)
But there is not that careful, tender regard, that thoughtful discrimination, in such cases, as there ought to be. If every one who has any thing to do with these matters would let the bright beams of the Sun of Righteousness shine fully into their hearts, they would open the windows on heaven’s side and then diffuse in every way possible the light to others, in a variety of ways.
(12LtMs, Lt 40, 1897, 9)
All these things are to be done, as you propose, to help students to obtain an education; but I ask you, Shall we not all act in this matter unselfishly, and create a fund, and keep it to draw upon on such occasions? When you see a young man or young woman who is a promising subject, advance or loan the sum needed, with the idea that it is a loan, not a gift. It would be better to have it thus. Then when it is returned, it can be used to educate others. But this money is not to be taken from the tithe, but from a separate fund secured for that purpose. This would exert a healthy uprightness and charity and patriotism among our people. There must be thoughtful consideration and a skillful adjustment of the work in the cause of God in all its departments. But let there be no meager, stingy plans in using the consecrated portion for the sustaining of the ministry, for then the treasury would soon be empty.
(12LtMs, Lt 40, 1897, 10)
The management of the case of Brother Hickox is after human methods, not after the methods which the Lord has ordained. I have had this matter so presented to me that I see the danger of diverting the tithe to any such purpose as you have suggested. The Lord is not pleased with your management of this case. May the Lord help you all to have the heavenly anointing, that no such thing may be repeated.
(12LtMs, Lt 40, 1897, 11)
Brother Farnsworth is ready to voice the decisions of human minds without looking on all sides of the question to see if there might not possibly be mistakes made. It is a very serious matter how any one handles one of the Lord’s disciples, one who has been dedicated to His service, to do His work. What made you do this kind of work? The Lord is not in it. You were faithless because there was an empty treasury. Now, in the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, I charge you not to devote the means that should be used in sustaining the gospel to any other purpose, and that your faith fail not as you see a lack in the supply of tithes, gifts and offerings.
(12LtMs, Lt 40, 1897, 12)
God would have meat in His house. My heart is stirred with grief as I think of the way in which Brother Lacey was permitted to come from Melbourne to Sydney, sick and alone. Some one should have acted the good Samaritan, and put him into a first-class carriage, if there was one on the train, and if not, wait until there was one. The poor man was crowded into a car with smokers and rough, drinking men to spend his night in such company. Could Christians have seen him in his feebleness and done this? I seldom cry, but I did cry when I heard this, for I felt that it was done to Jesus in the person of His disciple. I do not know who did this, but I would say that should circumstances like this again occur, put the afflicted one into the best compartment, make it as comfortable as possible for him, and charge it to my account.
(12LtMs, Lt 40, 1897, 13)
Brother Herbert [Lacey] is so afraid of taxing the conference that he would allow anything to be done to him. I cannot think, Elder Daniells, that you could have sanctioned this thing had you known of it. There is such a thing as being “penny wise and pound foolish.” Herbert is having all that can be possibly done for him, but that journey from Melbourne was a fearful tax upon him. He is very low judging from outward appearance, he cannot recover. But prayer is going up to God in his behalf. God’s arm is not shortened that it cannot save; neither is His ear heavy that it cannot hear.
(12LtMs, Lt 40, 1897, 14)
He has to go through the full run of typhoid fever. The tobacco fumes must have made his case very much worse. He suffered very much in stomach and bowels. I sent Sara down to help Brother Semmens; but the case is so critical that he will not leave him to go any [place]; he watches over him, and works and prays for him himself. I believe that God will spare Herbert’s life, and not suffer him to do down into the grave. All we can say is, “Thy will be done.” [Matthew 26:42.] “Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his saints.” [Psalm 116:15.] O that God would impart the wisdom that we all so much need.
(12LtMs, Lt 40, 1897, 15)
In love.
(12LtMs, Lt 40, 1897, 16)
Lt 40a, 1897
Daniells, A. G. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia January 14, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother Daniells:
There should be matter prepared to go forth in pamphlet form to all our people in Australia, America, and in South Africa, in regard to the true situation at Cooranbong. Unless this is done these misrepresentations will continue to work deeper and deeper and do great injury to the school. One thing is certain, Satan is working through such men as Brethren Shannon and Lawrence. They have a very nice appearance, especially Brother Shannon, who carries an influence with him wherever he goes. He is spreading his misrepresentations wherever he goes. He has forgotten that we have a God, and he has a Bible, both of which declare righteousness and condemn iniquity.
(12LtMs, Lt 40a, 1897, 1)
There is a work that Satan can do through our own professed Christian brethren that will please him immensely, but shall we sit still and let him do this, and thus hedge up our own way? I have been praying most earnestly for the Lord to work in our behalf. The Lord will work, but shall we not do our part in co-operating with God? The world seems to be going mad. We are fast approaching a condition of anarchy and wild uncertainty, and it has come, and will seek to pervade all our ranks of Seventh-day Adventists.
(12LtMs, Lt 40a, 1897, 2)
What kind of a religion can a man possess who will criticize and find fault when everything does not meet his mind? When men are placed in responsible positions, they must work without showing partiality, and without hypocrisy. [There are] those who consider that their case must be made a specialty, to be favored, whether it will be for the interest of the cause of God that must be built up and stand as the Lord’s appointed center, or not.
(12LtMs, Lt 40a, 1897, 3)
Now these whom God has entrusted as His stewards must keep the eye single to the glory of God. They are to do the work of the Lord intelligently, carrying with them all of the people possible. But if there be those who leave an incorrect impression upon the people, there must be some warnings given to guard the people from deception.
(12LtMs, Lt 40a, 1897, 4)
All this tide setting against us just now is no mystery to me. It is no more than we might expect. This we have had to meet in every place where advance moves are made, but I do not feel hardly strong enough to breast the difficulties alone. There is Brother Hare standing with me, but the same spirit of accusing has come against him with determined force. Sister Shannon calls him a hypocrite, but the lips and voice of human beings is not of much account, except with those who want to have it so. Lies are spoken, lies are acted. Of Brother Lawrence I will say, Surely gain and advantage is secured at an enormous price. When the eternal interests of the soul are sacrificed for this gain, success in this line means ruin. Better far to deny self, lift the cross, and follow Jesus.
(12LtMs, Lt 40a, 1897, 5)
But Brother Lawrence’s head is full of cupidity. Its control is seen in his and her dress, heard in their conversation, and deplorably seen in their actions. They have dismissed the Word of God from their counsels, and taken up self. He has laid his soul, a manacled victim, upon the altar of mammon; dishonesty is practiced. O, my soul costs too much to be treated indifferently! All men who profess to be Christians are not thus, and all who are not first seeking the kingdom of God and His righteousness are simply, deliberately, setting aside one of the plainest and most unequivocal injunctions contained in the Word of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 40a, 1897, 6)
I have heard infidels say that they will not credit those who profess to be Christians, because they have been so much taken in by their sharp-dealings. They deem their profession a cloak, and if they cannot take it off they despise it. But shall this moral degeneracy come into our ranks? Shall it establish itself on these grounds? Shall our school be established and composed of councils [of] men who will pay no heed to Bible principles? I answer no, no, no. The Word of God is truth; it is our counsellor.
(12LtMs, Lt 40a, 1897, 7)
O, I wish I had no occasion to refer to such subjects. I wish they could be forever banished from my lips and thoughts. Shall those who profess to be living in these last days, who have light upon present truth, who have had years of experience, become a subject of scorn for their avaricious spirit, which makes honest worldly men despise them? My soul abhors these practices. What shall we do about it? Some have so long worked on this line they cannot see but that it is perfectly consistent. What does it mean? May the Lord enlighten the minds, and His Spirit break in pieces the hard Pharisaism that is clothing all such persons. No more just now.
(12LtMs, Lt 40a, 1897, 8)
Lt 41, 1897
Daniells, A. G. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia February 24, 1897 Previously unpublished. + Dear Brother Daniells:
Brother Hare gave me your letter to him, dated February 13, to read. We feel to sympathize with you, and also with Sister Hurd, who has been so nigh, and yet so inaccessible.
(12LtMs, Lt 41, 1897, 1)
We spent nearly two weeks in Sydney. We returned to Cooranbong last Friday last. Sabbath we had an interesting meeting. Since then meetings have been held in the early morning. From thirty-five to forty have been present while Brother Haskell has opened to us the Scriptures. We know this will be for the benefit of all who come to the meetings. We have had no evening meetings as yet, but today, Wednesday, we have both morning and evening meetings.
(12LtMs, Lt 41, 1897, 2)
Thursday Elder Haskell goes to Sydney. Sister Hurd writes that she will be released from her exile on the island on Sabbath. We wish it was not on Sabbath that all these busy things take place, but Brother Haskell thinks he may accomplish something by getting her off on Friday.
(12LtMs, Lt 41, 1897, 3)
In regard to your coming to Cooranbong, we will not urge the matter. We have taken the responsibility to decide some things. Brother Hare wished me to go over Monday morning and see the foundation of the second building, the cellar and other things, and Sara and I rode down there. As soon as we saw it, and learned that it was to be one story, I thought the same expense of rafters and roofing might cover two stories as well as one.
(12LtMs, Lt 41, 1897, 4)
I suggested this, and after a little thought, Brother Hare said that it was excellent, for as yet no place was provided for the boys to sleep in. They were making provision for them to occupy the room above the mill; but we decided that the impression made upon the students would not be good.
(12LtMs, Lt 41, 1897, 5)
The furniture in the loft must be overhauled, repaired, painted, and all the bed clothing examined. It is full of vermin. We see bedbugs crawling upon the clothing of those who attend meeting there, and all at once we find our own beds swarming with bedbugs.
(12LtMs, Lt 41, 1897, 6)
Tents will have to be used, but as little as possible. The second story of the mill must be used as a workshop in which to put the furniture in order, and throughly cleanse it for the new building. We have considered that it is a disgrace to meet any long for the worship of God in such a place; and we propose to put up a second story on the building which is to serve as dining room and kitchen. One half of this can be used for sleeping rooms, and one half for a chapel, until the means for a meeting house come in.
(12LtMs, Lt 41, 1897, 7)
I am so glad that this new thought was suggested. I believe it is from God. The walls and roof only need [to] be put up now. It can be used without inside finishing. Thus we can all be accommodated in the present emergency.
(12LtMs, Lt 41, 1897, 8)
We located the underground cistern as soon as this question was brought to our notice. We have a large cistern on our place, and it is a treasure to us.
(12LtMs, Lt 41, 1897, 9)
The mill has been stopped for want of water. We are hoping and praying for rain, and we believe it will come. Brother Haskell is doing a good work. He will be needed here at the commencement of school and will be a blessing. I will write no further now, for I must prepare for morning meeting. It is now nearly five o’clock.
(12LtMs, Lt 41, 1897, 10)
We think that we will not ask you to come to Cooranbong now. We will get along in our advancement without any delay, and this will save your time, and an expense of pounds. We will act according to our best judgment, consulting together, and seeking the Lord most earnestly. We are sorry that there is so great a dearth of means, but all we can do is to present the matter to the Lord, and do the very best we can. We know that this new idea will improve the plan of building, and we are also sure that it will take money; but in the end it will be a saving of means, so we shall move forward, believing in the guidance of the Lord. I am willing to bear the responsibility of this matter of a second story being added to the one story building.
(12LtMs, Lt 41, 1897, 11)
We shall be glad to see you at any time, and may the Lord direct you and bless you and keep you in health and peace, is our most earnest prayer.
(12LtMs, Lt 41, 1897, 12)
Lt 42, 1897
Daniells, A. G. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia September 28, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in 15MR 1-5. Dear Brother Daniells:
I received your letter this afternoon. We are pleased that you have found grounds for the camp meeting. Our only fear is that you will be limited for space. I cannot see where you will find room to erect the large tent, the buildings necessary, and the family tents. It is altogether the smallest ground I have every heard of for a camp meeting.
(12LtMs, Lt 42, 1897, 1)
In reference to the question you ask me, I consider it an altogether different matter. You have had your printing establishment long enough in North Fitzroy. This has given character and standing and influence to our cause there. The showing in Melbourne is altogether different from that in Sydney. With your printing press you have opportunity to publish anything you deem essential, without long delay or large expense, to meet any emergency that may arise. I would say, Follow your convictions. You have altogether a different community in those who have embraced the truth. In Sydney there are many composing the number who claim to believe the truth whose judgment is too limited to carry through any large work intelligently in the line you propose to do in Melbourne. I have nothing, not one draw back to your plans in the light that the Lord has given me. All my fear is that there will not be that humble, contrite spirit that would insure the blessing of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 42, 1897, 2)
When one has such a breadth of intelligence that he has outgrown his simplicity and dependence upon God, then we cannot depend on him, for Christ says, “Without me, ye can do nothing.” [John 15:5.] When by faith we have a right hold from above, we have an experience that we are walking with God as did Enoch. We have nothing to fear in an emergency. They that are for us are more than they that can be against us. If we are wholly consecrated to God, we shall be laborers together with Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 42, 1897, 3)
If it were left to us to manage the interest of the cause of God in our own way and according to our disposition and strength, we would not need to expect much; but if self is hid with Christ in God, all our plans and methods will be wrought in God. God has imparted to us our moral powers and all our religious susceptibilities. We must draw nigh to God. We must be laborers together with Him, else weakness and mistakes will be seen in all we undertake. Let us have faith in God at every step. While we realize our own weakness, let us not be faithless, but believing. Let us learn the precious lesson you recently learned in Ballarat.
(12LtMs, Lt 42, 1897, 4)
I firmly believe that we shall see of the salvation of God if we will take Him at His Word. The very gospel that we present to save perishing souls must be to us the gospel that saves our own souls. We must eat the flesh and drink the blood of the Son of God. We must receive the Word of God. To all intents and purposes, we must eat the Word, live the Word. It is the flesh of the Son of God. We must drink of His blood, the spiritual attributes of Jesus Christ, and constantly develop as the result of the nourishment which the soul receives in eating His flesh and drinking His blood. Then our lips will utter His praise.
(12LtMs, Lt 42, 1897, 5)
If in our camp meetings we will only walk humbly with God, if we will work in the spirit of Jesus Christ, none of us will carry heavy burdens. We will lay them upon the great Burdenbearer. We may expect triumphs in the presence of God in the communion of His love, from the beginning to the end. The camp meeting may be a love feast, because we have the assurance of God’s presence. We shall have a signal manifestation of His glory.
(12LtMs, Lt 42, 1897, 6)
If we as believers enjoy the truth because we practice it, we shall give the impression that the truth is not a yoke of bondage, but that it has given us our emancipation papers, and we are free in Christ Jesus our Lord. The Lord Himself will make impressions on the people, and they will say, “Behold, the tabernacle of God shall be with men, and he will dwell with him, and they shall be his people, and God himself shall dwell with them and be their God.” [Revelation 21:3.] A foretaste of Christ’s mercy, His abundant love and compassion, will be felt by His people.
(12LtMs, Lt 42, 1897, 7)
“Arise, shine; for thy light has come, and the glory of the Lord hath risen upon thee.” [Isaiah 60:1.] All darkness, all murmuring, all complaining, all talking unbelief, must be crucified. Then Christ will put a new song on human lips, even songs of praise to our God. There should be far more thanksgiving and less murmuring and complaining, for all this kind of exercise is displeasing to our God. We have enough for which to praise God. He would have us walk in the light as He is in the light. Why do we not do this? Why do we not talk of His love, and tell of His goodness and His wonderful works to the children of men?
(12LtMs, Lt 42, 1897, 8)
We must learn what it means to believe in God. When will we learn to be not faithless but believing? Can God say any more than He has said to inspire us with faith and hope? We have no excuse for our conversation taking a low, desponding level.
(12LtMs, Lt 42, 1897, 9)
We need not exalt self, neither need we take special words to God, to depreciate self. We are the Lord’s property. He declares, “Ye are not your own; for ye are bought with a price; therefore glorify God in your body and in your spirit, which are God’s.” [1 Corinthians 6:19.] How shall we glorify Him? “Whoso offereth praise glorifieth God.” [Psalm 50:23.] From His throne above He calls to us, “Look unto me, and be ye saved, ... for I am God, and beside me there is none else.” [Isaiah 45:22.]
(12LtMs, Lt 42, 1897, 10)
Oh, why are our lips so ready to exalt and praise ourselves? Why have we so few words of praise to give our Lord Jehovah? Have we not fled for refuge to lay hold on the hope set before us? Are we not commanded to be joyful in our King? Jesus is our living Advocate in the presence of our Father. Talk of him as the One who can and does save to the uttermost all who come unto God through Him. Let us learn to speak His praises. “Behold, God is my salvation; I will trust and not be afraid; for the Lord Jehovah is my strength and my song; he also is become my salvation.” [Isaiah 12:2.] If we have tasted that the Lord is gracious, let us show that we are able intelligently to make Him known. Let us talk faith, helping others who are in the region and shadow of death.
(12LtMs, Lt 42, 1897, 11)
Well, I did not expect to write as much as I have. But I will say a few words more. We must rely wholly upon God. It is your only safety to let your tendrils entwine about God. We must educate our tongues to speak more hopefully, with thanksgiving to his dear name. We want to encourage and educate every soul who claims to believe the truth to talk of Jesus. He is the resurrection and the life.
(12LtMs, Lt 42, 1897, 12)
None of us need flatter ourselves that while the world is progressing in wickedness we shall have no difficulties. It is these very difficulties that bring us to the audience chamber of the Most High, to seek counsel of One who is infinite in wisdom. He loves to have us seek Him, to trust Him, and believe in Him. If we had no perplexities, no trials, we would become self-sufficient and lifted up in ourselves. The true saints will be purified and made white and tried.
(12LtMs, Lt 42, 1897, 13)
Will you do your best to awaken the dormant energies of the people of God to seek the Lord with all the heart that they may find Him, and to keep his love burning in their hearts because they love the truth as it is in Jesus? I am determined not to be discouraged. I am determined to keep my face lifted up to the Sun of Righteousness. I want the light and power of God in my soul. We need not become cold and dark and Christless. We are to pray and believe, and watch unto prayer.
(12LtMs, Lt 42, 1897, 14)
I am glad you are to have a period of rest in Cooranbong. I hope soon to see Willie and others who will come with him. Be of good courage and joyful in the Lord. Talk faith and you will have faith.
(12LtMs, Lt 42, 1897, 15)
With much love to your family, I will say good night.
(12LtMs, Lt 42, 1897, 16)
Lt 43, 1897
Daniells, A. G. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia September 24, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother Daniells:
I have some matters to present before you. After we first moved to Cooranbong, we came to a place where we had no means to use to advance the work in any lines. Then it was that I solicited a loan of £200 from Brother Hare, at five per cent interest. This I loaned to the school. I wish now to take up this note, as there is money now to be used in behalf of the school. I do not wish to carry this indebtedness any longer. I wish to hand Brother Hare his money, to do with as he pleases. If he wishes to lend it to the school, he can do so, and all that is to be done is to apply it thus, he letting the school have the money in the place of me.
(12LtMs, Lt 43, 1897, 1)
I do not feel it best to carry all this responsibility; therefore I request that this matter be taken from me. I carry a debt of £1,000, borrowed from Sister Wessels. This is enough; and just as soon as means can be appropriated, I wish this to be provided for. You see that I am altogether too heavily laden. Until within a short time ago, I thought that it was only $500 I had borrowed from Brother Hare, but I learn that it is $1,000. This has been used in the school interest. As the school has used the money, I wish it to pay the loan from the funds now in hand; and relieve me. I cannot be responsible for this money longer.
(12LtMs, Lt 43, 1897, 2)
There is also some of my money in the school. I wish to take this and use it in paying borrowed money, and also to invest in the chapel here in Cooranbong. I have money in the New South Wales Conference, and that must be met; for I shall need the money to pay interest, as soon as it is possible to get it.
(12LtMs, Lt 43, 1897, 3)
I think that Brother Hare is in need of money, for a few weeks since he borrowed thirty-five dollars from me. He has not as yet made any donation to the meetinghouse, while nearly every one else has done so. I have not as yet made any donation. My family will all do something in this line, for all want an interest in house of God. We have been waiting for the outside lining for the church. This is coming up by boat, but the boat has been delayed. After doing all in our power, we trust the matter to God, and feel at rest and peace in Him who understands all about the matter. This is His work, and we have obeyed His orders.
(12LtMs, Lt 43, 1897, 4)
In answer to a letter from Brother Haskell, Brother Palmer wrote a letter to him that I wished he had not told Brother Haskell to let me see. I read it, and felt sad; for I felt that the rebuke of God was upon Brother Palmer. Had he that real humbleness of mind that it is essential for all who are in the service of God to have, he would have seen the inconsistency of tracing such words. My heart aches; for I know that he does not know what manner of spirit he is of. His words are the fruit that is produced by a conceited mind. If this is the spirit in which he does the work of God, I am distressed beyond measure. I was cautioned to speak to you that you be on guard; for there is danger of your linking up with men, and depending on their wisdom. You will hurt your own soul and the souls of others if you show great confidence in one man, and lightly regard others of your brethren. Brother Palmer’s soul is precious. But he needs not his confidence in himself strengthened. You need to be cautious, and to hang your helpless soul on God. He will be your wisdom, your sanctification, and your righteousness.
(12LtMs, Lt 43, 1897, 5)
I cannot see how Brother Palmer could write such things to a brother old enough to be his father. Certainly nothing in Elder Haskell’s letter called for such words. The words of inspiration are not like the words of men. They express what man never spoke, and convey that which man never conceived. “The words that I speak unto you,” said Christ, “they are spirit and they are life.” [John 6:63.] “If my words abide in you, then are ye my disciples indeed.” [John 8:31.] If you, if Brother Palmer, if I, make our calling and election sure, we must hide in the cleft of the Rock. Then the mind, the thoughts, the words, will be renewed. The heart will not be puffed up unto vanity, but will be meek, lowly, and contrite. Oh that this self-esteem, these high ideas of our own wisdom, were cut away from us, that errors might not be made because we do not make God and God alone our Guide and Counsellor.
(12LtMs, Lt 43, 1897, 6)
There are sins of ignorance. But I think that an old and grey-headed man who has labored as a chosen one of God from nearly the first rise of the message, one who has ever shown that his whole heart and soul was in the work, deserves our confidence, and the confidence of men who are much younger than he is. I will not encourage or excuse for one moment the spirit that prompted the writing of such a letter to one of God’s faithful servants. Whatever the work in which Brother Palmer is engaged, it is only one part of the great whole, and every thread of the web makes up the fabric. For one to assume the attitude and spirit that this letter reveals is not right. I must say that Brother Palmer needs to learn of Christ to be meek and lowly of heart.
(12LtMs, Lt 43, 1897, 7)
I have little hope of the success of our work unless all pomposity and self-esteem is cut away from the workers, and they learn to walk humbly and softly before God. The conversation and conduct must be a real and visible expression of grace and truth within.
(12LtMs, Lt 43, 1897, 8)
When everything goes according to their own ideas and plans, men may express love and humility, but if the spirit and character, the words and actions, do not always reveal the spirit of meekness, kindness, and Christian courtesy, the Spirit of Christ does not abide in the soul. Whatever is contrary to the love, humility, and faith that should be cultivated is a denial of our profession. We need the converting power of God every day, that we may reveal the sanctification of soul, spirit, and body unto the Lord. I know that the spirit that moves those that are active workers in the cause of God must be of an order different from what it now is, or the Lord cannot impart to us His Holy Spirit in rich measure. I long for the Spirit of truth and righteousness to circulate in all our borders. But let none exalt man. Let all give honor to whom honor is due, and let there not be a lifting up of self in any place or on any occasion. There is an abundance of this to be corrected in our midst before we need expect success.
(12LtMs, Lt 43, 1897, 9)
I have to close this hastily written communication this morning. But I have much to say when I have time. Let us bear in mind that the Lord is soon to come, and that we must wait in patient meekness, working, praying, and watching for the coming of our Lord in the clouds of heaven.
(12LtMs, Lt 43, 1897, 10)
Lt 44, 1897
Daniells, A. G. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia January 1, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 3MR 249; 4Bio 287-288. Elder A. G. Daniells
Echo Office
North Fitzroy Dear Brother:
For days all through my sickness I could not rest. My mind has been in constant perplexity. The selection of officers for the church here was about to be made, and Brother Herbert Lacey conversed with me as to what should be done. Some said that Brother Lawrence was their choice for elder, but when we came to investigate the matter, we knew that Brother Lawrence has not an unselfish interest in the work. He has not a vital connection with God. The first of the week I told Brother Lacey to say or do nothing in regard to the selection of officers, but just to wait. I had been writing the matter I sent you, which led to other matters which were of vital importance. With one eye bandaged I wrote fully one hundred pages.
(12LtMs, Lt 44, 1897, 1)
I have not been able to attend a meeting here since the Adelaide camp meeting. I had not recovered from my last sickness, but I ventured to appoint a meeting for last evening. Brother Lacey went on horseback to notify the people. We decided not to meet in the chamber above the mill. The air was too close and stifling. As soon as possible we must have a building in which to meet for the worship of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 44, 1897, 2)
We had the chairs brought out on the green sward, and I sat in my phaeton, and spoke to the people. We had two lanterns that gave forth a most disagreeable smell. Sara sat in the phaeton on one side, holding a lantern, Herbert Lacey stood at my left hand holding another, while I read a small portion of the matter I had written. All listened with interest.
(12LtMs, Lt 44, 1897, 3)
Then I spoke of the establishment of the work in different localities, where buildings had been erected for schools, sanitariums, and places of worship. Among the people brought together in these places there were different elements. Some were always ready to advance ideas as to improved methods in which the work should be done, but they showed no living interest to do anything themselves. They did not manifest self-denial and earnest zeal in personal effort. But they were fast enough to criticize the work of others, to find fault and accuse. I told the people plainly that those who were not putting their whole heart into the work to be carried on in Cooranbong were only a hindrance to the work, and I heartily wished they would go to some other place.
(12LtMs, Lt 44, 1897, 4)
Our meeting lasted until nine o’clock. Brother Metcalfe Hare spoke well. He confessed that he had shown a lack of patience, and asked forgiveness of his brethren. It was a very solemn season to me. I had entreated the people to change right about. Those who had been sitting on the stool of criticism should change about. They had for a time been doing nothing to help, but proved a great hindrance. These did not open their lips. Brethren Lawrence and Shannon have linked up with the Hughes family. Sister Shannon has chosen to remain with them up to this time, and there is a great deal of gossiping and tale bearing, evil surmising and accusing of the brethren. Brother Lawrence has a very gentle appearance, but he has no living connection with God.
(12LtMs, Lt 44, 1897, 5)
I am so sorry that we are left just as we are, with no one to help me in this emergency. I begged every one who had not heart and soul in the work, who had come here to be favored, and who were figuring for their own selfish interests, to go away where they would not see so much to find fault with, while they did nothing to advance the work. I felt deeply, that I must speak. But I present these matters to you in the articles sent yesterday morning and today.
(12LtMs, Lt 44, 1897, 6)
I want Brother Haskell to come back here. If you feel free to do so, I wish you would give him a most hearty invitation to come to New South Wales, and to labor in Australia. We must have different kind of work from what can be expected from any one here. Will you say something to Brother Haskell on this subject at once? I cannot carry this burden of Sydney and Cooranbong. We need some one who can help us. I cannot live if the burden is allowed to rest on me in this fashion.
(12LtMs, Lt 44, 1897, 7)
The work of Brethren Lawrence and Shannon has introduced the leaven of dissension and alienation. Those who come newly upon the ground have to hear all about how Brother Lawrence has been ill used and unappreciated. We have no desire that he should remain longer on this ground. I wish the Hughes family were not here, for their influence tends to scatter and not to gather. I shall read more of the matter I have written on the Sabbath, and we hope to witness the moving of the Holy Spirit among us.
(12LtMs, Lt 44, 1897, 8)
Brother Herbert Lacey and his wife have labored hard to can fruit for the school, securing what help they could. One week ago they worked until one a.m. canning apricots. But only ten pounds could be appropriated to the purchase of fruit, and in fact a considerable part of this had to be used to pay for the sugar. What money there was, was all spent for apricots.
(12LtMs, Lt 44, 1897, 9)
Both Brother Lacey and our family felt that, if possible, more money should be spent for fruit for the school use. Well, yesterday a draught for twelve pounds came from South Africa to be invested in the school where I should see it was most needed. The queer part of it was, the money was sent as a donation to Cape Town by Brother Hardy, to be used in the cause. Brother Robinson felt that it would be just and right to send it to me for use in the cause here. He knew that we must need it. I passed it over to Herbert Lacey; this will supply all the means needed for securing the later fruit—peaches, plums, tomatoes, etc. As no meat or butter is to be used, there must be ample provision of fruit. I feel so thankful for this provision. There will not be one dollar too much.
(12LtMs, Lt 44, 1897, 10)
Brother Semmens applied to me for money, to start in on the health home. I sent a draught of ten pounds, asking how much he needed. He wanted another ten pounds immediately, to make the start. I borrowed twelve or fourteen pounds of Sara McEnterfer, and send [it] this morning. He needs it at once. He had to pay rent in advance, and this cut down the little sum he had on hand. I think they are doing up the house, but they are in it.
(12LtMs, Lt 44, 1897, 11)
We have had every hand busily employed in canning fruit and moving Willie’s family to “Sunnyside.” Nearly everything is moved. Today will close up that job. All feel much pleased to get back here from the convent.
(12LtMs, Lt 44, 1897, 12)
Please to give Elder Haskell a hearty invitation to come to New South Wales. We need him, and must have him. I told him this, but he feels that nothing has been expressed by yourself, and he is sensitive on this point. So please attend to this matter. I know of no one with whom I could unite better than with Elder Haskell. He would be just the help needed here now.
(12LtMs, Lt 44, 1897, 13)
Lt 45, 1897
Daniells, A. G. and the Church in Melbourne “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia November 15, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in UL 333; 15MR 271. Brother Daniells and my ministering brethren and the church in Melborne:
W. C. White has just brought me your letter dated November 10. I would not have you make any move on my account. At the present time I have not any idea of attending the meeting in Melbourne. The meeting in Stanmore on the last Friday morning was a severe tax on me. From the beginning to the close my distress of mind was very great, and in the very midst of the meeting the weight grew more heavy and the outlook more depressing. When I returned to my room, I was all alone for nearly three hours. I suffered such anguish of soul that it seemed to me I could not live. I was deeply impressed with the thought of how far we, as a people to whom is entrusted large responsibilities, are from realizing these sacred trusts. To how many will it be said by lips that always express truth, “Thou art weighed in the balances, and art found wanting”? [Daniel 5:27.]
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 1)
The work of God can advance only as the ministers and workers are themselves worked by the Holy Spirit. Unless they see the importance of the Holy Spirit’s guidance and power to work them, they will be spiritually strengthless. They will make grave blunders, and will grieve the Holy Spirit by their self-sufficiency and self-confidence. It is the constantly humble and contrite ones, who will not exalt their own supposed superior wisdom, to whom the Lord can manifest His power by giving success. Should He give success to him who trusts in self, it would ruin the human agent, and through him ruin many souls who look upon his selfish ideas and selfish ways as the wise and proper way.
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 2)
All self-centered ideas and opinions have the cheap and common intermingled with the sacred, so that it is difficult to separate the chaff from the wheat. It is this phase of revealing that has come into Battle Creek, and the end with them is not yet. If they will humble their hearts before God, and be converted, they will work in complete harmony with the Spirit of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 3)
The full knowledge before me of matters at Battle Creek has made me full of sorrow. Notwithstanding that the light has come to them, they have not heeded the light, but have misinterpreted warnings, and misconstrued the instruction given, until they have lost their spiritual eyesight, and they call good evil, and evil good.
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 4)
I am terribly afraid for our people, afraid that they will be at rest and peace, and have very little spirit of the deep, earnest prayer to God that will prevail. Everyone in the ministry who has had great light, every soul that has been entrusted with sacred responsibilities, is represented as being put into the balances and being weighed, as is done in the temporal affairs of life. Man is put into the balances, and all that concerns him is weighed. O how many are pronounced wanting. The words, the spirit, the actions, all are passing the test, and the value is accurately recorded, to be compared with God’s holy law, which is the standard of character.
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 5)
After the impression was made upon my mind that morning of things that I feel no liberty to mention, I decided that I could not attend the Melbourne camp meeting. I am afraid to go. There is so little genuine dependence upon God, so little spiritual eyesight to see and correctly understand the working of the Holy Spirit. I tell you in the fear of God that the truth which is sanctifying in its influence, and that will bring the rich treasures of the brightness of the glory of God, is not understood or considered to be a necessity. The truth as it is in Jesus makes feeble impressions upon the mind, and less upon the heart, to sanctify, purify, elevate, [and] ennoble after the divine similitude.
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 6)
We need an abiding, heartfelt dependence upon the Son of God for salvation and for all wisdom and spiritual influences. Unless there is much more love to God and to man, and a continual dependence upon the renewing, sanctifying grace of Christ to work a transformation of character by a divine change in the heart, which will be manifestly seen in word, spirit, and action, we shall fail in our work. What is the reason that the truth so full of grace and so powerful does not make its influence felt upon those who hear? Because the word does not sanctify the hearts of the teachers. Unbelief, unbelief in the God of all power, closes the door so that the sunlight of God’s righteousness does not come in.
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 7)
“The word of God is quick and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword; piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart. Neither is there any creature that is not manifest in his sight, but all things are naked and open unto the eyes of him with whom we have to do.” [Hebrews 4:12, 13.] This is the experience we may have and must have, as those who have been blessed with great light. “When God, willing more abundantly to show unto the heirs of promise the immutability of his counsel, confirmed it by an oath: that by two immutable things, in which it is impossible for God to lie, we might have strong consolation, who have fled for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set before us. Which hope we have as an anchor of the soul, both sure and steadfast, and which entereth into that within the veil, whither the forerunner is for us entered, even Jesus made an high priest forever after the order of Melchizedek.” [Hebrews 6:17-20.]
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 8)
Here is the promise that through Christ we are brought near to God. But our faith is not proportionate to the truth which we advocate. We take ourselves into our own keeping; we plan and devise, and pray little and have but little faith. There is too much cold selfishness woven into our religious experience.
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 9)
Loving God supremely comes first; loving our neighbor as ourselves comes second. If we love God with the whole heart, we shall love our neighbor as ourselves. We need increased faith, far less confidence and assurance in what we can do, and far greater confidence in what the Lord is longing to do for us individually, if we will prepare the way for Him. We need, O so much more than we now have, the longing of soul for communion with God. We need to plead most earnestly with Him. If thou shalt seek the Lord thy God, thou shalt find him, when thou shalt seek him with all thy heart and with all thy soul. “My soul, wait thou only upon God; for my expectation is from him.”“He only is my Rock and my salvation; he is my defence, I shall not be moved. In God is my salvation and my glory, the rock of my strength and my refuge.” [Psalm 62:5-7.]
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 10)
A great desire after large blessings and deep fulness should be cherished. But these we shall never have while we feel so self-sufficient, while we have so tame a love for God and so little Christlike love for our brethren. When self is emptied from the heart, the vacuum will be supplied with the fulness of Christ. Let the soul be less engaged in business matters. Let him put far less trust in the wisdom that bears the marks of being more human than divine. The praise given by word or action to any human being is an offence to God. Yet God will praise every individual that keeps His commandments in truth and righteousness. It is very human to place confidence and trust in man; but not so readily do these same persons themselves walk as seeing Him who is invisible.
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 11)
“The Lord God is nigh unto all them that call upon him, to all that call upon him in truth. He will fulfill the desire of them that fear him; he also will hear their cry, and will save them. The Lord preserveth all them that love him; but all the wicked will he destroy. My mouth shall speak the praise of the Lord; and let all flesh bless his holy name forever and ever.” [Psalm 145:18-21.]
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 12)
There are many words spoken in prayer as if to inform the Lord. It is best for the soul that is hungering and thirsting after righteousness to express his real wants. There is a large amount said in prayer that means nothing because it is not the expression of the soul. When Solomon, under the inspiration of the Spirit of God, urged upon the people the necessity of prayer for spiritual wisdom, he sought with the utmost energy of expression to show them the need they must feel for the blessings they asked. “If thou criest after knowledge, and liftest up thy voice after understanding: if thou seek her as for silver, and searchest her as for hid treasures, then shalt thou understand the fear of the Lord, and find the knowledge of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 13)
“For the Lord giveth wisdom: out of his mouth cometh knowledge and understanding. He layeth up sound wisdom for the righteous. He is a buckler to them that walk uprightly. He keepeth the paths of judgment, and preserveth the way of the saints. Then shalt thou understand righteousness and judgment and equity, yea, every good path. When wisdom entereth into thine heart and knowledge is pleasant unto thy soul, discretion shall preserve, understanding shall keep thee: to deliver thee from the way of the evil man, from the man which speaketh froward things.” [Proverbs 2:3-12.]
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 14)
The faith we have in the promises of God is feeble in comparison to what it should be. But the encouragement is given that if two or three shall agree, uniting together to ask the Lord in prayer for any one thing, He will give it us. These occasions of united prayer to the Lord, making our requests known unto Him, are not made as frequently as they should be. Seeking the Lord with the heart, represented as asking, seeking, knocking, is profitable. These are terms expressive of urgent need for immediate help from the source of all grace and power.
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 15)
James leads us to the throne of grace with faith and confidence, and assures us of success and victory. “Confess your faults one to another, and pray one for another, that ye may be healed. The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much.” [James 5:16.] Earnest, fervent prayer to God for such things as we need will come from hearts that are impressed with a sense of their necessity. We must press the urgency of the case, as did Daniel in his prayer. One says, “With my whole heart have I sought thee.” [Psalm 119:10.] “Evening, and at morning, and at noon, will I pray,” says David, “and thou shalt hear my voice.” [Psalm 55:17.]
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 16)
In the prayer of Daniel, the one who would not be filled with exaltation and pride, although assured that he was greatly beloved of God, every word reveals the longing of the soul after God. His wisdom is longed for. Daniel’s prayer is urgent, it will not admit of denial or delay. “O Lord, hear,” he said, “O Lord forgive, O Lord hearken and do; defer not, for thy name’s sake, O my God.” [Daniel 9:19.]
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 17)
Prayer is the want of the heart laid open before God.
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 18)
Most earnest preaching is done, but with it there is not a corresponding faith in the truth. There is not that firm belief in every word that proceedeth from the mouth of God that makes the heart susceptible to the sin of unbelief. The Holy Spirit’s work is to convict of sin, to break down self-esteem and self-complacency. This cannot come to the heart through any amount of education or talent of speech. It must come through the most precious influence of the Holy Spirit. This will be your great need in Melbourne—the inestimable gift of God. The soul feels its need to drink of the pure snow waters of Lebanon rather than of any human stream of the valley.
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 19)
God recognizes the wants of the soul. But our people, who have the great treasure of the Word of God opened before them, do not realize this. Self-esteem, self-sufficiency, so corrodes the soul with the slime and selfishness of earthliness, that the excellence of the things of eternal interest makes scarce a ripple upon the human heart. When the ambassadors of God shall awake, when they sense the truth as it is, there will be strong crying and tears, that they may themselves be sanctified through the truth, and that others may be sanctified through the diffusion of the Holy Spirit, which they communicate in all their life-practice, and weave into all their lines of work. Self no more lives. Habits and customs, the character which has been a hindrance, no longer holds them in a vice-like grasp.
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 20)
In the fear of God I tell you the truth. There needs to be a reaching out after God, not once now and then, but a continual earnest, heart-breaking confessing and humbling of the soul before God. God’s people must come into the audience chamber of the Most High. The Holy Spirit alone can open these things to the ministers and to the people. Past warnings, past reproofs, are not heeded. The people travel over the same path, and the soul is in danger through manifold temptation. In their sleepy state they are not able to discern spiritual things. They need to know by experience what true prayer is, and that real, whole-souled petitions alone find their way to the heart of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 21)
Those who presume to think that they stand accepted on account of their ministerial commission, their multitudinous duties and exercises of devotion, make a grave mistake. Often their lips express a poverty of soul that their heart does not acknowledge. While speaking to God of poverty of spirit, of the defections of others, the heart is swelling with the conceit of their superior humility, the exercise of their superior righteousness. This is humility upon stilts. When the Lord touches their defects by reproof, they do not receive it, or believe it.
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 22)
Many of the church members are incapable of offering the prayer that receives favor from God, because their hearts and not humble and contrite. What is prayer? It is the offering up of the heart to God, telling Him its needs.
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 23)
These prayers cannot wait for set times or conditions. A real concern for the soul leads to prayer. This leads to a burden of prayer for all those that are in need of salvation and the enlightenment and grace of God. Prayers may be offered while walking the street; amid the whirl of business. God understands that you need Him, and if you ask, you will receive help, when tempted and tried. Your petitions, made known only to God who searcheth the heart, He will hear and answer.
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 24)
“For thus saith the high and lofty One that inhabiteth eternity, whose name is Holy; I dwell in the high and holy place, with him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit, to revive the spirit of the humble, and to revive the heart of the contrite ones. For I will not contend forever, neither will I be always wroth; for the spirit should fail before me, and the souls which I have made. For the iniquity of his covetousness was I wroth, and smote him, I hid me, and was wroth, and he went on frowardly in the way of his heart. I have seen his ways, and will heal him: I will lead him also, and restore comforts unto him and to his mourners. I create the fruit of the lips; peace, peace, to him that is afar off, and to him that is near, saith the Lord: and I will heal him. But the wicked are like the troubled sea when it cannot rest, whose waters cast up mire and dirt. There is no peace, saith my God, to the wicked.” [Isaiah 57:15-21.]
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 25)
Let the prayer go forth from unfeigned lips. Let the longing of the soul be breathed into the ears of the Most High, asking for wisdom. Here is the promise. James 1:2-8: “If any of you lack wisdom let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, and upbraideth not, and it shall be given him. But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering; for he that wavereth is like a wave of the sea, driven with the wind and tossed.” [Verses 5, 6.]
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 26)
Every movement made to draw nigh to God meets with a response from that God who hears and answers prayer. The working of the Holy Spirit produces an inward change of the heart corresponding with the necessities of the soul. The time of temptation, when men are led from right to wrong, is when they feel confidence in their own smartness and capabilities. Different kinds of temptations will suggest themselves as circumstances arise around us and impressions are continually made to mold the decisions according to these circumstances. The heart will rise in self-gratulation and pride. Self will rise up to resist that which presents itself in word or thought. Combativeness is the trait of the character, and resistance is awakened into life. Discontent, peevishness, evil surmisings, uncharitable thoughts, and censure are aroused. The apostle exhorts us, “Be instant in prayer.” [Romans 12:12.] This is the charge of one who knew all the assaults of the enemy. “Pray without ceasing.” [1 Thessalonians 5:17.] “Watch unto prayer.” [1 Peter 4:7.] Ephesians 4:1-7.
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 27)
I have much more to write, but cannot send it in this mail. I have much to say in regard to the great lack of ministering in churches. May the Lord “make you to increase and abound in love one toward another, and toward all men, even as we do toward you; to the end he may establish your hearts unblamable and in holiness before God, even our Father, at the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ with all his saints.” [1 Thessalonians 3:12, 13.]
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 28)
No flattering words are to be used to any favorite, for this will be done at the peril of his soul. “But as we were allowed of God to be put in trust of the gospel, even so we speak, not as pleasing men, but God, which trieth our hearts.”“That ye would walk worthy of God, who hath called you unto his kingdom and glory.”1 Thessalonians 2:4, 5, 11-13.
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 29)
May the Lord help us all that we may not be beguiled by Satan. There is constant danger of falling into Satan’s concealed net which is spread for our feet. But the power of the Holy Spirit will be constantly at work to protect and defend us. We have become careless while entrusted with the most solemn truths ever committed to mortals. We but dimly comprehend what that truth can do for preachers and hearers if it is taken into the soul as a reforming power. “According as he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and without blame before him in love; having predestinated us unto the adoption of children ... according to the good pleasure of his will, ... according to the riches of his grace wherein he hath abounded to us in all wisdom and prudence.” [Ephesians 1:4, 5, 7, 8.]
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 30)
God help us to broaden, to reach up for the rich grace provided, and to reveal altogether a deeper experience, a deeper love for God and for one another. Then the baptism of the Holy Spirit will be seen in our midst to the glory of God. We can have a much larger, deeper experience in spiritual things. “The eyes of your understanding being enlightened, that ye may know what is the hope of his calling, and what the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the saints, and what is the exceeding greatness of his power to usward who believe, according to the working of his mighty power, which he wrought in Christ when he raised him from the dead, and set him at his own right hand.” [Verses 18-20.] There is much more for us. Shall we have the heavenly anointing to discern spiritual things? We must recover from this tame experience. We must grasp the power of God, which will make the truth all-powerful in the conversion of souls.
(12LtMs, Lt 45, 1897, 31)
Lt 46, 1897
Daniells, A. G.; Palmer, E. R. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia June 30, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brethren Daniells and Palmer:
We were very glad to have you visit Cooranbong, and glad that you were all pleased with the work done here. The last two Sabbaths I have spoken to the people assembled in the school room. The Lord blessed me and them. When I can copy the message, I will send you a copy.
(12LtMs, Lt 46, 1897, 1)
I sent you a hastily written line. I had hoped to have an interview with Brother Haskell before writing, but it did not come about, so I sent my letter. My advice to you may at first seem rather strange, that Brother Palmer go to Western Australia without you if one must go. If Brother Hare were not in Western Australia, then would seem to be greater need of two: but he is there, and with Brother Palmer working with the canvassers, and your letters which he can take with him, he will have help. Then you can work nearer home. We must be cautious now, and move wisely.
(12LtMs, Lt 46, 1897, 2)
I spoke a few words with you in reference to some things being managed with equality. I hoped to be able to write more fully ere this, but I am getting off mail for South Africa, and can write only a few lines. Some weeks ago I wrote you in regard to some dangers you would need to guard against. This I will send when I can find it. It has been misplaced. At the Ashfield camp meeting you and Brother Rousseau linked up together. All others were in many ways excluded from councils. You would leave the camp meeting and be away in Sydney a considerable part of your time some days. Those who ought to have been taken into your council were excluded.
(12LtMs, Lt 46, 1897, 3)
This close linking up together resulted in holding the work here from being done, which, had it been done, would have placed us two years ahead. Your leaving out McCullagh, Corliss, and Willie was a mistake. Great dissatisfaction was expressed by Brethren Corliss and McCullagh. Willie’s work was to excuse you and pacify them, for the feeling was running high into disaffection.
(12LtMs, Lt 46, 1897, 4)
These efforts to justify you as far as possible resulted in McCullagh’s trial and soreness of spirit against Willie. Both he and Corliss saw that Willie did not take the same position that they did. I could not conscientiously take the position they did. I saw that they were getting deep into what I fear would be an open rebellion. I told them their course was not right; they could not receive the blessing of the Lord with any such feelings. But I told them also that your course was not right, and that the Lord was not pleased with your linking up with Elder Rousseau to the exclusion of your ministering brethren. He has confessed this matter to me. I know not whether he has ever confessed to them the stumbling block he and Brother Rousseau placed in their way. One thing I know, they never afterward felt toward me and Willie as they did before. They thought we sanctioned all you did. This was a mistake.
(12LtMs, Lt 46, 1897, 5)
All [I can say] is, Brother Daniells, be cautious. From the light given me, you will hurt Brother Palmer by your decided preferences. Brother Palmer will hurt you by sustaining all that you may say and do. And Sister Ingels also will be a part of your preferences. Everything will be endangered; for God will not countenance partiality and such marked preferences. “Without partiality,” you should treat your brethren all as equal. [James 3:17.] This must be guarded. Everything that bears the least resemblance to an admiration society of two, three, five, or more, God will not bless or prosper.
(12LtMs, Lt 46, 1897, 6)
I write you these things because I know whereof I write. Move with an eye single to the glory of God. Brother Daniells, in the responsible position you occupy, you may easily mar the work of God which you love. For Christ’s sake link not your arm with human help and human wisdom. Look to God, trust to God. In trusting to humanity, Elder Olsen failed decidedly and imperilled the work. In a marked manner it bears the scars of human defection. Take Brother Colcord and others of your brethren nearer yourself. Figure for them just as closely as you would figure for anyone. All ye are brethren. Lean heavily on God. Move with an eye single to His glory. Thus you will move safely and not stumble in your walk.
(12LtMs, Lt 46, 1897, 7)
In much love to you all.
(12LtMs, Lt 46, 1897, 8)
Lt 47, 1897
Daniells, A. G.; Palmer, E. R. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia June 28, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in VSS 126; 8MR 285. Dear Brethren Daniells and Palmer:
I have been hoping to see Brother Haskell, but as I have not had any conversation with him, I cannot tell the decision he may have come to. But I will say that I cannot discern the wisdom of breaking him off in his Bible studies in behalf of the students, to go to any place. The Lord has placed him here for the present. I was in great perplexity and distress of mind to know what we should do. W. C. White was away, and the cruel work of Lawrence and Shannon and the apostasy of McCullagh and Hawkins had grieved me to the soul. The outlook was very discouraging; but the Lord gave light and revealed to me that in the emergency His providence had brought us help through His servants Elder Haskell and Sister Hurd Haskell. He would work through him. He would put His words in his lips, and use him to his name’s glory to diffuse light, and to open the Scriptures to minds that were in darkness.
(12LtMs, Lt 47, 1897, 1)
I have no light to direct his course in leaving the work here for other places. He is needed right here, and his work is just what the Lord has appointed, and what the students need just at this time. Things are constantly arising that need to be repressed. Ideas are advanced that will lead into false paths. Everything must be closely guarded. Here are sixty students who need to be educated. Very important is the work to be done. Much has been said and too much cannot be said in regard to Bible education in our schools. The Bible is to be presented as the lesson book. I have seen that infidel sentiments would be brought from our schools where infidel authors are placed in the hands of the students. Sentiments will be expressed in regard to Scripture statements that are directly infidel, and will open the way for the students, if but one chance is given them, to put a construction on the Scriptures that will lead to unbelief and infidelity. Brethren Hughes and Haskell have to watch closely, and counterwork every jot and tittle of this kind of instruction.
(12LtMs, Lt 47, 1897, 2)
The management of church affairs is no small affair. Everything must be done properly; no haphazard work must be left to slip through. The Lord has given me special messages to the church assembled on the last two Sabbaths. Last Sabbath I had a very solemn message. I spoke from Matthew 12:31-37. The sin of foolish talk is common among those who claim to believe the most solemn truths ever given to our world. Because of this commonplace, frivolous talk, the Spirit of the Lord is grieved away. Improper conversation is the reason of such a lack of faith and power among the people of God. Their piety is weak, and there is no spiritual growth. We then had a testimony meeting, and many testimonies were borne. We certainly had the good Spirit of the Lord in our midst.
(12LtMs, Lt 47, 1897, 3)
I wish to state that I cannot see light in your leaving at this special time for Western Australia. You can see in Saturday’s Daily Telegraph the notice of the meeting of the council of churches in Sydney, to bring around that which they have hitherto been unable to accomplish—the recognition of God in the government of the nation. Now is our time to work. Leaflets and periodicals, giving plain warning, should be scattered everywhere. I think meetings should be held in halls to see if the matter cannot be presented so as [to] let in light.
(12LtMs, Lt 47, 1897, 4)
I cannot say much, but I say this much. Know that you do know that now is the time to leave for Western Australia, when there are important issues to be urged upon the people. I do not think that we are one half awake. We are not doing one half what we ought to do, and should have been doing right along for months. True, something has been done, but much more is required to be done.
(12LtMs, Lt 47, 1897, 5)
Brother Wilson has had another attack of bleeding, but prayer was offered on his behalf, and he declares that the soreness is removed. He proposes to go to Hobart, and work carefully. Then if you do not go [to] Western Australia, Brother Daniells might perhaps spend a few days in Hobart. But the one great burden now is to work earnestly to let light shine upon the people, for they are working ignorantly. Much should have been done that has not been done. If Brother Palmer could, after a little, go to Western Australia, why could he not give instruction upon the canvassing work, and spend more time than it is possible for you, Brother Daniells, to give them? The work and interests here demand most earnest work, mingled with faith and prayer.
(12LtMs, Lt 47, 1897, 6)
In much haste.
(12LtMs, Lt 47, 1897, 7)
Lt 48, 1897
Daniells, A. G.; Salisbury, W. D. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia January 21, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in UL 35; ML 157, 162, 217; CTr 231. + Dear Brethren Daniells and Salisbury:
I have just received and read your letter. I was very much pleased with the contents. What the result would be if our brethren separated from the office has been presented to me, in regard to the Echo office, in regard to their business, and in regard to the church. Their reunion with God’s great center is just as it should be, for all the families interested will be placed in a much more pleasing relation to one another, and to our Redeemer, whose they are by creation, and whose they are doubly by redemption.
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 1)
It was impossible, before, for me to present the things I had written in regard to this subject. Knowing the condition of the minds of Brethren Miller and Woods when I was with you, I knew it would be labor lost. I may bring before you all some things, which I have not felt that I could present before, that you may be benefited by the principles presented to me; but I cannot do this just now.
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 2)
In regard to the branch office in the city, I cannot see why it is not the proper thing to do. If you move carefully and prayerfully the Lord will give you wisdom. Heart-consecration to God means everything to us. The good leaven of truth absorbs and permeates everything, heart, mind, and strength. It is the grace of God, hidden in the heart, reforming, purifying, and cleansing. The whole life becomes one of service, not to self, but to God. Thus the truth, working like leaven, influences all brought within the sphere of our influence.
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 3)
One strong reason why an office should be established in the city of Melbourne is that some will be converted. Men often find God when they are not seeking Him. They alight on the hidden treasure of truth, which is more precious to the finder than gold. If those who shall have charge of this branch office keep in close relation with God, others will find Him. Let the light shine in the highways and the byways. In every line of our work we are to seek most earnestly to become fishers of men.
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 4)
Consider how circumstances which occur bring truth before the minds of others. Call to mind the woman of Samaria, who came, as was her usual custom, to draw water. A stranger sitting on the well asks her for a drink. A conversation begins. Jesus says to her, “If thou knewest the gift of God, and who it is that saith to thee, Give me to drink, thou wouldst have asked of him, and he would have given thee living water.”“Whosoever drinketh of this water shall thirst again, but whosoever drinketh of the water that I shall give him shall never thirst; but the water that I shall give him shall be in him a well of water, springing up unto everlasting life.” [John 4:7-14.]
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 5)
Remembering the weary work which she had to repeat day after day, and thinking what an advantage it would be if she could have water without all this trouble, the woman said, “Sir, give me this water, that I thirst not, neither come hither to draw.” [Verse 15.] She did not realize that Jesus was presenting to her the soul’s highest interest, the water of life.
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 6)
The words spoken by Christ were the living water. But she soon became so interested that she left her water pot, and going into the city, bore the words to her countrymen, “Come, see a man that told me all things that ever I did. Is not this the Christ?” [Verse 29.]
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 7)
The woman had come for water, and she heard of the water of life. She had been convinced of sin, and believed on Jesus Christ. Thus is the holy oil is emptied by the holy messengers, represented by the two olive trees, into the golden tubes, and from thence into the golden bowls. The emptying process goes on, from the receiving of the golden oil, to the communicating of the same to others. Words are spoken; the unconscious influences that surround the soul are felt, although no words are designedly spoken. A word may be often spoken that will be as seed sown. The presentation of a tract or a paper may carry impressions to hearts, and the result is that the reader or hearer thirsts for the water of life.
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 8)
The Lord has made ample provision that the heavenly graces shall be abundantly supplied to all, that the truth as it is in Jesus shall hold the first place in the heart, and shall ever occupy the soul-temple. Then there will be thorough devotion to God, and every true believer will become a fisher of men. He will pray for wisdom, and will walk in accordance with the prayer: “Ye are the light of the world.”“Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven.” [Matthew 5:14, 16.]
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 9)
I cannot see but that you are being driven, as it were, to the city, to raise the standard of the Lord, that others may be convinced. It takes a variety of gifts to do the Lord’s work.
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 10)
The pearl of great price is the truth. The seeker after it represents the humble, sincere seeker after Christ. If that which he finds does not better enable him to reveal Christ, both by precept and example, it is not of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 11)
We have abundant evidence that tares grow with the wheat in the church of God. There are sincere Christians in the church, and there are also lukewarm Christians. These have opportunity to know the truth. The Word of God is presented to them; they come to the banquet, as Judas came to the passover, but like Judas, they do not eat the Word of life. No one can compel them to eat the Word of eternal life, to make thorough work for repentance, that they may obtain a Christian experience, and become rooted and grounded in the truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 12)
The lessons of Christ drew all kinds of people together, many of whom professed to receive the truth. Some followed the disciples as did Ananias and Sapphira, who acted a lie to get credit for liberality, that others might think they were sacrificing all. But God read their pretension; for He is the searcher of all hearts.
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 13)
Simon Magus was baptized, but he thought that the Holy Ghost could be purchased with money. He offered the disciples money, saying, “Give me also this power, that on whomsoever I lay hands, he may receive the Holy Ghost.” But with holy indignation Peter answered, “Thy money perish with thee, because thou hast thought that the gift of God may be purchased with money. Thou hast neither part nor lot in this matter; for thy heart is not right in the sight of God. Repent therefore of this thy wickedness, and pray God, if perhaps the thought of thine heart may be forgiven thee. For I perceive that thou art in the gall of bitterness and in the bond of iniquity.” [Acts 8:19-23.]
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 14)
Sharp testimonies must be borne, testimonies that reveal sin. It is often difficult to make the impression upon human minds that must be made to enable them to distinguish sacred, eternal interests from common things. The witness for God often repeats truth clearly and distinctly, and he thinks, “There is no more to be said now.” But there are those who like Simon Magus, think that sacred things of God are merchandise. There are learned men who, like Nicodemus, say, “How can these things be?” [John 3:9.] God’s worker is then grieved and astonished. Disappointment comes, and he says, “What is the use of working? Clear and striking arguments, illustrations appropriate and right to the point, earnestness, and hope to save a soul from death, all have failed to arouse the benumbed senses.” Because of the failure of his efforts his heart becomes discouraged.
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 15)
But this will never do. We are to remember that spiritual things are spiritually discerned. The carnal mind is as dark as midnight, and its illumination must come from the Holy Spirit. “Not by might, nor by power, but by my Spirit, saith the Lord of Hosts.” [Zechariah 4:6.] The most simple representation will be the most effective. This work is to be done by every believing child of God. None are to fail or be discouraged in their service for the Master, whatever the ignorance of spiritual things is shown by learned men.
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 16)
Demas forsook Paul. Writing to Timothy Paul says, “Do thy diligence to come shortly unto me; for Demas hath forsaken me, having loved this present world.” [2 Timothy 4:9, 10.] This is acted out over and over again. Many choose the world before Christ. Paul writes further, “Alexander the coppersmith did me much evil; the Lord reward him according to his works: of whom be thou ware also; for he hath greatly withstood our words. At my first answer no man stood with me, but all men forsook me: I pray God that it may not be laid to their charge. Notwithstanding the Lord stood with me, and strengthened me; that by me the preaching might be fully known, and that all the Gentiles might hear: and I was delivered out of the mouth of the lion.” [Verses 14-17.]
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 17)
This experience we shall have to meet. But work on, lifting Christ higher and still higher, as the sin-pardoner. We must not be overwhelmed with discouragement because good and bad are gathered into the church. Judas was numbered among the disciples. He had every advantage a man could have, but although he heard the truth, and listened to the principles so plainly laid down, yet Christ knew that he did not receive the truth. He did not eat the truth. It did not become a part of himself. His old habits and practices constantly sought to assert themselves. But Christ did not take forcible means to cut Judas away from the disciples.
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 18)
There is a time coming when those who have joined the church but who have not joined Christ, will be manifest. Their corrupt principles cannot blend with Christ. He has represented all such as a new patch put on an old garment. The old cloth tears away from the new, and the rent is made worse. They are like new wine put into old bottles. The bottles break, and the wine is lost. The heart must be made new before it can receive the truth which sanctifies the receiver.
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 19)
All this represents the condition of the church. But what are we to do? To sit in judgment upon these poor, delinquent ones, to condemn them, and root them out, is not given to mortal men to do. God has not given this work to any human being. “Let both grow together until the harvest,” said Christ. [Matthew 13:30.] Christ is the judge. He has bought man. Man is His property. The Redeemer does not want to lose one soul, and His experience with Judas is recorded to show His long patience with perverse human nature.
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 20)
Christ will decide who are worthy to dwell in perfect unity with the saints in the family of heaven. Christ will judge every man by his works and by his words; by his works, whether they be good or bad; by his words, whether they be spoken in the language of heaven or in the language of this earth. Man’s profession is as nothing in the scale. Character will decide the destiny of every soul. “Wherefore gird up the loins of your mind, be sober, and hope to the end for the grace that is to be brought unto you at the revelation of Jesus Christ; as obedient children, not fashioning yourselves according to the former lusts in your ignorance. But as he which hath called you is holy, so be ye holy in all manner of conversation. Because it is written, Be ye holy; for I am holy.” [1 Peter 1:13-16.]
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 21)
Those who are members of the church of Christ will be tested. Some will make shipwreck of the faith. There will be those in the church who will be shown to be tares. They have no appetite for the heavenly banquet. There will be those who appear to be wheat, but by their works and words they prove themselves to be tares.
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 22)
All who are trying to do true service to God will be brought into perplexity; but do not think of failure. Do not talk of discouragement. Let all be united in doing the will of our heavenly Father. “Wherefore lift up the hands which hang down, and the feeble knees and make straight paths for your feet, lest that which is lame be turned out of the way, but let it rather be healed. Follow peace with all men, and holiness, without which no man shall see the Lord: looking diligently lest any man fail of the grace of God; lest any root of bitterness springing up trouble you, and thereby many be defiled. Lest there be any fornicator, or profane person, as Esau, who for one morsel of meat sold his birthright.” [Hebrews 12:12-16.]
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 23)
I see by faith a channel of light which must come more and more directly to humanity. If those who are connected with God’s work would feel the burden of it, and would realize that they are representatives of Jesus Christ, what a light would go forth from them to others. The Lord presents many opportunities to those in His army, but these opportunities are not always discerned. There are hungry, aching hearts, to whom we could speak words that would be as seed sown in good ground, if we could only see the inner wants of the soul.
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 24)
But God knows that we cannot do that, and He has given as directions for work. He inspired His apostle Paul to write, “By him therefore let us offer the sacrifice of praise to God continually, that is, the fruit of our lips, giving thanks to his name. But to do good, and to communicate, forget not; for with such sacrifice God is well pleased.” [Hebrews 13:15, 16.] James writes, “Who is a wise man, and endued with knowledge among you, let him show out of a good conversation his works with meekness of wisdom.” [James 3:13.]
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 25)
Peter writes, “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 now are 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.” [1 Peter 2:9-12.] “Sanctify the Lord God in your hearts, and be ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh you, a reason of the hope that is in you, with meekness and fear: having a good conscience, that, whereas they speak against you as evildoers, that they may be ashamed that falsely accuse your good conversation in Christ.” [1 Peter 3:15, 16.]
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 26)
There is not a man living that can truly enjoy the world except the man of God. That heart is the happiest that has Christ as an abiding guest. That home is the most blessed where godliness is a principle. In the cultivation of the soil the worker can read from nature lessons upon spiritual things. In the workshop where the peace and heavenly presence of Christ dwells, the workers The fear and love of God is seen. They walk in wisdom toward those that are connected with them, and toward all with whom they deal. The Bible sheds light upon their pathway, and the living principles of God’s law are brought into every transaction. But gain obtained in an unfair way is gain without godliness, and as money put into a bag with holes. It will eat the flesh as doth a canker.
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 27)
If we are Christians, we cannot follow the world’s policy. “It is written” must be our constant counsellor. What ungodly men do should not guide us. What men think and say should never lead one soul to swerve from the path of strict rectitude. We are to go to the Fountainhead, and carefully meditate upon the great moral principles contained in the law of Jehovah. “The law of the Lord is perfect, converting the soul.” [Psalm 19:7.] We are to bring it into all our business transactions. The decisive question is, What has God said? What standard has He set up? This once determined, we should feel bound to follow it.
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 28)
We cannot afford to barter away our birthright for a mess of pottage. If we do this, we lose life, eternal life, to secure a treasure that will perish in the using. Shall we not hear the voice of our Redeemer, saying, “He that will come after me, let him take up his cross daily, and follow me.” [Luke 9:23.]
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 29)
What is Bible religion? Living the law of God as Christ lived it in His humanity. That law is holy, just, and good. “The words that I speak unto you,” said Christ, “they are spirit, and they are life.” [John 6:63.] Whatever be our situation, if we are doers of those words, we have a guide to direct our way; whatever our perplexity, we have a sure counsellor; whatever our sorrow, bereavement, or loneliness, we have a sympathizing friend. If you, in your ignorance, have taken missteps, God does not leave you. His voice, clear and distinct, is heard, “I am the way, the truth, and the life.” [John 14:6.]
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 31)
Those who choose to follow their own way reap the sure results. Could they be persuaded to follow the Lord, fearing and loving Him, how different would be their end. Those who truly love God can rest their souls in His keeping. The way given to guide the feet of every one is divine; but if men refuse to follow this path, and make imperfect rules, and raise human standards, you will see a mournful people, a dissatisfied people, and an accusing people. They lay the misfortunes, which come because they follow their own imperfect standards, to their brethren, because they did not do exactly as they said.
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 32)
Thank God, we have a divine path, marked out for us to follow. The man who has true religion planted in his heart will not be guided by human opinion, but by the verdict of One who is unerring. God’s laws are not uncertain conjectures, but the truth, the decisions of an infallible judge. The very laws which He has made known to His people are the laws by which they are to be tried when they stand before His judgment seat. “And I saw a great white throne,” writes John, “and him that sat on it, from whose face the earth and the heavens fled away; and there was found no place for them. And I saw the dead, small and great, stand before God; and the books were opened, and another book was opened, which is the book of life, and the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books, according to their works.” [Revelation 20:11, 12.]
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 33)
I would that we could all remember, much better than we have done in the past, that each day we are deciding what shall be written in the books of heaven. “And another angel came out of the temple, crying with a loud voice, to him that sat on the cloud, Thrust in thy sickle, and reap; for the time is come for thee to reap, for the harvest of the earth is ripe.” [Revelation 14:15.]
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 34)
“And I saw another sign in heaven, great and marvelous, seven angels having the seven last plagues; for in them is filled up the wrath of God. And I saw as it were a sea of glass, mingled with fire; and them that had gotten the victory over the beast, and over his image, and over his mark, and over the number of his name, stand on the sea of glass, having the harps of God. And they sing the song of Moses the servant of God, and the song of the Lamb, saying, Great and marvelous are thy works, Lord God Almighty, just and true are thy ways, thou King of saints. Who shall not fear thee, O Lord, and glorify thy name? For thou only art holy; for all nations shall come and worship before thee; for thy judgments are made manifest.” [Revelation 15:1-4.]
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 35)
Men act as though they had been given special liberty to cancel the decisions of God. The higher critics put themselves in the place of God, and review the Word of God, revising or endorsing it. In this way all nations are induced to drink the wine of the fornication of Babylon. These higher critics have fixed things to suit the popular heresies of these last days. If they cannot subvert and misapply the Word of God, if they cannot bond it to human practices, they break it.
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 36)
But no man who is a partaker of the divine nature will judge the Word of God, for he realizes that it is that Word that judges him. We cannot bring our religion to the Bible, and re-shape and misplace the Scriptures to prove our religion true. We must obtain our religion from the Word, just as it reads. Those who have felt at liberty to reject any portion of God’s Word at pleasure, trampling upon it because it does not suit the world’s measure, or accommodate their own practices in business deal, will find that they are handling a sword which cuts both ways.
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 37)
All who are doers of the Word of God will be blessed abundantly. Whatever crosses they must lift, whatever losses they must sustain, whatever persecution they may suffer, even if it be to the loss of their temporal life, they are amply recompensed, for they secure that life which measures with the life of God. In losing their lives for Christ’s sake, they gain a life which lasts through the eternal ages. They walk under the direction of the Father of lights, with whom there is no variableness, neither shadow of turning. They shall see His face, and His name shall be in their foreheads.
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 38)
Every one that kindles his taper from the divine altar holds his lamp firmly. He does not use common fire upon his censer, but the holy fire, kept burning by the power of God day and night. who walk in the footsteps of Jesus, who will surrender their lives to His guidance and to His service, have the golden oil in their vessels with their lamps. They will never be placed in a position for which God has not made provision. The lamp of life is always trimmed by the very hand that lit it.
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 39)
“Now the God of peace, that brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus, that great shepherd of the sheep, through the blood of the everlasting covenant, make you perfect in every good work to do his will, working in you that which is well-pleasing in his sight, through Jesus Christ, to whom be glory for ever and ever.” [Hebrews 13:20, 21.]
(12LtMs, Lt 48, 1897, 40)
Lt 49, 1897
Daniells, A. G.; Colcord, W. A.; Faulkhead, N. D.; Palmer, E. R.; Salisbury, W. D. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia September 1, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in 21MR 336-339. Dear Brethren Daniells, Colcord, Faulkhead, Palmer, and Salisbury:
I have just finished writing a letter to Brother Miller and his wife, which I wish you to see. I could not sleep after half past twelve o’clock tonight. I was conversing with you, and the Spirit of the Lord came upon me as I presented some things before you. I was telling you that the Lord had shown me that the minds and spirits and characters of His workers needed to be molded and fashioned before he could work in and through them. There needs to be a deeper work of grace in the heart. Less of self and more of Jesus Christ must be seen. Tests close and sharp are coming to all. The religion of the Bible must be interwoven with all that we do and say. All business transactions are to become a fragrance as from God, because of the presence of God, which is to be mingled with every action.
(12LtMs, Lt 49, 1897, 1)
Do you individually realize that you are in the presence of the unseen Watcher? Your individual ways and temperaments need to be fashioned after the divine similitude. Constantly you need to cultivate and cherish the thought, I am in the presence of One whom I love and fear and reverence, but he is seen only by the eye of faith. I must think no thought and do no action in my own spirit or after my own inclination. Unless I have the mind and the spirit of God, I cannot safely be trusted with sacred responsibilities. My mind, my judgment must not rule. The mind and judgment of the great I AM must rule.
(12LtMs, Lt 49, 1897, 2)
We must plough deep if we would obtain an all-round experience. We need to cultivate faith in the word of God. “Thus saith the Lord” is to be the Alpha and the Omega of our experience. As brethren located where you must be more or less connected, you must draw closer together in your councils, in your association, in spirit, and in all your works. One man among you is not to be made the counsellor for all. Each one is to stand in his lot and in his place, doing his work. Every individual among you must before God do a work for these last days that is great and sacred and grand. Every one must bear his weight of responsibility.
(12LtMs, Lt 49, 1897, 3)
The Lord is preparing each one to do his appointed work, and each one is to be respected and honored as a brother chosen of God and precious in His sight. One man is not to be selected to whom all plans and methods shall be confided, while the others are left out. If this is done, errors will be made, wrong moves will be taken. Harm rather than good will be done. No one of you needs to be afraid of the other, lest the other shall have the highest place. Without partiality and without hypocrisy each is to be treated.
(12LtMs, Lt 49, 1897, 4)
The same line of work is not to be given to each worker, and for this reason you need to counsel together in that freedom and confidence that should exist among the Lord’s workmen. All need to have less confidence in self and far greater confidence in the One who is mighty in counsel, who knoweth the end from the beginning.
(12LtMs, Lt 49, 1897, 5)
When you respect each other, you will respect Jesus Christ. You are to show no preferences, for the Lord does not show preferences to His chosen ones. He says, “I call you not servants; for the servant knoweth not what his lord doeth: but I have called you friends; for all things that I have heard of my Father I have made known unto you.” [John 15:15.] This is the confidence that the Lord would have you cherish in each other. Unless you do this more than you have done in your past experience, you will not walk and work under the dictates of the Spirit of God. God would have you united in pleasant cords of companionship. As the Lord’s workmen, you are to open your plans one to another. These plans must be carefully and prayerfully considered, for the Lord will leave those who do not do this to stumble in their own supposed wisdom and superior greatness.
(12LtMs, Lt 49, 1897, 6)
“Ye have not chosen me, but I have chosen you, and ordained you, that ye should go and bring forth fruit, and that your fruit should remain; that whatsoever ye shall ask of the Father in my name, he may give it you. These things I command you, that ye love one another.” [Verses 16, 17.] One person must not suppose that his wisdom is beyond making any mistake. God would have the greatest cherish that humility that will lead him to be the servant of all, if duty thus orders it.
(12LtMs, Lt 49, 1897, 7)
But while you are to love as brethren, and think soul to soul, heart to heart, life to life, you are individually to lean your whole weight on God. He will be your support. He is not pleased when you depend on each other for light and wisdom and direction. The Lord must be our wisdom. Individually we must know that He is our sanctification and our redemption. To Him we may look; in Him we may trust. He will be to us a present help in every time of need.
(12LtMs, Lt 49, 1897, 8)
Whatever your duties in the various lines of work may be, remember that God is the General over all. You must not withdraw from Him to make flesh your arm. You have been too much inclined to measure yourselves among yourselves, and compare yourselves one with another, estimating the importance of your work. Will you remember that your comparisons may fall wide of the mark? It is not position or rank by which the Lord estimates. He looks to see how much of the Spirit of the Master you cherish and how much of the likeness of Christ your work reveals. He who listens most earnestly and intently for the voice of God loves the Lord the most, and as he loves most, he is most beloved by the Father. “Learn of me,” says the greatest Teacher the world ever knew, “for I am meek and lowly in heart, and ye shall find rest unto your souls.” [Matthew 11:29.]
(12LtMs, Lt 49, 1897, 9)
There has been need for this prayer to be offered: “O, my best Friend, my Maker, my Lord, shape me and mold me into Thy divine likeness. Make me entirely like Thyself. Refine, purify, quicken me, that I may represent the character of God.” Religion and business are not two separate things, but one. All that trust in the Lord implicitly will be tested and tried. Then the superscription of God will be placed upon them.
(12LtMs, Lt 49, 1897, 10)
Important work is before us, and we must prepare the way for this work by preparing our own hearts. Heaven must be cherished in our hearts, and the rubbish of selfishness excluded, that Christ may change us into His image. And this work goes on. By beholding Christ, we are changed from glory to glory, and from character to character. His strength is made perfect in our weakness.
(12LtMs, Lt 49, 1897, 11)
Take up the stones, remove the rubbish from your hearts. Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world. People will be tested and proved, as in the case of Brother Davis and in the case of Sister Miller. God’s servants need constantly to lay hold of souls ready to perish with one hand, while with the hand of faith they lay hold of the throne of God. Souls possessed of evil spirits will present themselves before us. We must cultivate the spirit of earnest prayer mingled with genuine faith to save them from ruin. And all the relief gained will confirm our faith.
(12LtMs, Lt 49, 1897, 12)
The Lord will work through every soul that will give himself up to be worked, not only to preach but to minister to the despairing, and to inspire hope in the minds of the hopeless. We are to act our part in relieving and softening the hardships and mysteries of this life. The miseries of this life are as dark and cloudy as they were thousands of years ago. We have something to do: “Arise, and shine; for thy light is come, and the glory of the Lord is risen upon thee.” [Isaiah 60:1.] The needy are close by us; the suffering are in our very borders. We must try to help them. By the grace of Christ, the sealed fountains of earnest, Christlike work are to be unsealed. In the strength of Him who has all strength we are to work as never before. The time of need and necessity shows our sure need of a present, all-powerful Lord Jehovah, in whom is everlasting strength, in whose power we may work. “We are laborers together with God; ye are God’s husbandry; ye are God’s building.” [1 Corinthians 3:9.]
(12LtMs, Lt 49, 1897, 13)
The secret of success is not in our learning, not in our position, for “all ye are brethren” [Matthew 23:8], not in our numbers or entrusted talents; not in the will of man. All the Lord’s workers, feeling their inefficiency, must contemplate Christ; and through Him who is the strength of all strength, the thought of all thought, the willing and obedient will gain victory after victory. The Lord God of Israel is our strength.
(12LtMs, Lt 49, 1897, 14)
We must humble self today, tomorrow, and constantly. With a willing, sanctified heart, we must co-operate with God. We are living in the time when Satan has come down in great power. He is walking about like a roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour. But the Lord is ready to take away the sin that hinders us from yoking up with Christ. If we wear the yoke of Christ, He will be our Emmanuel, “God with us,” supplying every weakness with His strength, every inefficiency with His power of success. [Matthew 1:23.] But if we take glory to ourselves, He removes His excellency from us, and we no longer ride prosperously.
(12LtMs, Lt 49, 1897, 15)
God designs that the sick, the unfortunate, those possessed of evil spirits, shall hear His voice through us. Through His human agencies He desires to be a Comforter such as the world has never before seen. His words are to be voiced, “Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid.”“Ye believe in God, believe also in me.” [John 14:27, 1.] The Lord has not given us the work of reasoning out the things that we do not comprehend until we are satisfied. We must take the Word as it reads. We are not to institute schools of scholastic philosophy or for the so-called “higher education.”
(12LtMs, Lt 49, 1897, 16)
We are to understand that our greatness consists in honoring God by simple, practical experience in the humble, every day life. We need to walk with God, to bring Him into our homes. Grasp the hand of Christ and say, I will not let thee go except thou bless me. He will respond, Keep near to me; I will hold your hand. My grasp shall never relax. Possess your soul in patience, in humbleness, in meekness, and yet say, Arise and shine; for thy light has come, and the glory of the Lord has risen upon thee.
(12LtMs, Lt 49, 1897, 17)
God must be with us day by day, preparing us to learn of Him, that He may teach us the lessons of perfect obedience, that we may be ever with Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 49, 1897, 18)
Lt 49a, 1897
Workers in our Institutions NP September 1897 This letter is published in entirety in SpM 87-90. Unity in Work and in Counsel To the Workers in our Institutions:
The Spirit of the Lord has presented to me things which I now present to you. There needs to be a deeper work of grace among God’s workers. Their minds, their spirit, and their characters need to be molded and fashioned after the similitude of His divine character before He can work in and through them. Less of self and more of Jesus Christ must be seen in their lives. Close and trying tests are coming to all, and the religion of the Bible must be interwoven with all that we do and say. All business transactions are to become a fragrance as from God, because of the presence of God, which is to be mingled with every action.
(12LtMs, Lt 49a, 1897, 1)
Individually, you should realize that you are in the presence of the unseen Watcher. Your methods, and your temperaments need to be fashioned after the divine Pattern. Constantly you should cherish the thought, I am in the presence of the One whom I love and fear and reverence. I must think no thought and do no action in my own spirit or after my own inclination. Unless I have the mind and the spirit of God, I cannot be safely trusted with sacred responsibilities. My own mind, my own judgment, must not rule. It is the mind and judgment of the great I AM, that must bear rule.
(12LtMs, Lt 49a, 1897, 2)
If we would obtain an all-round experience, we must plough deep for truth and wisdom. We must cultivate faith in the Word of God. The alpha and omega of our experience must be “Thus saith the Lord.” As brethren, located where you must be more or less connected in your work, you must draw closer together, in your counsels, in your associations, in spirit, and in all your work. Each one among you is to stand nobly in his lot and place, doing the work which God has committed to him. Every individual among you must do for these last days a work that is great and sacred and grand. Every one must bear his weight of responsibility before God.
(12LtMs, Lt 49a, 1897, 3)
The Lord is preparing each one to do his appointed work, and each one is to be honored and respected as a brother chosen of God and precious in His sight. No one man among you is to be made the counsellor for all. One man is not to be selected as the one to whom all plans and methods shall be referred, while others are not consulted. If this is done, errors will appear, wrong moves will be made, and harm rather than good will be done. No one should be afraid of the other, lest he shall have the highest place. Each is to be treated without partiality and without hypocrisy.
(12LtMs, Lt 49a, 1897, 4)
The same line of work is not to be committed to each one, and therefore you need to counsel together in that freedom and confidence that should exist among the Lord’s workmen. All need to have less confidence in self, and far greater confidence in the One who is mighty in counsel, who knows the end from the beginning.
(12LtMs, Lt 49a, 1897, 5)
As you cultivate respect for one another, you will learn to respect Jesus Christ. You are to show no preferences, for the Lord does not show preferences to His chosen ones. He says, “I call you not servants, but friends; for the servant knoweth not what his Lord doeth: but I have called you friends; for all things that I have heard of my Father I have made known unto you.” [John 15:15.] This is the confidence that the Lord would have you cherish toward one another. Unless you do this more than you have in the past, you will not walk and work under the dictation of the Spirit of God. God would have you united in pleasant cords of companionship. As the Lord’s workmen, you are to open your plans to one another. These plans must be carefully and prayerfully considered, because those who do not do this the Lord will leave to stumble in their own supposed wisdom and superior greatness.
(12LtMs, Lt 49a, 1897, 6)
“Ye have not chosen me, but I have chosen you, and ordained you, that ye should go and bring forth fruit, and that your fruit should remain: that whatsoever ye shall ask the Father in my name, he may give it you. These things I command you, that ye love one another.” [Verses 16, 17.] No one must suppose that his wisdom will secure him from making any mistakes. God desires that the greatest should choose that humility, that will lead him to be the servant of all if duty demands it.
(12LtMs, Lt 49a, 1897, 7)
But while you are to love as brethren, and think mind to mind, soul to soul, heart to heart, life to life, you are individually to lean your whole weight upon God. He will be your support. He is not pleased when you depend on one another for light and wisdom and direction. The Lord must be our wisdom. We must know individually that He is our sanctification and redemption. To Him we may look, in Him we may trust. He will be to us a present help in every time of need.
(12LtMs, Lt 49a, 1897, 8)
Whatever your duties may be in the various lines of work, always remember that God is the General over us all. You must not withdraw from Him to make flesh your arm. We are too much inclined to measure ourselves among ourselves, and compare ourselves one with another, placing our own estimate upon the importance of our work. But these comparisons may fall wide of the mark. The Lord does not estimate by position or rank. He looks to see how much of the Spirit of Christ you possess, and how much of His likeness your life reveals. He who loves the Lord most, listens most earnestly and intently for the voice of God, and as he loves most, he is most beloved by the Father. “Learn of me,” says the greatest Teacher the world ever knew, “for I am meek and lowly in heart; and ye shall find rest unto your souls.” [Matthew 11:29.]
(12LtMs, Lt 49a, 1897, 9)
There is need for this prayer to be offered: “O my best Friend, my Maker, my Lord, shape and mold me into Thy divine likeness. Make me entirely like Thyself. Refine, purify, quicken me, that I may represent the character of God.” We must not think that religion and business are two separate things; they are one. All who trust in the Lord implicitly will be tested and tried, then the superscription of God will be placed upon them.
(12LtMs, Lt 49a, 1897, 10)
There is important work before us. And we must prepare for this work by preparing our own hearts. Heaven must be cherished in our hearts, and the rubbish of selfishness excluded, that Christ may change us into His image. As this work goes on, by beholding Christ we are changed from glory to glory, and from character to character. His strength is made perfect in our weakness.
(12LtMs, Lt 49a, 1897, 11)
We must humble self, today, tomorrow, and constantly. With a willing, sanctified heart, we must co-operate with God. We are living in the time when Satan has come down in great power. He is walking about like a roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour. But the Lord is ready to take away the sin that hinders us from yoking up with Christ. If we wear the yoke of Christ, He will be our Immanuel—“God with us,” supplying every weakness with His strength, every inefficiency with His power and success. [Matthew 1:23.] But if we take glory in ourselves, He removes His excellency from us, and we no longer ride prosperously.
(12LtMs, Lt 49a, 1897, 12)
Take up the stones, remove the rubbish from your hearts. Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world. God’s servants need constantly to lay hold with one hand of souls ready to perish while with the hand of faith they lay hold of the throne of God. Souls possessed with evil spirits will present themselves before us. We must cultivate the spirit of earnest prayer mingled with genuine faith to save them from ruin, and this will confirm our faith.
(12LtMs, Lt 49a, 1897, 13)
God designs that the sick, the unfortunate, those possessed with evil spirits, shall hear His voice through us. Through His human agents He desires to be a Comforter such as the world has never before seen. His words are to be voiced by His followers: “Let not your heart be troubled: neither let it be afraid.”“Ye believe in God, believe also in me.” [John 14:27, 1.]
(12LtMs, Lt 49a, 1897, 14)
The Lord will work through every soul that will give himself up to be worked, not only to preach, but to minister to the despairing, and to inspire hope in the hearts of the hopeless. We are to act our part in relieving and softening the miseries of this life. The miseries and mysteries of this life are as dark and cloudy as they were thousands of years ago. There is something for us to do: “Arise, shine, for thy light is come, and the glory of the Lord is risen upon thee.” [Isaiah 60:1.] There are needy close by us; the suffering are in our very borders. We must try to help them. By the grace of Christ, the sealed fountains of earnest, Christlike work are to be unsealed. In the strength of Him who has all strength, we are to work as we have never worked before. The time of need and necessity makes plain our great need of a present, all-powerful God, in whom is everlasting strength, and in whose power we may work.
(12LtMs, Lt 49a, 1897, 15)
The secret of success is not in our learning, not in our position, not in our numbers, nor the greatness of our talents; it is not in the will of man. The Lord God of Israel is our strength. The willing and obedient will gain victory after victory. The Lord’s workers must feel their inefficiency, must contemplate Christ, and conquer through Him who is the thought of all thought, the strength of all strength. Grasp the hand of Christ, and say, I will not let thee go except Thou bless me. He will respond, Keep near to me; I will hold your hand. My grasp shall never relax. Possess your souls in patience, in meekness, in humbleness of mind, and yet, “Arise, shine, for thy light has come, and the glory of the Lord has risen upon thee.” [Verse 1.]
(12LtMs, Lt 49a, 1897, 16)
Day by day God must be with us, preparing us to learn of Him, that He may teach us perfect obedience, that we may be ever with Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 49a, 1897, 17)
Lt 50, 1897
Daniells, A. G.; Palmer, E. R.; Colcord, W. A. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia March 12, 1897 See variant Lt 50a, 1897. Portions of this letter are published in SpM 60-69. Dear Brethren Daniells, Palmer, and Colcord:
I have been deeply moved. In the night season, as we were in a meeting where several were assembled, we were setting forth the present situation and how few there were to do the work so important and essential to be done. One of commanding appearance, who had been listening to the description of the condition of things, arose and said, Will you please to look carefully, and see if you are accepting the men that are waiting to do service for the Master? Have you not mistaken your calling, and what it comprehends, in the position you occupy toward one who has moved to another field of labor? What if this move was not according to your ideas of order, or according to your human wisdom? Have you, in your experience, been faultless? Have you not made mismoves and blunders? He has his strong traits of character, and you have yours. All these imperfections God sees. He sees that some have made independent moves, even without the counsel of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 1)
“All ye are brethren.” [Matthew 23:8.] To no one has the Lord given permission to rule over a brother. All need their hearts refined and cleaned from weakness, from natural and hereditary traits of character. All are amenable to God. If a brother errs in his ministerial work, remember that you have all erred and shown great want of faith in the Lord. Yet God has not discarded you and given you no place to work. Had He done this, His action would have been just as sensible as your action in this case.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 2)
Be careful what power you take into your finite hands. Be careful how you denounce those whom you should only pity and comfort and help. The Lord does not see the works of men with the same vision that men see them. He has many kinds of men to deal with, and He knows just how to deal with all. But let every man, whatever his position, remember that he is not to rule any man’s conscience, or sit on the judgment seat against any man. The Lord does not pronounce as just the judgment you have formed.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 3)
Satan is a masterly worker, and he will lose no opportunity to make the most of his chances to work for those who are left in a very disagreeable situation. There are those who make grave mistakes, but they seldom see the aggravated character of their own faults or their more disagreeable results. But if another passes over the ground and does no worse, and perhaps not nearly as bad, how easy for the brother who first sinned to bear down on his brother with an unsparing hand. There are men who are severely tempted and tried, but who meet their temptations, at times feeling desperately, because they know not what to do in an emergency. Jesus pities them. He sees them meeting their temptations with a noble purpose, and wrestling with the devil, foot to foot, breast to breast; and He says to them as He said to Peter, “Get thee behind Me, Satan. Let Me come close to My tempted one. Satan hath desired thee, that he might sift thee as wheat; but I have prayed for thee, that thy faith fail not.” [Matthew 16:23; Luke 22:31, 32.]
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 4)
Speak gently to ministers who are seeking, fully as earnestly as your own self, to do their duty under difficulties. They are but men, with all the clamoring of Satan to discourage them. “Wherefore lift up the hands which hang down, and the feeble knees.” Be careful to “make straight paths for your feet, lest that which is lame be turned out of the way; but let it rather be healed. Follow peace with all men, and holiness, without which no man shall see the Lord; looking diligently lest any man fail of the grace of God; lest any root of bitterness springing up trouble you, and thereby many be defiled.” [Hebrews 12:12-15.]
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 5)
The Lord has accepted men, and borne with them, when their brethren have treated [them] indifferently. They have allowed their masterly spirit to come in to rule, and in thus doing, they have counterworked the work of God. You have managed this case, from first to last, in evidently a faithless manner. Take your hands off your brother. He is God’s property. He is in God’s service. You have no right to handicap him as you have done. You should deal with him just as you would choose to be dealt with under like circumstances. By going to another field to work, without consulting his brethren, or opening his mind to them, he moved unwisely. But his brethren do not understand just how the Lord will bring about the accomplishment of the work He would have done. This very moving to another part of the field may be wholly in the Lord’s order. Let men be delicate and exercise their caution when it will tell for God’s glory in the end.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 6)
But this brother was not so much to be censured in his action, for your own course of action revealed movements that did not encourage confidence in your faith or in your judgment. He was willing to submit to the judgment of others, altogether too much so. The Lord is not pleased when men go to men and yield up their own will and judgment to follow their counsel, when the one giving it has not more wisdom and faith than themselves. It is all a mistake. Erratic movements will be made, according to present appearances, and not according to the mind and will of God. All must stand in God. If there was not another person on the globe but ourselves, we should be Christians for our own individual present and eternal good. Life can be pure only when it is under God’s control. No man is to rule his follow men.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 7)
The brethren in the portion of the field to which this brother has gone should not have looked to Elder Daniells to know their duty, but to God. They should have set him at work, because he is in service, under bonds to God. He is not to be a canvasser, only as it shall be connected with his ministerial work. He is to present the Word. He has many things to learn, as well as have all who have given themselves to the ministry. Many rush into matters in a hurry, and thus make mistakes. Some forget that they are only human with the deficiencies of humanity upon them, and they give expression to principles that are not Christian. Thus they set an example that leads others astray.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 8)
Ignoble, egotistic, weak criticizing has become a false science, which must be cut out of the life experience. It is no marvel that many, having sensitive natures, who thought Christian work the noblest, and longing for some word of direction, or some counsel and encouragement, have been driven aside by wrong management, and turned church foes.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 9)
The Lord’s workers need the melting love of Jesus in their hearts. Let every minister live a man among men. Let him, in well-regulated methods, go from house to house, bearing ever the censer of heaven’s fragrant atmosphere of love. Anticipate the sorrows, the difficulties, the troubles of others. Enter into the joys and cares of both high and low, rich and poor.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 10)
Let not the shepherds of God’s pasture treat coolly their fellow laborers. “All ye are brethren.” [Matthew 23:8.] The Lord Jesus died to save sinners, and He longs to see men with hearts tender and full of compassion, not full of self-dignity. This must be laid in the dust. Ministers must touch lovingly and tenderly their brother minister, who is battling with difficulties that appear stubborn and unyielding. But in your decisions in regard to this case, you have shown much more of self and earthliness than of kindness, meekness, gentleness, or love.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 11)
All are to gather the precious treasures of love, not merely for favorites, but for every soul who has his hand and heart in the work of the ministry, for all who do this work are the Lord’s. Through them He works. Learn lessons of love from the life of Jesus. Let men be careful how they speak to their fellow men. There is to be no egotism, no lording it over God’s heritage. A bitter sneer should not rise in any mind or heart. No tinge of scorn should be heard in the voice. Speak a word of your own; take an indifferent attitude; show suspicion, prejudice, jealousy; and by mismanagement the work may be done for a soul.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 12)
Ministers are but men; and God has said that one man’s mind and judgment is not to control another man’s mind. Let the graces of our Elder Brother be copied. With heart and spirit, and all the power that piety and art can bestow, do true, faithful work. Show thyself an example by working earnestly for the Master, drawing all men to Christ. Thy work is but to proclaim; God’s work is to convert the barren hearts of men.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 13)
When the work seems to go hard, dip thy words and spirit into the oil of God’s love; and then, under the working of the Holy Spirit, thou canst pray with all earnestness, and preach with all power. And God giveth the increase.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 14)
Allow not your hearts to grow cold and unimpressible. Your religious life may be praiseworthy, as is represented by the church at Ephesus, but deficient in love to God and to your neighbors. Suffer not a Pharisaical harshness to come in and hurt your brother. “Unto the angel of the church at Ephesus write: These things saith he that holdeth the seven stars in his right hand, who walketh in the midst of the seven golden candlesticks: I know thy works, and thy labor, and thy patience, and how thou canst not bear them which are evil: and thou hast tried them which say they are apostles, and are not, and hast found them liars: and hast borne, and hast patience, and for my name’s sake hast labored, and hast not fainted. Nevertheless I have somewhat against thee, because thou hast left thy first love. Remember therefore from whence thou art fallen, and repent, and do thy first works; or else I will come unto thee quickly, and will remove thy candlestick out of his place, except thou repent.” [Revelation 2:1-5.]
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 15)
“And unto the angel of the church of Sardis write: These things saith he that hath the seven spirits of God, and the seven stars; I know thy works, that thou hast a name that thou livest, and art dead. Be watchful, and strengthen the things which remain, that are ready to die: for I have not found thy works perfect before God. Remember therefore how thou hast received and heard, and hold fast, and repent. If therefore thou shalt not watch, I will come on thee as a thief, and thou shalt not know what hour I will come upon thee. Thou hast a few names even in Sardis which have not defiled their garments; and they shall walk with me in white, for they are worthy.” [Revelation 3:1-4.]
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 16)
Cry unto God the Lord, Pardon our infirmities, and their infirmities; but give not up one hour of service. Keep all at work in their own line, and handicap none of God’s servants because they did not come to you for counsel and do according to your bidding. You have bidden and directed too much. God’s ministers should look to Him for their directions. Your plans were not God’s plans. Had your brother come to you for instruction, you would have discouraged or misdirected him. No man whom God has chosen to do His work is to be under the control of any other man’s mind. Men may converse as equal men, but when it comes to laying down rules and commands, leave that for the Lord to do. This is not the line in which you are called to work.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 17)
The Lord has been working to bring certain things around for His own name’s glory. Had your brother done just as you think he should have done, he would have become discouraged by the way you would have handled his case. God would have you work with your fellow men with this idea in view—that they are human like yourself, subject to temptations; and you are to meet them on equal ground. Treat them respectfully, as men who are chosen of God. They may not always have been wise or perfect in their judgment; but humanity must meet humanity just where it is, remembering that all are of value with God. Your brethren are as precious in God’s sight as your individual selves.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 18)
Under stress of circumstances, because you did not exercise faith and reveal trust in God, you have made grave blunders. If men err in the same lines in which you have erred, if they move hastily by looking at appearances, do not do with them as you have done in the case of the one who has been laboring for the Master. You cannot bind him to your heart or influence him for good by the course of action you have pursued. Come into union and agreement without delay. Act your part nobly, for you have erred. You have dealt with him as no minister should deal with a fellow laborer. The Lord will not sanction any such an example for your fellow workers to follow.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 19)
A man who could have been at work in New Zealand has not been permitted to work. His fellow laborers in New Zealand have echoed your sentiments, which they thought they must carry out. They have made themselves, in connection with you, answerable to God for all that man could have done and did not do. The Lord could have used him to speak and to pray, to help souls that are in suffering need of help.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 20)
Men have become feeble by looking to men, and trusting in men. They go when men say, Go. They ought to look to God, and trust in Him for wisdom. “I am the Truth.” [John 14:6.] God’s thoughts are expressed and made prominent through the inspired writers. Christ’s Comforter is upon earth, not discerned in human form, although He oft comes as a man to protect and to counsel. “But the Comforter, which is the Holy Ghost, whom the Father will send in my name, he shall teach you all things, and bring all things to your remembrance, whatsoever I have said unto you.” [Verse 26.]
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 21)
“These things have I spoken unto you that my joy might remain in you, and that your joy might be full. This is my commandment, That ye love one another, as I have loved you. Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friend. Ye are my friends, if ye do whatsoever I command you. Henceforth I call you not servants; for the servant knoweth not what his Lord doeth, but I have called you friends, for all things that I have heard of my Father I have made known unto you. You have not chosen me, but I have chosen you, and ordained you, that ye should go forth and bring forth fruit, that your fruit should remain; that whatsoever ye shall ask of the Father in my name, he may give it you.” [John 15:11-16.]
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 22)
Every soul that is sanctified by the Holy Spirit will look to God for himself. The human agent will not look to other human agents to be told his duty. The divine Guide will prepare his heart for divine light. The Holy Spirit’s work is to write God’s thoughts deeply in the heart of man. “After these days, saith the Lord, I will put my law in their inward parts, and write it in their hearts.” [Jeremiah 31:33.] Such alone are Christ’s living epistles, written, not with pen and ink, but by the Spirit of the living God, not in tables of stone, but in the fleshy tables of the heart.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 23)
If men could see the tender love of Christ, there would be no lifting up one over another. The Lord Jesus came to our world, you may not say, to save them only, but to save us. In Him are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge. He came to seek and to save that which was lost. He traversed every path where souls were straying. He reached to the very depths of human woe and misery. What right, then, has one fellow laborer to give the cold shoulder to another fellow laborer because he presumes to think that he has not in all things done as he should have done? O man, remember that thou art only a man! What account will those in New Zealand render for their Pharisaism, for standing apart from their brother, leaving him to the devil’s temptations? Satan works to rob man of his integrity toward God.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 24)
United with Christ, one may have all the power he needs. If he comes to Jesus Christ in His Word, he will realize that this is the victory that overcometh the world, even our faith. But if his union with Christ is made through finite man, he is as weak as finite man. It will never do to make man the guardian of our sacred responsibilities, for no virtue goes from man to man. When a man is educated and trained to do as another man tells him to do, he ceases to rely on Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 25)
We have no real moral power if severed from Christ. United to Him, we have all the wisdom and sufficiency and power we need. “If ye abide in me”—if you continue to exercise faith in Me—“and my words abide in you”—if ye are obedient doers of the Word, eating the flesh and drinking the blood of the Son of God, the Word sinks deep into the soul, fastening itself upon the memory, directing the actions, inspiring the motives, controlling the judgment, filling the heart with love to God and your fellow men. “Ye shall ask what ye will, and it shall be done unto you.” [John 15:7.]
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 26)
I ask you, my brethren in Melbourne who have allowed your impressions and circumstances to quench your love for your brother, to consider the circumstances connected with his labor. He was shifted from place to place, and was sent into the canvassing field, because there did not seem to be any place for him, or money to sustain him. If he felt urged by duty to go to New Zealand, the right way would have been for him to go to you, my brethren, tell his difficulties, and asked your counsel. But he was in debt, mortified, and strengthless. His heart-courage was gone.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 27)
When he went to New Zealand, because Brother Daniells expressed the opinion that his course had been wrong, he was left with nothing to do. But ought men’s opinions to be regarded as infallible? Must men follow the expressed opinions of a laborer against a fellow laborer who has shown devotion to the work? Did his brethren kneel down and seek the Lord in his behalf, making his case their own? There are souls to be saved everywhere, but he did not have courage to work, because he had fallen into debt. He needed a brother, with the Elder Brother’s heart of sympathy and humanity, to touch his heart of humanity.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 28)
Were you afraid, Brother Crothers, Brother Farnsworth, and Brother Steed, to take this brother by the hand, and say, “We all have our trials, Brother Hickox, and we will help you all we can by our sympathy and prayers? If you have made a mistake, it is what we all do. Brace up like a man, and go to work. Do not feel that you are outside the ring. Be true to principle, and we will help you. The Lord needs one hundred laborers where there is now one. It may be that the Lord has sent you here, to engage with us in the work.”
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 29)
Never say, “It is time to make an example of this brother,” even though he may have erred. Wait till you can say, “It is time to make an example of me by the withdrawal of your confidence and favor, because I have not moved wisely.” But there are so many who, though willing to make out a recipe, that others may take the bitter medicine, would not be pleased to take it themselves. With many it makes every difference whether it is I or my brother. Well did the apostle say, Ye have many teachers, but few fathers. [1 Corinthians 4:15.] It is spiritual fathers that we need in our gospel work.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 30)
I have not received a line from Brother Hickox or from his wife. All that I have heard is from those whom I know are not moving in the counsel of God. I think that it would be best for us to humble our hearts before God, and obtain bowels of mercy and the incense of sanctified love, and see if this will not change the recipe given to Brother Hickox. I do not speak of him as a perfect man, for he is the same as his brethren. He has the same liability to err, and the same need of a teachable spirit. But if you think that the course pursued toward him will enable you to obtain his confidence, and lead him to rely on his brethren, believing that if he makes a mistake, they will have wisdom to help him, you have made a wrong calculation.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 31)
We all need to sow a crop of patience, compassion, and love. We shall reap the harvest we are sowing. Our characters are now being formed for eternity. Here on earth we are being trained for heaven. We owe everything to grace, free grace, sovereign grace. Grace in the covenant ordained our adoption as sons of God. Grace in the Saviour effected our redemption, our regeneration, and our adoption to heirship with Jesus Christ. Let this grace be revealed to others.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 32)
From the light which has been given me in the past and at the present, I do not see the spirit, which Christ possessed in His life, revealed in your dealings with Brother Hickox. If I were where I could see him, I should urge him to respect all in positions of trust, and not to make flesh his arm, but always in everything to make Christ his strength and efficiency. I would converse with him as one who, if he had sinned, had not sinned willfully. If he has sinned, there is a God to pity, who is forbearing and tender and longsuffering, ready to pardon and forgive.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 33)
I am so wearied and tired out with the heartless manner in which human, erring man treats his brother, who may be just as much beloved of God as he himself is. Little love is expressed in attitude and words when one is supposed to have moved not in accordance with the will of men. How do you know that the Lord has brought this about in order to set Brother Hickox and his wife where they could be laborers together with God, where he could stand in earnest labor, presenting the truth to those in darkness? Who is responsible for all the good that might have been done by these two workers in opening the Scriptures to others, in union with their brethren? Who will render the account to God for laying hands upon one of His workers, causing him to be dropped out as he has been? There is no excuse for this manner of dealing, and in the name of the Lord I protest against it.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 34)
I wish that occasionally the curtain could be rolled back, that all could see the manner of the Lord’s working, and the wonderful activity in the courts above. The Lord often works in a manner which is not in accordance with the ideas of the men who are in responsible positions. The speculations and calculations of human minds are not always the wisdom of God. Some move altogether too slow, and their caution is as a defective spoke in the wheel, keeping it from rolling. Again, others may devise and plan how this one and that one shall work, when the Lord has other work for these men to do, and other places where He wants them to fill in as His agents. His plans are not built on any foundation that is laid by man, but as the high and lofty One that inhabiteth eternity, He lays the foundation, and erects the structure, in lofty independence through those who will be worked by Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 35)
The Lord Jesus takes those that He finds will be molded and uses them for His own name’s glory, to meet His own spiritual conception. He sees material that others would pass by, and works all who will be worked. Through very simple means a door is opened in heaven, and the simplicity of the human agent is used by God to reveal God to man.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 36)
The Lord Jesus never attempts to prove His teachings or vindicate Himself. He speaks as one having authority, as the Source from which all wisdom flows. His Word is spoken out, and the Holy Spirit’s work is to find a place for that Word. He is the light of the world. His own ideas are light. He simply shines, and men are to be enlightened. His work upon human hearts is not to be interfered with by men. All men must keep their place, and let God work upon hearts and minds, and enlighten the understanding. He does not want men to walk in darkness. He has given ability and talents to men, in order that they may use them and improve them.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 37)
Men are not left in absolute darkness. As the light of the world, Christ addresses the world. His light is not at all mingled with darkness. It is clearer, brighter, and far more penetrating than any other light. His light shineth in darkness, but the darkness comprehendeth it not. “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.” [John 1:12.] He is waiting and watching, taking the imperfect ideas of men, not extinguishing them, but correcting their errors, supplying their defective ideas of management with correct ideas, and putting His own truth in the place of their erroneous principles.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 38)
Christ is the light of the world. O how condescendingly He takes out of the mind the traditions, the false theories, and the maxims, authority, and commandments of men, which are working counter to the commandments of God! But the enemy strives to hinder God’s working in human minds.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 39)
I am pained to see the little value placed upon men whom the Lord has used, and whom He will use. God forbid that every man’s mind shall follow in the channel of another man’s mind. One man’s mind may be, by some, exalted as being in every degree superior, but every mind has its peculiar weakness and its peculiar strength. One man’s mind will supply another man’s deficiency. But if all work in the one harness and are given encouragement to look, not to men to know their duty, but to God, they will develop under the Holy Spirit’s guidance, and will work in unity with their brethren. One will supply another’s lack.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 40)
We need young, strong workers, such as Brother Hickox and his wife. The Lord will use both of them if they will walk humbly with God. The time they have spent doing little has not been so spent because the Lord refused to use them, but because of the Pharisaism manifested by the men who need the converting power of Christ, the Light of the world, to shine into their confused human minds, teaching them that they are not gods, and that they must leave God to deal with His workmen. There is only one true method by which any man can work. He must learn of Him who is meek and lowly in heart. We must go more earnestly and humbly, with more contrition of soul, and ask of God wisdom, as He has appointed.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 41)
For the same reason that Brother Hickox is not received and supported by his brethren in his work, other ministers might be regarded as unfit for labor. I want to put this matter before you in the light in which it has been placed before me. The Lord has high claims upon Brother and Sister Hickox. They have much to learn, as have all who are connected with the great work of the Master, but I entreat the men who should be helpers of those who in an emergency need help, not to prove hindrances and stumbling blocks in their way.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 42)
It is a desirable thing to do God service; but it is not always an easy thing. The world is against us. At times the way seems to be hedged up, and Satan seems to get hold of the mind. And too often, when the brethren of the tempted one should be wise, they show the human side of their characters instead of the godly side. It is lamentable. If these tempted ones had not, by a course of teaching, been educated to [look to] men, they would turn their face toward God and trust in God. They need greater strength than human power, greater strength than their own.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 43)
When men have to swim against the stream, there is a weight of waves driving them back. Let a hand then be held out, as was the Elder Brother’s hand to a sinking Peter, and let hopeful advice [be given] that will establish confidence and awaken love. You cannot tell how such a work is registered in the heavenly books. Let the one who is supposed to have moved wrongly be given no occasion by his brother to become discouraged, but let him feel the strong clasp of a sympathizing hand; let him hear the whisper, “Let us pray.” The Holy Spirit will give a rich experience to both. It is prayer that unites hearts. It is prayer to the Great Physician to heal the soul that will bring the blessing of God. Prayer unites us with one another and with God. Prayer, brings Jesus to our side, and gives new strength and fresh grace to the fainting, perplexed soul to overcome the world, the flesh, and the devil. Prayer turns aside the attacks of Satan.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 44)
O, remember that we are His offspring, children of one family. “All ye are brethren.” [Matthew 23:8.] His tender mercies are over all His works. Ever bear in mind that money is of little value compared with souls. Many, if left to impulse, represent God as stern, watching to denounce and condemn, who would not receive a soul in error as long as he has a legal excuse for not helping him. It is not God who is thus represented, for He is full of goodness and mercy and truth. Christ came to remove all such feelings and thoughts of God. He wants every erring soul to “look and live.” [Numbers 21:8.] He would have them feel that God’s yearning, fatherly love is toward them. He has revealed that which is not apprehended.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 45)
If men would eat of Christ’s flesh and drink His blood, which means to be doers of His Word, they would manifest the attributes of Christ. He was a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief. He was wounded for our transgressions and bruised for our iniquities. The chastisement of our peace was upon Him, and with His stripes we are healed. Wherein is our self-denial, our self-sacrifice, and patience and mercy and long-suffering and love exercised to bring back the erring to repentance and to fellowship with God? If this were done, what a reformation would be wrought in individual souls and in families and in the church, under the transforming grace of the Holy Spirit. Why do we not act as Christians, as shown in the lessons Christ has given?
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 46)
God is the orderer of all things. Have you not had any idea that this movement made by Brother Hickox was under the ordering of God? Did not the Lord see that you might not deal with His servant wisely? Did He not see that he needed to do services in some other part of His vineyard, just where he is? He who is the orderer of all things, He who numbers the hairs of our head, worked through His Spirit to transfer him to a field where he could do greater good, just as the careful, tender, earthly father would do in the interests of his children, only our God is infinitely more watchful over the interests of His sons and daughters. He is too wise to err, and too good to do them harm. He has a wise love, a great and unbounded love. “Are ye not of more value than many sparrows? and yet your heavenly Father feedeth them.” [Matthew 10:31; 6:26.]
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 47)
The Lord will, by His own methods, break up this indifference of man toward his fellow man. He will educate and train and discipline His children, O how kindly and lovingly, for their greater consecration in His work, and fit them for a higher life. It is by His Word that He instructs, and by experience that He develops virtues and powers, making those in His service meet for the inheritance of the saints in light. If they will surrender to God, and not look to men, or depend on the finite in the place of the Infinite, He will work out for them a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 48)
Darkness and mysteries compass the path of some who have not permitted the Lord to carry forward His work in their hearts, who have not brought their thoughts into captivity to Him. If these poor souls who now rise before my mind had only learned of Jesus, and had not taken counsel of their own unconverted, unsubdued souls, they would now be in the path of obedience, co-workers with Jesus Christ. But they put themselves in their own hands, and did not trust the Lord, and they are not enjoying His blessing, or the faith that works by love, and purifies the soul.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 49)
O that everyone would realize the great love, the self-sacrifice, the benevolence, and the kindness, of our heavenly Father in giving His Son to die for us, that we might, if we believe and do His commandments, have a sweet peace, the Father’s joy, the Father’s love, and unite with Him, heart, soul, mind, and strength, to maintain righteousness, and to draw in even lines with Christ. It is not the sacrifice of Christ only; it is the Father’s sacrifice also.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 50)
The Father, in union and loving sympathy with His Son, subjected Himself to suffer with His Son. He spared not His only begotten Son, but freely delivered Him up for us all. This gift of Christ is the crowning truth of God’s love, and His Fatherhood through all time and through eternity. Here the love of God in His Fatherhood is shown. Let us drink in this love, that we may know by experience what a real, tender, joyful, experience there is in a realization of the Fatherhood of God. “Let brotherly love continue.” [Hebrews 13:1.] By bearing one another’s burdens, we are fulfilling the law of Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 51)
“All the paths of the Lord are mercy and truth unto such as keep his testimonies.” [Psalm 25:10.] “The mercy of the Lord is from everlasting to everlasting upon them that fear him, and his righteousness unto children’s children, to such as keep his covenant and to those who remember his commandments to do them.” [Psalm 103:17, 18.]
(12LtMs, Lt 50, 1897, 52)
Lt 50a, 1897
Daniells, A. G.; Palmer, E. R.; Colcord, W. A. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia March 12, 1897 Variant of Lt 50, 1897. Dear Brethren Daniells, Palmer, and Colcord:
I have been deeply moved. In the night season, as we were in a meeting where several were assembled, we were setting forth the present situation and how few there were to do the work so important and essential to be done. One of commanding appearance, who had been listening to the description of the condition of things, arose and said, “Will you please look carefully, and see if you are accepting the men that are waiting to do service for the Master? Have you not mistaken your calling, and what it comprehends, in the position you occupy toward one who has moved to another field of labor? What if this move was not according to your ideas of order, or according to your human wisdom? Have you, in your experience, been faultless? Have you not made mismoves and blunders? He has his strong traits of character, and you have yours. All these imperfections God sees. He sees that some have made independent moves, even without the counsel of God.”
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 1)
“All ye are brethren.” [Matthew 23:8.] To no one has the Lord given permission to rule over a brother. All need their hearts refined and cleansed from weakness, from natural and hereditary traits of character. All are amenable to God. If a brother errs in his ministerial work, remember that you have all erred and shown great want of faith in the Lord. Yet God has not discarded you and given you no place to work. Had He done this, His action would have been just as sensible as your action in this case.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 2)
Be careful what power you take into your finite hands. Be careful how you denounce those whom you should only pity and comfort and help. The Lord does not see the works of men with the same vision that men see them. He has many kinds of men to deal with, and He knows just how to deal with all. But let every man, whatever his position, remember that he is not to rule any man’s conscience, or sit on the judgment seat against any man. The Lord does not pronounce as just the judgment you have formed.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 3)
Satan is a masterly worker, and he will lose no opportunity to make the most of his chances to work for those who are left in a very disagreeable situation. There are those who make grave mistakes, but they seldom see the aggravated character of their own faults or their more disagreeable results. But if another passes over the ground and does no worse, and perhaps not nearly as bad, how easy for the brother who first sinned to bear down on his brother with an unsparing hand. There are men who are severely tempted and tried, and who meet their temptations, at times feeling desperately, because they know not what to do in an emergency. Jesus pities them. He sees them meeting their temptations with a noble purpose, and wrestling with the devil, foot to foot, breast to breast; and He says to them as He said to Peter, “Get thee behind Me, Satan. Let Me come close to My tempted one. Satan hath desired thee, that he might sift thee as wheat; but I have prayed for thee, that thy faith fail not.” [Matthew 16:23; Luke 22:31, 32.]
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 4)
Speak gently to ministers who are seeking, fully as earnestly as your own self, to do their duty under difficulties. They are but men, with all the clamoring of Satan to discourage them. “Wherefore lift up the hands which hang down, and the feeble knees.” Be careful to “make straight paths for your feet, lest that which is lame be turned out of the way; but rather let it be healed. Follow peace with all men, and holiness, without which no man shall see the Lord: looking diligently lest any man fail of the grace of God; lest any root of bitterness springing up trouble you, and thereby many be defiled.” [Hebrews 12:12-15.]
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 5)
The Lord has accepted men, and borne with them, when their brethren have treated them indifferently. They have allowed their masterly spirit to come in to rule, and in thus doing they have counterworked the work of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 6)
You have managed this case, from first to last, in an evidently faithless manner. Take your hands off your brother. He is God’s property. He is in God’s service. You have no right to handicap him as you have done. You should deal with him just as you would choose to be dealt with under like circumstances. By going to another field to work, without consulting his brethren or opening his mind to them, he moved unwisely. But his brethren do not understand just how the Lord will bring about the accomplishment of the work He would have done. This very moving to another part of the field may be wholly in the Lord’s order. Let men be delicate and exercise their caution when it will tell for God’s glory in the end.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 7)
But this brother was not so much to be censured in his action, for your own course of action revealed movements that did not encourage confidence in your faith or in your judgment. He was willing to submit to the judgment of others, altogether too much so. The Lord is not pleased when men go to men and yield up their own will and judgment to follow their counsel, when the one giving it has not more wisdom and faith than themselves. It is all a mistake. Erratic movements will be made, according to present appearances, and not according to the mind and will of God. All must stand in God. If there was not another person on the globe but ourselves, we should be Christians for our own individual present and eternal good. Life can be pure only when it is under God’s control. No man is to rule his fellow man.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 8)
The brethren in the portion of the field to which this brother has gone should not have looked to Elder Daniells to know their duty, but to God. Then they should have set him at work, because he is in service, under bonds to God. He is not to be a canvasser; he is to present the Word. He has many things to learn, as well as have all who have given themselves to the ministry. Many rush into matters in a hurry, and thus make mistakes. Some forget that they are only human, with the deficiencies of humanity upon them, and they give expression to principles that are not Christian. Thus they set an example that leads others astray.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 9)
Ignoble, egotistic, weak criticizing has become a false science, which must be cut out of the life experience. It is no marvel that many, having sensitive natures, who thought Christian work the noblest, and longed for some word of direction, or some counsel and encouragement, have been driven aside by wrong management, and turned into church foes.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 10)
The Lord’s workers need the melting love of Jesus in their hearts. Let every minister live as a man among men. Let him, in well-regulated methods, go from house to house, bearing ever the censer of heaven’s fragrant atmosphere of love. Anticipate the sorrows, the difficulties, the troubles of others. Enter into the joys and cares of both high and low, rich and poor.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 11)
Let not the shepherds of God’s pasture treat coldly their fellow-laborers. “All ye are brethren.” [Matthew 23:8.] The Lord Jesus died to save sinners; and He longs to see men with hearts tender and full of compassion, not full of self-dignity. This must be laid in the dust. Ministers must touch lovingly and tenderly their brother minister, who is battling with difficulties that appear stubborn and unyielding. But in your decisions in regard to this case, you have shown much more of self and earthliness than of kindness, meekness, gentleness, or love.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 12)
All are to gather the precious treasures of love, not merely for favorites, but for every soul who has his hand and heart in the work of the ministry, for all who do this work are the Lord’s. Through them He works. Learn lessons of love from the life of Jesus. Let men be careful how they speak to their fellow men. There is to be no egotism, no lording it over God’s heritage. A bitter sneer should not rise in any mind or heart. No tinge of scorn should be heard in the voice. Speak a word of your own; take an indifferent attitude; show suspicion, prejudice, jealousy; and by mismanagement the work will be done for a soul.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 13)
Ministers are but men; and God has said that one man’s mind and judgment are not to control another man’s mind. Let the graces of our Elder Brother be revealed. With heart and spirit, and all the power that piety and art can bestow, do true, faithful work. Show thyself an example by working earnestly for the Master, drawing all men to Christ. Thy work is but to proclaim; God’s work is to convert the barren hearts of men.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 14)
When the work seems to go hard, dip thy words and spirit into the oil of God’s love; and then, under the working of the Holy Spirit, thou canst pray with all earnestness, and preach with all power. And God giveth the increase.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 15)
Allow not your hearts to grow cold and unimpressible. Your religious life may be praiseworthy, as is represented by the church at Ephesus, but deficient in love to God and to your neighbors. Suffer not a Pharisaical harshness to come in and hurt your brother. “Unto the angel of the church at Ephesus write: These things saith He that holdeth the seven stars in his right hand, who walketh in the midst of the seven golden candlesticks: I know thy works, and thy labor, and thy patience, and how thou canst not bear them which are evil: and thou hast tried them which say they are apostles, and are not, and hast found them liars: and hast borne, and hast patience, and for my name’s sake hast labored, and hast not fainted. Nevertheless I have somewhat against thee, because thou hast left thy first love. Remember therefore from whence thou art fallen, and repent, and do the first works; or else I will come unto thee quickly, and will remove thy candlestick out of his place, except thou repent.” [Revelation 2:1-5.]
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 16)
“And unto the angel of the church in Sardis write: These things saith he that hath the seven Spirits of God, and the seven stars: I know thy works, that thou hast a name that thou livest, and art dead. Be watchful, and strengthen the things which remain, that are ready to die: for I have not found thy works perfect before God. Remember therefore how thou hast received and heard, and hold fast, and repent. If therefore thou shalt not watch, I will come on thee as a thief, and thou shalt not know what hour I will come upon thee. Thou hast a few names even in Sardis which have not defiled their garments; and they shall walk with me in white: for they are worthy.” [Revelation 3:1-4.]
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 17)
Cry unto God the Lord, Pardon our infirmities, and their infirmities; but give not up one hour of service. Keep all at work in their own line, and handicap none of God’s servants because they did not come to you for counsel, and do according to your bidding. You have bidden and directed too much. God’s ministers should look to Him for their directions. Your plans were not God’s plans. Had your brother come to you for instruction, you would have discouraged or misdirected him. No man whom God has chosen to do His work is to be under the control of any other man’s mind. Men may converse as equal men, but when it comes to laying down rules and commands, leave that for the Lord to do. This is not the line in which you are called to work.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 18)
The Lord has been working to bring certain things around for His own name’s glory. Had your brother done just as you think he should have done, he would have become discouraged by the way you would have handled his case. God would have you work with your fellow men with this idea in view—that they are human like yourself, subject to temptations; and you are to meet them on equal ground. Treat them respectfully, as men who are chosen of God. They may not always have been wise or perfect in their judgment; but humanity must meet humanity just where it is, remembering that all are of value with God. Your brethren are as precious in God’s sight as your individual selves.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 19)
Under stress of circumstances, because you did not exercise faith and reveal trust in God, you have made grave blunders. If men err in the same lines in which you have erred, if they move hastily by looking at appearances, do not do with them as you have done in the case of the one who has been laboring for the Master. You cannot bind him to your heart or influence him for good by the course of action you have pursued. Come into union and agreement without delay. Act your part nobly, for you have erred. You have dealt with him as no minister should deal with a fellow laborer. The Lord will not sanction any such example for your fellow workers to follow.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 20)
A man who could have been at work in New Zealand has not been permitted to work. His fellow laborers in New Zealand have echoed your sentiments, which they thought they must carry out. They have made themselves, in connection with you, answerable to God for all that man could have done. The Lord could have used him to speak and to pray, to help souls that are in suffering need of help.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 21)
Men have become feeble by looking to men and trusting in men. They go when men say, “Go.” They ought to look to God, and trust in Him for wisdom. “I am the truth.” [John 14:6.] God’s thoughts are expressed and made prominent through the inspired writers. Christ’s Comforter is upon earth, not discerned in human form, although He oft comes as a man to protect and to counsel. “But the Comforter, which is the Holy Ghost, whom the Father will send in my name, He shall teach you all things, and bring all things to your remembrance, whatsoever I have said unto you.” [Verse 26.]
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 22)
“These things have I spoken unto you, that my joy might remain in you, and that your joy might be full. This is my commandment, That ye love one another, as I have loved you. Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends. Ye are My friends, if ye do whatsoever I command you. Henceforth I call you not servants; for the servant knoweth not what his lord doeth: but I have called you friends; for all things that I have heard of my Father I have made known unto you. Ye have not chosen me, but I have chosen you, and ordained you, that ye should go and bring forth fruit, and that your fruit should remain: that whatsoever ye shall ask of the Father in My name, He may give it you.” [John 15:11-16.]
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 23)
Every soul that is sanctified by the Holy Spirit will look to God himself. The human agent will not look to other human agents to be told his duty. The divine Guide will prepare his heart for divine light. The Holy Spirit’s work is to write God’s thoughts deeply in the heart of man. “After those days, saith the Lord, I will put my law in their inward parts, and write it in their hearts.” [Jeremiah 31:33.] Such alone are Christ’s living epistles, written, not with pen and ink, but by the Spirit of the living God, not in tables of stone, but in the fleshy tables of the heart.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 24)
If men could see the tender love of Christ, there would be no lifting up one over another. The Lord Jesus came to our world, you may not say, to save them only, but to save us. In Him are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge. He came to seek and to save that which was lost. He traversed every path where souls were straying. He reached to the very depths of human woe and misery. What right, then, has one fellow laborer to give the cold shoulder to another fellow laborer because he presumes to think that he has not in all things done as he should have done? O man, remember that thou art only a man! What account will those in New Zealand render for their Pharisaism, for standing apart from their brother, leaving him to the devil’s temptations? Satan works to rob man of his integrity toward God.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 25)
United with Christ, one may have all the power he needs. If he comes to Jesus Christ in His Word, he will realize that this is the victory that overcometh the world, even our faith. But if his union with Christ is made through finite men, he is as weak as finite man. It will never do to make man the guardian of our sacred responsibilities, for no virtue goes from man to man. When a man is educated and trained to do as another man tells him to do, he ceases to rely on Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 26)
We have no real moral power if severed from Christ. United to Him, we have all the wisdom and sufficiency and power we need. “If ye abide in me”—if you continue to exercise faith in Me—“and my words abide in you”—if you are obedient doers of the Word, eating the flesh and drinking the blood of the Son of God, the Word sinks deep into the soul, fastening itself upon the memory, directing the actions, inspiring the motives, controlling the judgment, filling the heart with love to God and your fellow men. “Ye shall ask what ye will, and it shall be done unto you.” [John 15:7.]
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 27)
I ask you, my brethren in Melbourne who have allowed your impressions and circumstances to quench your love for your brother, to consider the circumstances connected with his labor. He was shifted from place to place and was sent into the canvassing field, because there did not seem to be any place for him to labor in ministerial lines. If he felt urged by duty to go to New Zealand, the right way would have been for him to go to you, my brethren, tell his difficulties, and ask your counsel. But he was in debt, mortified, and strengthless. His heart-courage was gone.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 28)
When he went to New Zealand, because Brother Daniells expressed the opinion that his course had been wrong, he was left with nothing to do. But ought men’s opinions to be regarded as infallible? Must men follow the expressed opinions of a laborer against a fellow laborer who has shown devotion to the work? Did his brethren kneel down and seek the Lord in his behalf, making his case their own? There are souls to be saved everywhere; but he did not have courage to work, because he had fallen into debt. He needed a brother, with the Elder Brother’s heart of sympathy and humanity, to touch his heart of humanity.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 29)
Were you afraid, Brother Crothers, Brother Farnsworth, and Brother Steed, to take this brother by the hand, and say, “We all have our trials, Brother Hickox, and we will help you all we can by our sympathy and by our prayers? If you have made a mistake, it is what we all do. Brace up like a man, and go to work. Do not feel that you are outside the ring. Be true to principle, and we will help you. The Lord needs one hundred laborers where there is now one. It may be that the Lord has sent you here to engage with us in the work.”
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 30)
Never say, “It is time to make an example of this brother,” even though he may have erred. Wait till you can say, “It is time to make an example of me by the withdrawal of your confidence and favor, because I have not moved wisely.” But there are so many who, though willing to make out a recipe, that others may take the bitter medicine, would not be pleased to take it themselves. With many it makes every difference whether it is I or my brother. Well did the apostle say, Ye have many teachers, but few fathers. [1 Corinthians 4:15.] It is spiritual fathers that we need in our gospel work.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 31)
I have not received a line from Brother Hickox or from his wife. All that I have heard is from those whom I know are not moving in the counsel of God. I think that it would be best for us to humble our hearts before God, and obtain bowels of mercy, and the incense of sanctified love, and see if this will not change the recipe given to Brother Hickox. I do not speak of him as a perfect man, for he is the same as his brethren. He has the same liability to err, and the same need of a teachable spirit. But if you think that the course pursued toward him will enable you to obtain his confidence, and lead him to rely on his brethren, believing that if he makes a mistake, they will have wisdom to help him, you have made a wrong calculation.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 32)
We all need to sow a crop of patience, compassion, and love. We shall reap the harvest we are sowing. Our characters are now being formed for eternity. Here on earth we are being trained for heaven. We owe everything to grace, free grace, sovereign grace. Grace in the covenant ordained our adoption as sons of God. Grace in the Saviour effected our redemption, our regeneration, and our adoption to heirship with Jesus Christ. Let this grace be revealed to others.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 33)
From the light which has been given me in the past and at the present, I do not see the spirit, which Christ possessed in His life, revealed in your dealings with Brother Hickox. If I were where I could see him, I should urge him to respect all in positions of trust, not to make flesh his arm, but always in everything to make Christ his strength and efficiency. I would converse with him as one who, if he had sinned, had not sinned willfully. If he has sinned, there is a God to pity, who is forbearing and tender and long-suffering, ready to pardon and forgive.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 34)
I am so wearied and tired out with the heartless manner in which human, erring man treats his brother, who may be just as much beloved of God as he himself is! Little love is expressed in attitude and words when one is supposed to have moved not in accordance with the will of men. How do you know but that the Lord has brought this about in order to set Brother Hickox and his wife where they could be laborers together with God, where he could stand in earnest labor, presenting the truth to those in darkness? Who is responsible for all the good that might have been done by these two workers in opening the Scriptures to others, in union with their brethren? Who will render the account to God for laying hands upon one of His workers, causing him to be dropped out as he has been? There is no excuse for this manner of dealing, and in the name of the Lord I protest against it.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 35)
I wish that occasionally the curtain could be rolled back, that all could see the manner of the Lord’s working, and the wonderful activity in the courts above. The Lord often works in a manner which is not in accordance with the ideas of the men who are in responsible positions. The speculations and calculations of human minds are not always the wisdom of God. Some move altogether too slow, and their caution is as a defective spoke in the wheel, keeping it from rolling. Again, others may devise and plan how this one and that one shall work, when the Lord has other work for these men to do and other places where He wants them to fill in as His agents. His plans are not built on any foundation that is laid by man, but as the high and lofty One that inhabiteth eternity, He lays the foundation, and erects the structure, in lofty independence through those who will be worked by Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 36)
The Lord Jesus takes those that He finds will be molded and uses them for His own name’s glory, to meet His own spiritual conception. He uses material that others would pass by, and works all who will be worked. Through very simple means a door is opened in heaven, and the simplicity of the human agent is used by God to reveal God to man.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 37)
The Lord Jesus never attempts to prove His teachings or vindicate Himself. He speaks as One having authority, as the Source from which all wisdom flows. His Word is spoken out, and the Holy Spirit’s work is to find a place for that Word. He is the light of the world. His own ideas are light. He simply shines, and men are to be enlightened. His work upon human hearts is not to be interfered with by men. All men must keep their place, and let God work upon hearts and minds and enlighten the understanding. He does not want men [to] walk in darkness. He has given ability and talents to men, in order that they may use them and improve them.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 38)
Men are not left in absolute darkness. As the light of the world, Christ addresses the world. His light is not at all mingled with darkness. It is clearer, brighter, and far more penetrating than any other light. His light shineth in darkness, but the darkness comprehendeth it not. “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.” [John 1:12.] He is waiting and watching, taking the imperfect ideas of men, not extinguishing them, but correcting their errors, supplying their defective ideas of management with correct ideas, and putting His own truth in the place of their erroneous principles.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 39)
Christ is the light of the world. O how condescendingly He takes out of the mind the traditions, the false theories, and the maxims, authority, and commandments of men, which are working counter to the commands of God! But the enemy strives to hinder God’s working in human minds.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 40)
I am pained to see the little value placed upon men whom the Lord has used and whom He will use. God forbid that every man’s mind shall follow in the channel of another man’s mind. One man’s mind may be, by some, exalted as being in every degree superior, but every mind has its peculiar weakness and its peculiar strength. One man’s mind will supply another man’s deficiency. But if all work in the one harness and are given encouragement to look, not to men to know their duty, but to God, they will develop under the Holy Spirit’s guidance, and will work in unity with their brethren. One will supply another’s lack.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 41)
We need young, strong workers, such as Brother Hickox and his wife. The Lord will use both of them if they will walk humbly with God. The time they have spent doing little has not been so spent because the Lord refused to use them, but because of the Pharisaism manifested by the men who need the converting power of Christ, the light of the world, to shine into their confused human minds, teaching them that they are not gods, and that they must leave God to deal with His workmen. There is only one true method by which any man can work. He must learn of Him who is meek and lowly in heart. We must go more earnestly and humbly, with more contrition of soul, and ask of God wisdom, as He has appointed.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 42)
For the same reason that Brother Hickox is not received and supported by his brethren in his work, other ministers might be regarded as unfit for labor. I want to put this matter before you in the light in which it has been placed before me. The Lord has high claims upon Brother and Sister Hickox. They have much to learn, as have all who are connected with the great work of the Master, but I entreat the men who should be helpers of those who in an emergency need help, not to prove hindrances and stumbling blocks in their way.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 43)
It is a desirable thing to do God service; but it is not always an easy thing. The world is against us. At times the way seems to be hedged up, and Satan seems to get hold of the mind. And too often, when the brethren of the tempted one should be wise, they show the human side of their characters, instead of the godly side. It is lamentable. If these tempted ones had not, by a course of teaching, been educated to look to men, they would turn their face to God, and trust in Him. They need greater strength than human power, greater strength than their own.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 44)
When men have to swim against the current, there is a weight of waves driving them back. Let a hand then be held out, as was the Elder Brother’s hand to sinking Peter. Give hopeful advice that will establish confidence and awaken love. You cannot tell how such a work is registered in the heavenly books. Let the one who is supposed to have moved wrongly be given no occasion by his brother to become discouraged, but let him feel the strong clasp of a sympathizing hand. Let him hear the whisper, “Let us pray.” The Holy Spirit will give a rich experience to both.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 45)
It is prayer that unites hearts. It is prayer to the great Physician to heal the soul that will bring the blessing of God. Prayer unites us with one another and with God. Prayer brings Jesus to our side, and gives new strength and fresh grace to the fainting, perplexed soul to overcome the world, the flesh, and the devil. Prayer turns aside the attacks of Satan.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 46)
O, remember that we are His offspring, children of one family. “All ye are brethren.” [Matthew 23:8.] His tender mercies are over all His works. Ever bear in mind that money is of little value compared with souls. Many, if left to impulse, represent God as stern, watching to denounce and condemn; who would not receive a soul in error as long as he has a legal excuse for not helping him. It is not God who is thus represented; for He is full of goodness and mercy and truth. Christ came to remove all such feelings and thoughts of God. He wants every erring soul to “look and live.” [Numbers 21:8.] He would have them feel that God’s yearning, fatherly love is toward them. He has revealed that which is not apprehended.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 47)
If men would eat of Christ’s flesh and drink His blood, which means to be doers of His Word, they would manifest the attributes of Christ. He was a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief. He was wounded for our transgressions and bruised for our iniquities. The chastisement of our peace was upon Him, and with His stripes we are healed. Wherein is our self-denial, our self-sacrifice, our patience and mercy and long-suffering and love exercised to bring back the erring to repentance and fellowship with God? If this were done, what a reformation would be wrought in individual souls and in families, and in the church, under the transforming grace of the Holy Spirit! Why do we not act as Christians, as shown in the lessons Christ has given?
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 48)
God is the orderer of all things. Have you not had any idea that this movement made by Brother Hickox was under the ordering of God? Did not the Lord see that you might not deal with His servant wisely? Did He not see that he needed to do service in some other part of His vineyard, just where he is? He who is the orderer of all things, He who numbers the hairs of our head, worked through His Spirit to transfer him to a field where he could do greater good, just as the careful, tender, earthly father would do in the interests of his children, only our God is infinitely more watchful over the interests of His sons and daughters. He is too wise to err, and too good to do them harm. He has a wise love, a great and unbounded love. “Are ye not of more value than many sparrows? and yet your heavenly Father feedeth them.” [Matthew 10:31; 6:26.]
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 49)
The Lord will, by His own methods, break up this indifference of man toward his fellow men. He will educate and train and discipline His children, O how kindly and lovingly, for their greater consecration in His work, and fit them for a higher life. It is by His Word that He instructs, and by experience that He develops virtues and powers, making those in His service meet for the inheritance of the saints in light. If they will surrender to God, and not look to men, or depend on the finite in the place of the infinite, He will work out for them a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 50)
Darkness and mysteries compass the path of some who have not permitted the Lord to carry forward His work in their hearts, who have not brought their thoughts into captivity to Him. If these poor souls who now rise before my mind had only learned of Jesus, and had not taken counsel of their own unconverted, unsubdued souls, they would now be in the path of obedience, co-workers with Jesus Christ. But they took themselves into their own hands, and did not trust the Lord, and they are not enjoying His blessing, or the faith that works by love, and purifies the soul.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 51)
O that every one would realize the great love, the self-sacrifice, the benevolence, the kindness, of our heavenly Father in giving His Son to die for us, that we might, if we believe and do His commandments, have a sweet peace, the Father’s joy, the Father’s love, and unite with Him, heart, soul, mind, and strength, to maintain righteousness, and to draw in even lines with Christ. It is not the sacrifice of Christ only; it is the Father’s sacrifice also.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 52)
The Father, in union and loving sympathy with His Son, subjected Himself to suffer with His Son. He spared not His only begotten Son, but freely delivered Him up for us all. This gift of Christ is the crowning truth of God’s love and His Fatherhood through all time and through eternity. Here the love of God in His Fatherhood is shown. Let us drink in this love, that we may know by experience what a real, tender, joyful experience there is in a realization of the Fatherhood of God. “Let brotherly love continue.” [Hebrews 13:1.] By bearing one another’s burdens, we are fulfilling the law of Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 53)
“All the paths of the Lord are mercy and truth unto such as keep his testimonies.” [Psalm 25:10.] “The mercy of the Lord is from everlasting to everlasting upon them that fear him, and his righteousness unto children’s children, to such as keep his covenant and to those who remember his commandments to do them.” [Psalm 103:17, 18.]
(12LtMs, Lt 50a, 1897, 54)
Lt 51, 1897
Evans, Brother Stanmore, New South Wales, Australia November 21, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 15MR 6-9. + Brother Evans:
I have [had] but [a] few minutes conversation with W. C. White since his return to Australia. We met him in Stanmore at our camp meeting. This meeting was indeed a meeting of great interest and the interest is being followed up as well as can be done to bind off the work here in Sydney. There must be no lax movements done after an interest has been created in any place. There has been a house selected as a home in every way appropriate for the workers. Some are engaged in selling papers, small books, and pamphlets, and others who are experienced, Brother and Sister Haskell, Brother and Sister Starr and Brother Baker are engaged in meetings and holding Bible readings, and calling on the people as they are invited.
(12LtMs, Lt 51, 1897, 1)
About twenty have taken their stand upon the Sabbath question; others are deciding. I came down here last Friday. For the past three weeks I have been very sick. My sickness was caused by overwork at the camp meeting. On Sabbath I ventured to speak in the tent. A hot wave had just passed over New South Wales and the heat seemed as if it was coming from a burning furnace; yet the Lord gave me strength, and last night I rested in sleep.
(12LtMs, Lt 51, 1897, 2)
This morning, at my usual —at three o’clock—I am writing these lines. I thank the Lord that I am being strengthened. This morning the atmosphere is cooler. There is work enough for twelve earnest workers. I have just written to Cooranbong for Brother Wilson and his wife to come to Sydney and unite in the work here. We expect them today, also W. C. White, on his way to Melbourne.
(12LtMs, Lt 51, 1897, 3)
A telegram came from Melbourne last Thursday for Elder Haskell to attend the camp meeting there, but it is impossible for him to do so. The interest here requires all the force we have here, and even more helpers than we have here now. Not one can be spared. The class who are now becoming interested and taking their stand for the truth are those who will be able to assist in the financial part of the work, and also with their influence in helping to reach other souls. We feel very thankful to God for this encouragement. We are now hearing that precious souls are being moved by the Holy Spirit. We will continue to work and pray as well.
(12LtMs, Lt 51, 1897, 4)
The souls who have newly come to the faith, and others who have not fully decided, are stirred in regard to building a church; we will call it a tabernacle. We have a neat, nice place of worship at Cooranbong, every way appropriate. It was dedicated without one penny of debt upon it. This can be a pattern for Stanmore, if proper grounds can be obtained; if not, we shall have to select some suburb nearer Sydney. We think there will be considerable help from outside parties.
(12LtMs, Lt 51, 1897, 5)
We have no tabernacle in which to worship in the large city of Sydney, but if the people of Sydney will unite in this work, we can build a tabernacle to accommodate the church in Sydney, Stanmore, and other suburbs; and when they are a little stronger in numbers, a house of worship must go up in Sydney proper, but work must first be done in Sydney. Next year a camp meeting should be repeated here in Stanmore or nearer Sydney, if the Lord wills. We have no time now to hesitate; the work must advance. The class who are now taking hold of the work are of the higher class. These will help to reach the higher class. The Lord knows just how much we need to attain an influence over a class that can be a help in helping others to see the truth, and also to sustain and advance the work. We have no time to devote to hesitancy and unbelief. The work must go.
(12LtMs, Lt 51, 1897, 6)
In Newcastle and Maitland, places about twenty miles from Cooranbong, considerable work has been done in canvassing. Now there is an interest to hear the truth, and yet no labor has been given in tent effort. There are also small towns between Morisset and Sydney where there has been no labor. The work must go forward in these places. The standard must be raised. Fields are opening and calls are being made from every direction, Send us a minister. The people want a minister to present to them the truth. We need the inspiration of faith continually.
(12LtMs, Lt 51, 1897, 7)
We have had the most successful camp meeting that has been held in New South Wales. It exceeded anything we had hoped. The light of the third angel’s message has penetrated many dark places. We need every day a living connection with God. Our faith is not as strong as it should be. As a people we are not as devotional as we should be. We have great light, great opportunities, great privileges and we now need to walk with the light and have a faith proportionate to the great and living truths we are handling. We must not trust in our own powers or in the powers and smartness of our speakers. We must lean our whole weight upon One who can help us in every emergency. Our work is aggressive, there must be no halting. There must be less, far less, hovering about the churches, and far more lifting the standard in new fields. Our ministers must give the trumpet a certain sound, lifting up Jesus and saying, “Behold the Lamb of God who taketh away the sin of the world.” [John 1:29.]
(12LtMs, Lt 51, 1897, 8)
The light of truth must flash forth upon the pathway of many who have never heard the message of warning. We want light to go forth everywhere. I am pleading for physical strength, mental clearness, and spiritual power. The Lord is my helper. He can be efficiency. He will be our strength. We have no time to lose. The end of all things is at hand.
(12LtMs, Lt 51, 1897, 9)
I wish now to speak in regard to matters of communication sent to Battle Creek. Before I left America I attended, as you well know, the camp meeting at Lansing. I returned to Battle Creek, then a second time visited the camp meeting at Brother Olsen’s request. This gave me very limited time to prepare to leave America en route for Australia. I had a large package of matter written for the men who were carrying responsibilities in the Review office. This I took with me to Lansing, hoping to have an opportunity to read it to the one that should hear them, but there was no time or favorable opportunity given.
(12LtMs, Lt 51, 1897, 10)
I took them back to Battle Creek, hoping to have time there to read them, but it seemed impossible. Then I entrusted them to Elder Olsen and told him to make no delay, but to read these communications to the responsible men in the Review and Herald office. He promised me he would do so; therefore, I supposed he had done it, yet no response came to me.
(12LtMs, Lt 51, 1897, 11)
After some months I wrote again directly to A. R. Henry, speaking to him plainly, but I got no response to that letter. Then I wrote again, sending a copy of the second letter to A. R. Henry in the package of letters to Elder Olsen. Then I wrote to Elder Olsen, but while I was expecting to hear from him in regard to the communications I had entrusted to him, and which he was to read to those assembled in councils and board meetings, light came to me from the Lord that Elder Olsen had the trust given him, and had failed in doing his duty to read the things that I had given him to the ones who must have them. A letter came to me that he had not placed these matters before them but that he had been wanting a favorable opportunity.
(12LtMs, Lt 51, 1897, 12)
I then wrote to Brother Tait, always giving directions to use very carefully these matters. I knew that the brethren in the faith, the presidents in the conferences, should have the light that God had given me, and this is the history of the matter. I have carried a heavy burden. The receiving of no response to my letters from A. R. Henry led me to suppose that it made no difference upon him whatever. I might write, but if he would take no heed I must let others know the dangers that were threatening the cause of God at the head of the work in America. The only thing that I now regret is that I did not, as I have done in the past, get out a testimony especially for our own people, that they might not be left in darkness in regard to the movements in Battle Creek—the perverting of principles which would disconnect God from those who were handling sacred things. This burden was upon me day and night.
(12LtMs, Lt 51, 1897, 13)
I have done that which I believed was my duty to do under the circumstances, only I regret that in the place of entrusting the light given me with a few men in Battle Creek, I did not issue testimonies which would have come before the leading men throughout our conferences. I supposed that the men at the heart of the work, when receiving the warnings and cautions given, would in a careful manner use these more private matters to enlighten our people and guard them. I did not suppose that those who claimed to believe the testimonies would lay them away, and make no use of them to prevent a condition of things that was imperilling the cause of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 51, 1897, 14)
I had presented before me the dangers of Elder Olsen and wrote to him personally in regard to them, and I thought he would take heed to the light given. He was the president of the General Conference, and, as A. R. Henry made no response to several letters sent to him, I saw no other way to do than to address the letters to the president of the General Conference. But as he went directly to the cautions and warnings given him, I was left to try some other way to get the light before the people and place the communications in other hands in order to prevent what has come, for the Lord has withdrawn His favor from those who followed their own wisdom and relied upon the wisdom of men who were not worked by the Holy Spirit of God, but by a power that was from the inspiration of the devil, that the means coming from the people should be so handled that the Lord could not give success to the cause entrusted to their hands.
(12LtMs, Lt 51, 1897, 15)
I have communications which I have had no courage to send. There were so few consecrated to God to do His will that whatever I should send would be perverted, misinterpreted, misstated, [and] misunderstood. There were those who would use these communications to counteract the influence of anything that I should say to them that did not coincide with the methods, plans, and principles which the Lord set before them, and which, if they heeded, they would cut away from the things which they were seeking to inaugurate; but I had sent line upon line, warning upon warning, that seemed not to be heeded in the least.
(12LtMs, Lt 51, 1897, 16)
Letters came from some of the brethren, stating that the leading men were expressing that they did not believe the testimonies. Who these leading men were was not stated, the names were not given, but I knew who they were and that this was no false report.
(12LtMs, Lt 51, 1897, 17)
The question may arise, Why did you not get out a testimony as you have done in the past? For the very reason that it would be an exposure of corruptions at the very heart of the work that I was not willing should appear, to be used by our enemies.
(12LtMs, Lt 51, 1897, 18)
Now when I see that the very men are inspired by Satan to express themselves, and make the most of this state of things, and expose this course of action to our enemies, it is a revelation of how much such ones have respected the sacred work of God. They would cast [the] truth and righteousness of God’s commandment-keeping people to those who have no sense of truth, of its importance or its sacredness. The Lord would have had all such men separated from His work long years ago, for their connection with the work was to act a Judas and betray the work when the inspiration of Satan came upon them.
(12LtMs, Lt 51, 1897, 19)
The warnings God sent were unheeded. Had they been heeded, these men who now are to all appearances where nothing can have the least influence upon them might have been saved, but the reckless, stubborn rebellion has placed them where some will never be reached, they will never know at what they stumble. But everything should be done for them that possibly can be done peradventure that God may give them repentance. If they are determined to sell their Lord, to destroy His cause and work, those who have with them acted their part in securing this blindness better walk very softly before God. The Lord will punish them, then the one that He permitted to pursue this course to humiliate them He will also punish to their own discomfiture. All this might have been saved had the men claiming to be Christians taken heed to the Word of the Lord, and set their face to seek the Lord confessing their sins.
(12LtMs, Lt 51, 1897, 20)
Lt 51a, 1897
Judge, Mr.; Jones, Mr.; Redwood, Mr.; Simpson, Mr. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia July 8, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 10MR 307. See BEcho 04/25/1898, 05/02/1898. Dear Friends:
I have a few things to say to you, Mr. Judge, Mr. Jones, Mr. Redwood, and Mr. Simpson who, we are sorry to see, is also being overcome by Satan’s temptations. The Lord has given me a message for you. Your deportment in your rooms is not that which is to be expected of Christian gentlemen. You are young men, and even if you have made no profession of religion, it becomes you, situated as you are, to be at least gentlemen in all that the name signifies. But the Lord has shown me that in your behavior you are not gentlemen. You are not honoring your God-given manhood.
(12LtMs, Lt 51a, 1897, 1)
You are not your own, for you have been bought with a price; and what a price! Even the life of the only begotten Son of God. “Therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit, which are Christ’s.” [1 Corinthians 6:20.] The rebuke of God is upon you. Day by day you are privileged to hear the most solemn, sacred truths of God’s Word. These are presented to you in clear lines, and if you will receive and practice the truth, acting upon the principles laid down in God’s Word, you will receive great blessing.
(12LtMs, Lt 51a, 1897, 2)
Your reputation is at stake. Day by day the record of your words, your actions, and your influence is being made in the books of heaven. This you will one day meet. “I saw the dead, small and great, stand before God; and the books were opened, and another book was opened, which is the book of life: and the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books, according to their works.... And whosoever was not found written in the book of life was cast into the lake of fire.” [Revelation 20:12, 15.] In that great day will you be pleased to meet the record that you have made while at this school?
(12LtMs, Lt 51a, 1897, 3)
There is a Witness constantly in your bedchamber, who hears every word you utter. Every gesture, every action, is noted by this Witness. “O Lord, thou hast searched me, and known me. Thou knowest my downsitting and mine uprising, thou understandest my thought afar off. Thou compassest my path and my lying down, and art acquainted with all my ways. For there is not a word in my tongue, but, lo, O Lord, thou knowest it altogether. Thou hast beset me behind and before, and laid thine hand upon me. Such knowledge is too wonderful for me; it is high; I cannot attain unto it.
(12LtMs, Lt 51a, 1897, 4)
“Whither shall I go from thy spirit? or whither shall I flee from thy presence? If I ascend up into heaven, thou art there: If I make my bed in hell, behold, thou art there. If I take the wings of the morning, and dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea; even there shall thy hand lead me, and thy right hand shall hold me. If I say, Surely the darkness shall cover me; even the night shall be light about me. Yea, the darkness hideth not from thee; but the night shineth as the day—the darkness and the light are both alike to thee.” [Psalm 139:1-12.]
(12LtMs, Lt 51a, 1897, 5)
“I saw in the visions of my head upon my bed,” writes Daniel, “and behold a watcher and an holy one came down from heaven; he cried aloud, and said thus, Hew down the tree, and cut off his branches, shake off his leaves, and scatter his fruit: Let the beasts get away from under it, and the fowls from his branches: Nevertheless leave the stump of the roots in the earth, even with a band of iron and brass; and let it be wet with the dew of heaven, and let his portion be with the beasts in the grass of the earth: let his heart be changed from man’s, and let a beast’s heart be given unto him; and let seven times pass over him. This matter is by the decree of the watchers, and the demand by the word of the holy ones; to the intent that the living may know that the most High ruleth in the kingdom of men, and giveth it to whomsoever he will.” [Daniel 4:13-17.]
(12LtMs, Lt 51a, 1897, 6)
Here we are shown that God holds even heathen kings subject to His will. He takes idolaters, and deals with them according to their evil ways and evil doings.
(12LtMs, Lt 51a, 1897, 7)
The same Watcher who came to Daniel was an uninvited guest at Belshazzar’s sacrilegious feast. This monarch had everything to flatter his pride and indulge his passions. He was a great king, presiding over the greatest kingdom then on earth. He held the life and property of his subjects in his hand. His provinces were cultivated by captives, and his capital was enriched by the spoil of nations. To those who ministered to his pride and vanity, Belshazzar was indulgent; they were his chosen favorites; but if at any moment they crossed his will, he was at once a cruel tyrant. His anger blazed forth in a most unseemly manner.
(12LtMs, Lt 51a, 1897, 8)
Admitted to a share in kingly authority and power at fifteen years of age, Belshazzar gloried in his power, and lifted up his heart against the God of heaven. He despised the One who is above all rulers, the General of all the armies of heaven. “Belshazzar the king made a great feast to a thousand of his lords, and drank wine before the thousand.” [Daniel 5:1.] The profane orgies of royal mirth were attended by men of genius and education, by masters of architecture.
(12LtMs, Lt 51a, 1897, 9)
On this occasion there was music and banqueting and wine drinking. Decorated women with their enchantments were among the revellers. Exalted by wine, and blinded by delusion, the king himself took the lead in the riotous blasphemy. His reason was gone, and his lower impulses and passions were in the ascendancy. His kingdom was strong and apparently invincible, and he would show that he thought nothing too sacred for his hands to handle and profane. To show his contempt for sacred things, he desecrated the holy vessels taken from the temple of the Lord at its destruction.
(12LtMs, Lt 51a, 1897, 10)
Holy angels looked down on the scene of desecration. A Watcher was present who was unrecognized, but who was making his presence a power of condemnation. Now the unseen and uninvited guest made his presence felt. At the moment when the sacrilegious revelry was at its height, a bloodless hand came forth, and wrote words of doom on the wall of the banqueting hall. Burning words followed the movements of the hand. “Mene, mene, tekel, upharsin,” was traced in letters of flame. [Verse 25.] Few were the characters traced by the silent hand on the wall facing the king, but they demonstrated that the power of God was there.
(12LtMs, Lt 51a, 1897, 11)
The king was afraid. His conscience was awakened. Fear and suspicion seized him. This always follows the course of the guilty. When God makes men fear, they cannot hide the intensity of their terror. Alarm and terror seized the great men of the kingdom. Their blasphemous disrespect of sacred things was changed in a moment. A frantic terror overcame all self-control.
(12LtMs, Lt 51a, 1897, 12)
Belshazzar had been given many opportunities for knowing and doing the will of God. He had seen his grandfather Nebuchadnezzar banished from the society of men. He had seen the reason and intellect, in which the proud king gloried, taken away by the One who gave it. He had seen the king driven from the kingdom, and made the companion of the beasts of the field. But Belshazzar’s love of amusement and self-glorification had effaced the lessons he should never have forgotten. He committed sins similar to those that had brought such signal judgments on Nebuchadnezzar. He wasted the opportunities graciously granted him, neglecting to use the means within his reach for becoming acquainted with truth. “What must I do to be saved?” was a question that the great but foolish king passed by indifferently. [Acts 16:30.]
(12LtMs, Lt 51a, 1897, 13)
This is the danger of heedless, reckless youth today. The footstep of God will awaken the sinner, as it did Belshazzar, but with many it will be too late for them to repent. The words of warning, sent by the Lord to Nebuchadnezzar, are just as verily sent to the young men connected with this school. God would turn you from darkness to light, from the power of Satan to God; but you have not, opened your minds that you might understand the truth. Enough has been presented before you to convict and convert your souls if you had taken heed to the voice of God. The truth of God’s Word will never be presented to you more clearly and plainly than it is now. Will you not take heed to it?
(12LtMs, Lt 51a, 1897, 14)
The ruler of Babylon had riches and honor, and in his haughty self-indulgence, he had lifted himself up against the God of heaven and earth. He had trusted in his own arm, not supposing that any would dare to say, “Why doest thou this”? But as the mysterious hand traced the letters on the wall, Belshazzar was awed and silenced. In a moment he was completely shorn of his strength, and humbled as a child. He realized that he was at the mercy of one greater than Belshazzar. He had been making sport of sacred things. Now his conscience was awakened. He realized that he had had the privilege of knowing and doing the will of God. The history of his grandfather stood out as vividly before him as the writing on the wall. He gazed at the burning letters, which no mortal power could evade. But he had found a power too strong for him. He could not read the writing.
(12LtMs, Lt 51a, 1897, 15)
“The king cried aloud to bring in the astrologers, the Chaldeans, and the soothsayers. And the king spake and said to the wise men of Babylon, Whosoever shall read this writing, and show me the interpretation thereof, shall be clothed with scarlet, and have a chain of gold about his neck, and shall be the third ruler in the kingdom. Then came in all the king’s wise men; but they could not read the writing, nor make known to the king the interpretation thereof.” In vain the king offered honor and promotion. Heavenly wisdom cannot be bought or sold. “Then was king Belshazzar greatly troubled, and his countenance was changed in him, and his lords were astonied.” [Daniel 5:7-9.]
(12LtMs, Lt 51a, 1897, 16)
There was in the palace a woman who was wiser than them all,—the queen of Belshazzar’s grandfather. In this emergency she addressed the king in language that sent a ray of light into the awful darkness. “O king, live forever,” she said; “let not thy thoughts trouble thee, nor let thy countenance be changed. There is a man in the kingdom in whom is the spirit of the holy gods; and in the days of thy father, light and understanding and wisdom, like the wisdom of the gods, was found in him; whom the king Nebuchadnezzar, thy father, the king, I say, thy father, made master of the magicians, astrologers, Chaldeans, and soothsayers; ... now let Daniel be called, and he will show the interpretation.” [Verses 10-12.]
(12LtMs, Lt 51a, 1897, 17)
“Then was Daniel brought in before the king.” Making an effort to brace himself up to show kingly authority and greatness, Belshazzar said, “Art thou that Daniel, which art of the children of the captivity of Judah, whom the king my father brought out of Jewry? I have even heard of thee, that the spirit of the gods is in thee, and that light and understanding and excellent wisdom is found in thee.... Now if thou canst read the writing, and make known to me the interpretation thereof, thou shalt be clothed with scarlet, and have a chain of gold about thy neck, and shalt be third ruler in the kingdom.” [Verses 13, 14, 16.]
(12LtMs, Lt 51a, 1897, 18)
Daniel was not awed by the king’s appearance, or confused and intimidated by his words. He answered, “Let thy gifts be to thyself, and give thy rewards to another; yet I will read the writing unto the king, and make known to him the interpretation. O thou king, the most high God gave Nebuchadnezzar thy father a kingdom, and majesty, and glory, and honor.... But when his heart was lifted up, and his mind hardened in pride, he was deposed from his kingly throne, and they took his glory from him.... And thou his son, O Belshazzar, hast not humbled thine heart, though thou knewest all this, but hast lifted up thyself against the Lord of heaven; and they have brought the vessels of his house before thee, and thou, and thy lords, thy wives, and thy concubines, have drunk in them, and thou hast praised the gods of silver and gold, of brass, iron, wood, and stone, which see not, nor hear, nor know; and the God in whose hand thy breath is, and whose are all thy ways, hast thou not glorified.” [Verses 17, 18, 20, 22, 23.]
(12LtMs, Lt 51a, 1897, 19)
“This is the writing that was written, MENE, MENE, TEKEL, UPHARSIN. This is the interpretation of the thing: MENE: God hath numbered thy kingdom, and finished it. TEKEL: Thou art weighed in the balances, and art found wanting. PERES: Thy kingdom is divided and given to the Medes and Persians.” [Verses 25-28.] Daniel did not swerve from his testimony. He held the king’s sin before him, showing him the lessons he might have learned, but did not. He had not heeded the events so significant to him. He had not read the history of his grandfather correctly. The responsibility of knowing truth had been laid upon him, but the practical lessons he might have learned and acted upon, had not been taken to heart; and his course of action brought its sure consequences.
(12LtMs, Lt 51a, 1897, 20)
This was the last feast of boasting held by the Chaldean king. He who bears long with the perversity of man passed the irrevocable sentence. Belshazzar had greatly dishonored Him who had exalted him as king, and his probation was taken from him. While the king and his nobles were at the height of their revelry, the Persians turned the Euphrates out of its channel, and marched into the unguarded city. And as the king and his lords were drinking from the sacred vessels of Jehovah, and praising their gods of silver and gold, Cyrus and his soldiers stood under the walls of the palace. “In that night,” the record says, “was Belshazzar the king of the Chaldeans slain. And Darius the Median took the kingdom.” [Verse 30.]
(12LtMs, Lt 51a, 1897, 21)
Could the curtain be rolled back before the youth who have never given their hearts to God, with others who are Christians in name, but who are unrenewed in heart and unsanctified in temper, they would see that God’s eye is ever upon them, and they would feel as disturbed as did the king of Babylon. They would realize that in every place and in every hour of the day, there is a holy Watcher, whose eye takes in the whole situation, whether it is one of fidelity or of disloyalty and deception. He balances every account.
(12LtMs, Lt 51a, 1897, 22)
We are never alone. We have a companion, whether we choose Him or not. Remember, young men and young women, that wherever you are, whatever you are doing, God is there. Nothing that is said or done or thought can escape His infinite eye. In the deepest darkness and solitude, He is there. To your every word and action you have a witness—the holy, sin-hating God. He reads the inward anger of the soul when the will is crossed. He hears the expression of profanity. Your words may not be heard by human ears, but they are heard by the Ruler of the universe. No one can deceive God; no one can escape from their accountability to Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 51a, 1897, 23)
I send you the note of warning to take heed. “We ought to give the more earnest heed to the things which we have heard, lest at any time we should let them slip. For if the word spoken by angels was steadfast, and every transgression and disobedience received a just recompense of reward; how shall we escape, if we neglect so great salvation; which at the first began to be spoken by the Lord, and was confirmed unto us by them that heard him?” [Hebrews 2:1-3.] God has appointed each one of us to do His work. He has given you faculties, means, light, and knowledge; and He holds you accountable for the way in which you use these powers. You are appointed to be “laborers together with God.” [1 Corinthians 3:9.] This responsibility you may ignore, but your action in so doing will bring its sure result.
(12LtMs, Lt 51a, 1897, 24)
If you will wear the yoke of Christ, and lift His burden, everything in your perverse characters will change. The attributes of the enemy that you have accepted, the impure thoughts, the selfish purposes, will be cleansed from your heart and your character, and the righteousness of Christ will supply the vacancy. In carrying the burdens and difficulties, you will realize that you have a helper in Christ and in wearing His yoke you will find rest and peace.
(12LtMs, Lt 51a, 1897, 25)
Lt 52, 1897
Farnsworth, Brother and Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia January 18, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in CS 259-260; HP 300. Dear Brother and Sister Farnsworth:
We received your letter, and have read it to several. We were much interested in its contents. I can understand the route you have been over, for I have been over the same ground. I am sorry that Brother Harris has given up the Sabbath, and sorry that Brother Finch has lost his interest in the truth. Poor souls, I pity them. I fear that many more will do the same unless they make decided efforts to have root in themselves.
(12LtMs, Lt 52, 1897, 1)
Brother Blackman wrote me, inviting me to do something for their church. Gladly would I do this, if the great necessity was not now drawing upon me in many ways. Here is the school, demanding every dollar that I can possibly spare. Then I have loaned £35 to the Health Home, that the house they have rented may be furnished. Brother Parcells has had to borrow £10 to make a payment on his place. Most of this W. C. White and I loaned him. I cannot see how I can send money to New Zealand now.
(12LtMs, Lt 52, 1897, 2)
The next school building is about to be put up in Avondale. The plasterers have come to plaster the building which is nearly finished. We are thankful to see one building up, and ready for the finishing work. They are finishing the other building as fast as possible. The foundation is being prepared.
(12LtMs, Lt 52, 1897, 3)
I rejoice with you in the prospect of clearing the church buildings from debt. How much might have been saved if extra efforts had been made every year to do this. There is no necessity for our meetinghouses to continue year after year in debt. If every member of the church will do his duty, practicing self-denial and self-sacrifice for the Lord Jesus, whose purchased possession he is, that His church may be free from debt, he will do honor to God.
(12LtMs, Lt 52, 1897, 4)
The Lord’s great centers, His own instrumentalities, should be free from all debt. Every year many pounds are being swallowed up by the interest paid on debts. If this money was all appropriated to settle the principal, the debt would not be eating, eating, and ever eating. It is a poor, wretched policy to go into debt. If the money that is needed to build could be first accumulated, by strenuous efforts, and the church dedicated free from debt, how much better it would be. O, shall we not make it a rule when building a house for the Lord, to put forth earnest, persevering efforts, that it may be dedicated to Him free from debt?
(12LtMs, Lt 52, 1897, 5)
The most difficult sermon to preach and the hardest to practice is self-denial. The greedy sinner, self, closes the door to the good which might be done, but which is not done because shillings and pounds are invested in selfish purposes. We may never have opportunity to do great things; we may never be required to make sublime sacrifices. But the greatest victory we can gain is to follow Jesus. What saith the great Teacher? “If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross daily, and follow me.” [Luke 9:23.] Every day that Christ lived in our world was for Him a day of self-denial. If we would follow Him over the rugged path of self-denial, we must commence with the earliest years of our life to deny self, and this denial must be carried into the every day occurrences and actions of our life.
(12LtMs, Lt 52, 1897, 6)
Why cannot we learn the methods and results of Christ’s life-practice? It is the opposite of the world’s practice. The world’s policy is to acquire money and advantages in any way that they can be obtained. An accumulation of this world’s treasure is the ambition of worldlings. The aim and object of the followers of our Lord Jesus Christ is to become Christlike by self-denial and self-sacrifice. They keep their eyes on the eternal riches which they can obtain by renouncing earthly treasure for heavenly treasure. Here are the conditions: “He that will be my disciple, let him forsake all, and follow me,” keeping Christ in view, following where He leads the way. When we steadfastly obey the Word of God, we shall be doers of the Word, eating the flesh and drinking the blood of the Son of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 52, 1897, 7)
“It is more blessed to give than to receive.” [Acts 20:35.] Through self-denying effort many pounds, shillings, and pence will flow into the Lord’s treasury, that there may be meat in His house. Self-denial will bring into the treasury of God the means necessary to advance His work. Thus we may act in copartnership with Christ. Christ’s followers consider that in giving back to the Lord His own they are receiving a blessing, for they are accumulating heavenly treasure, which will be given to them when they shall hear the “Well done, good and faithful servant; ... enter thou into the joy of thy Lord.” [Matthew 25:23.] What is that joy? “Who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross, despising the shame, and is set down at the right hand of the throne of God.” [Hebrews 12:2.] The joy of seeing souls redeemed, souls eternally saved, is the privilege of those who have overcome obstacles in order to put their feet in the footprints of Him who said, “Follow me.” [Luke 9:23.]
(12LtMs, Lt 52, 1897, 8)
The Lord has shown me that debts need not be left on our meetinghouses in Australia or New Zealand. A debt in every case means a neglect of God’s special, sacred things, for selfish, common things are made first and all-absorbing. Things which should have been made second in Napier have been made first. That which had to do with the worship of God has been made inferior. The common received much more time and consideration than the sacred and eternal. This dishonors God. The heavenly universe beholds the dishonor practiced before God. The very highest honor is to be shown to God’s tabernacle. Every other consideration should be second to this. Our ideas must be elevated, ennobled, and sanctified.
(12LtMs, Lt 52, 1897, 9)
Worldliness and covetousness have been indulged by parents for their children and for relatives and friends. Money has been appropriated when and where it could not honor God, where it has done positive harm. Gifts have been liberally bestowed on children and relatives and friends, while the gifts that have been made to that which the Lord honors, have been stinted and limited in value and in recurrence. Are we in Australia and New Zealand ready to watch, and to bend our energies individually to wipe off the debts which stand to dishonor God?
(12LtMs, Lt 52, 1897, 10)
The test question for every Christian to ask himself is, Have I, in my innermost soul, a love for Jesus? Do I love His tabernacle? Will not the Lord be honored by my making every sacred institution my first consideration, thus showing my interest in the Lord’s great centers? Have I not fostered worldliness and vanity in my gifts and offerings, while the Lord’s tabernacle has been regarded as an inferior thing? Have I, in my inmost heart, a love for sacred things? Will I do to the utmost of my God-given ability to wipe out this debt, that the money which it now swallows up may be devoted to the many and various necessities of the work which need to be done? Is my love for God and my Redeemer strong enough to lead me to deny self? When temptations come to indulge in pleasure and selfish enjoyment, shall I not say, No, I will not spend one shilling or even sixpence for my own gratification while the house of God is under mortgage, or bearing the pressure of debt?
(12LtMs, Lt 52, 1897, 11)
Should not Christ have our first and highest consideration? Should He not demand this token of our respect and loyalty? These very things underlie our heart-life, in the home circle, and in the church life. If the heart, the soul, the strength, the life, is surrendered wholly to God, if the affection is given wholly to Him, you will make God supreme in all your service. The result will be that you will have a sense of what it means to be a partner with Jesus Christ in the sacred firm. The building erected for the worship of God will not be left crippled with debt. It will appear almost like a denial of your faith to allow such a thing. If we love Jesus, we will love to live for Him, to present our thank offerings to Him, to labor for Him. The very labor will be light. And if Christ abides in the heart, He sanctifies all temporal labor.
(12LtMs, Lt 52, 1897, 12)
Our Redeemer claims far more than we give Him. Self interposes its desire to be first; but the Lord claims the whole heart, the entire heart. He will not come in as second. The house where God meets is dear and sacred to every loyal child of God. Your Father’s house is to be your first consideration. Make any personal sacrifice if only you may have a house free from debt, where God can meet to bless His people. Never withhold means from the Lord’s center; but never do anything with reference to this sacred place unless you can do it cheerfully. At the beginning of every year an offering should be brought to the Lord, to be dedicated to church debts.
(12LtMs, Lt 52, 1897, 13)
Man would like to reach a character more perfect, a faith more firm, and an experience more clear and decided, because the Word of God requires this. As you read the Word of God, you see that it sets before all who are believers in the Lord Jesus Christ a high and holy standard. All who are elect and chosen of God believe in Christ, and act their belief. There is seen in them a completeness and consistency of character which is in marked contrast to the worldling. Their earnest endeavor for righteousness is manifest by their prayerful petitions for the grace of Christ, oft when no one but God can see and understand the yearning of the soul. To all such the Holy Spirit comes as a comforter, a teacher.
(12LtMs, Lt 52, 1897, 14)
The Lord is well pleased when we make our very highest demands upon Him, that we may glorify Him by being fruitful. We may press onward. The members of the church of Christ may be strong. When they are one with Christ, and a mutual, helpful support to each other, then it is that the heavenly Watcher here on earth bears the tidings to heaven, and it is written in the books, “Ye are laborers together with God; ye are God’s husbandry; ye are God’s building.” [1 Corinthians 3:9.] “Ye are my witnesses,” saith the Lord. [Isaiah 43:10.]
(12LtMs, Lt 52, 1897, 15)
When we are in harmony with God, the thought of His honor and glory comes before everything else. No person is to be preferred before God in our gifts and offerings. Let the church place themselves in that position where they will make God’s house their first consideration, where they will honor the Lord by preparing Him a place free from debt, where He can meet and bless His people. If every month you endeavor to bring your offering to the Lord with a true, sincere heart, you will receive the blessing of the Lord. The Lord sees; He reads your desires, and your earnest love for Him, and He will open ways where by you may obtain something for so wise and good an object! Let each individual member of the church feel that he has something invested in the church. He will then feel like saying, “O Lord of Hosts, blessed is the man whose strength is in thee.” [Psalm 84:3, 5.]
(12LtMs, Lt 52, 1897, 16)
Lt 53, 1897
Farnsworth, Brother and Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia March 19, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother and Sister Farnsworth:
I have had very much writing to do, and have not written to you as I would have been glad to do. I have commenced writing as early as eleven and twelve o’clock, and one and two o’clock in the morning, and I sleep none through the day. There is constant work in this line to be done.
(12LtMs, Lt 53, 1897, 1)
I will send you some matters written in regard to the case of Brother Hickox. I have not written them one line, or they me; but I have been given light in regard to his present situation. Brother Farnsworth, I am compelled to say that if this is the right way for our ministers to treat their brethren ministers, then I am not acquainted with right and Scriptural methods. I know that this is not according to the Scriptures. Those who know the truth as it is in Jesus, and who bring that truth into their practical life, would not do as you have done. The love of truth brought into the inner sanctuary of the soul, the bright rays of the Sun of Righteousness shining into the heart, melt the frozen heart.
(12LtMs, Lt 53, 1897, 2)
There is a divine side of truth in the aspect which the human agent assumes toward his brethren. There is an objective and external side to us, and there is a subjective side, which is possessing that faith that works by love, and purifies the soul. Our inward thoughts and feelings testify to the tenor and character of our faith. The soul’s appropriation of faith is the Lord’s provision, made for our individual souls. Faith in Jesus Christ is saving grace, whereby we receive and rest alone in Christ for salvation, believing in Him, and looking unto and depending on Jesus Christ day by day, hour by hour, grasping His saving grace.
(12LtMs, Lt 53, 1897, 3)
When the soul rests solely in the Lord Jesus Christ for its individual salvation, it entirely surrenders to Him, in full reliance upon “It is written.” The whole man is the purchase of the only begotten Son of God. The heart, the mind, the affections, the strength, the will, all connect, depending on Jesus Christ as One able to save to the uttermost all who come unto Him. This act joins the soul to God. Saving faith centers in Christ alone, in His blood and sacrifice, and in the promises of God. All who believe in Christ as their personal Saviour, believe in him as their Sin-bearer, Teacher, Counsellor, Sanctification, and Righteousness, and their eternal reward. He is their supreme Ruler. You must trust in Him, and Him alone and place yourself, individually, in His keeping.
(12LtMs, Lt 53, 1897, 4)
Now, this is the right of every being that has breath and life. This is just as much the privilege of Brother Hickox as it is the privilege of Brother Farnsworth or Brother Crothers or Brother Daniells. “All ye are brethren.” [Matthew 23:8.] Brother Hickox is under service to Jesus Christ, not to man, or any counsel of men. This man-rule has done a great amount of mischief in separating the soul from God, and in educating a trust and dependence upon human agents that the Lord condemns. What evidence have our brethren that Brother Hickox was not chosen of God to do His work? What right have you to leave him out of your confidence, and refuse to sustain him, as though the Lord has given you the right to do this? Brother Hickox should have had a place to work from the first period that he was ready to work. He has done nothing that should have kept him handicapped, so that he could not work. You know not but that he has done the very best thing that could be done under the circumstances. God does not look upon many things [as] man does.
(12LtMs, Lt 53, 1897, 5)
I speak the things that I do know. This kind of a remedy will not heal the soul’s bruises, and the Lord has not prescribed it. From the light that the Lord has given me, it is high time for us to awake out of sleep, and read and re-read the Scripture defining the fruit of true Christianity. “The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, longsuffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance; against such there is no law.”“Brethren, if a man be overtaken in a fault, ye which are spiritual, restore such an one in the spirit of meekness, considering thyself, lest thou also be tempted.”“Bear ye one another’s burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ.” [Galatians 5:22, 23; 6:1, 2.]
(12LtMs, Lt 53, 1897, 6)
I have been writing to Battle Creek in regard to man lifting himself up against his fellow laborer if that laborer does not follow his ideas and plans. But I have reason to say that the Lord has permitted these things to transpire to reveal the wrong principle of action. In this action, Brother Hickox has been more sinned against than sinning. If his brethren continue this kind of management, they cannot bind the hearts of God’s workers to their hearts, because no one could move as the brethren of Brother Hickox have moved unless their souls were lifted up in them. This is exactly the spirit which the Pharisees manifested in Christ’s day, and which brought God’s displeasure upon them.
(12LtMs, Lt 53, 1897, 7)
“All ye are brethren.” [Matthew 23:8.] Men chosen of God are to be left far more to His management, and less, far less, to the supposed wisdom of human instrumentalities. How men dare take men away from a work, or forbid them doing service to God and refuse to link up with them, for the reasons that exist in this case, I cannot explain only on the ground that they do not understand that they are not to assume the place of God. O, for more love, and less self. May the Lord help us to seek Him with a whole heart, that we may find Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 53, 1897, 8)
O, I am so thankful that it is not the prerogative of finite, erring man to work the Holy Spirit. Every one must be worked by the Holy Spirit, or else he had better call a halt, and seek the Lord with all humility of mind, and with the persevering purpose, “I will not let thee go except thou bless me.” [Genesis 32:26.] We are to believe in Jesus, not in self. We are not to exalt self one jot or tittle, but to walk humbly with God. Then He can work with us. Our lofty, self-sufficient ideas only bring dearth to the soul.
(12LtMs, Lt 53, 1897, 9)
Your look of faith, my Brother Farnsworth, must not be a looking now and then, but a lifelong looking to Jesus Christ. Every day give Jesus a proof of your faith, a proof of your love, by loving those for whom Christ has given His life. In a deep sense, bring your soul into close relation to Jesus Christ. Our Brother Hickox and his wife can be helpers with you all, laborers together with God. Christ died, not to save righteous men, but sinners.
(12LtMs, Lt 53, 1897, 10)
Brethren Farnsworth and Crothers, may the Lord draw nigh to you by His Holy Spirit. Never interpose between your fellow man and his God. The principle that man must control his fellow men has been gradually coming in, until it is regarded as a vital principle. I hope you will allow your hearts to be softened and subdued by the Spirit of God. Let icebound souls melt under the Holy Spirit’s working.
(12LtMs, Lt 53, 1897, 11)
We read of Christ, “When he saw the multitude, he was moved with compassion on them, because they fainted, and were scattered abroad, as sheep having no shepherd. Then said he unto his disciples, The harvest truly is plenteous, but the laborers are few; pray ye therefore the Lord of the harvest, that he will send forth laborers into his harvest.” [Matthew 9:36-38.] Consider Christ’s strange compassion—shall we call it? No; it was His natural tenderness of heart. He understood the value of men. He was working to bring the gospel of salvation to sinful man, that through faith in Christ he might forsake his sins, believe in Him, and be saved.
(12LtMs, Lt 53, 1897, 12)
Did you not see that your fellow laborer was in need of tender, pitying love? Did you not see him discouraged? Should you not have acted the part of the good Samaritan, “Wherefore lift up the hands which hang down, and the feeble knees; and make straight paths for your feet, lest that which is lame be turned out of the way; but let it rather be healed.” [Hebrews 12:12, 13.] Are you confident that the Lord directed you to give your brother a severe letting alone? Did you think Jesus would have done this kind of work? His heart of love is grieved, because compassion did not lead you to understand the situation.
(12LtMs, Lt 53, 1897, 13)
Compassion was not a strange element for Christ to exercise, for it has its eternal abode in His heart, and was revealed in His life-practice. This compassion and measureless love He wants you to have, my brethren, and if you cherish this heavenly attribute, you will certainly express the same. One sight of the need of humanity aroused and filled Christ’s soul. The sight of bodily weakness, of hunger and thirst, of exhaustion, and weakness that made men fall on the hill side, kindled his compassion. Your brother needed this compassion; but the words spoken by men have influenced your actions more than the words spoken by Christ, who tells you by precept and example just what you should do under all circumstances.
(12LtMs, Lt 53, 1897, 14)
Do not let your heart’s compassion freeze. Let the light of love streaming from the Sun of Righteousness melt the austere, severe, unsympathizing nature, which has been cultivated altogether too much. Such cases must be understood, and treated tenderly and courteously. I speak plainly, because notwithstanding all the light given, the same spirit is acted over and over and over again. I must close. I love you all. May the light of heaven shine into your hearts and minds, is my prayer.
(12LtMs, Lt 53, 1897, 15)
Lt 54, 1897
Farnsworth, Brother and Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia December 15, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother and Sister Farnsworth:
The mail goes this morning from Cooranbong to reach the boat. My health is improving. I cling to my Saviour by living faith. This is my strength. In Him will I trust.
(12LtMs, Lt 54, 1897, 1)
The lot in Stanmore is not yet secured. Brother Starr thinks he has found cheaper land in Newtown, and better situated. Brother Haskell writes that the interest in Stanmore does not diminish. Every effort that can be made with their present force of workers is being made. They gave up Saturday night meetings in order to give that evening to visiting, but there has been so strong a plea from outside parties that they have taken them up again. There is no end to the visiting from house to house. Calls come in for help in this direction.
(12LtMs, Lt 54, 1897, 2)
Brother Sharp, who has embraced the truth, thought that he could keep his situation, where he had been a most acceptable worker for fourteen years. He had not received one word of faultfinding for any mistakes or mismoves. But he was discharged. His wife had not advanced as he had done in the understanding of the truth, and she saw at once all the difficulties before them, debt and want for the necessaries of life. She went into a fit, and her life was in peril for a time. But she has recovered.
(12LtMs, Lt 54, 1897, 3)
Brother Haskell writes that a man in Sydney sent for him to come and see him. He had heard that Brother Sharp had lost his situation for conscientiously abstaining from work on the Sabbath, and he told Brother Haskell he wanted just such a man; for his business would be safe in his hands. His book keeper went on a vacation, and he did his own book keeping. He found that the book keeper had run short fifteen pounds per month and he said that if he could get an honest man, he could have the Sabbath without any questioning. So Brother Sharp has found a situation. His wife said that all day the words had been in her mind, “O ye of little faith.” The man who turned Brother Sharp out of his situation told someone interested in the truth that he felt keenly sorry to lose Sharp, for he was a faithful worker. He had found no one yet to take his place. But he said he did not want one who would be poking the Sabbath down their throats.
(12LtMs, Lt 54, 1897, 4)
We feel very thankful that Brother Sharp has found work, for several who are on the point of deciding are making this a test case. The Lord knew all about this, and has opened the way for His servant.
(12LtMs, Lt 54, 1897, 5)
The workers in the mission find all they can possibly do. It rained one week, and this hindered the sale of tracts and papers. Yet aside from the minister’s salary, every expense has been met without help from the conference. This includes house rent and wages for the workers. Quite a number are giving Bible readings. Sister Lucas is now in the mission, learning to act a part with the rest. Brother Haskell and Brother Starr state that the interest is wonderful. They discover more and more of it as they carry forward the work. This looks like the work of the Holy Spirit of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 54, 1897, 6)
We need wisdom from God to understand what to do and how to manage. The week’s rain was a great hindrance to the work. We must have a meetinghouse at once. £150 has already come in toward this building, and as yet no effort has been made [to] induce the people to give. One man and his wife, as soon as they decided to obey the truth, pledged £5 each. They have since raised it of their own accord to £10 each. Brother Haskell and myself headed the subscription paper with £25 each. Brother Starr gave £10, Brother Baker £10, and a sister has come in with £25.
(12LtMs, Lt 54, 1897, 7)
The Lord has these matters in hand, and in ten weeks we are counting on having a meetinghouse free from debt, where we can worship God according to the light of His Word. The chapel shall go up as soon as possible, for this will give confidence to those souls who are convicted of the truth. The ministers are on the track of these, with their idle tales, handling the Word of God deceitfully. We are calling upon the Lord in faith for no less than one hundred sheaves to present to God as the trophies of His grace.
(12LtMs, Lt 54, 1897, 8)
The Spirit of God accompanies the truth to the heart of those who are seeking for truth as for hidden treasure. These souls are susceptible of appreciating the truth. This work resembles the movement of 1844, when the everlasting gospel was preached. “And I saw another angel fly in the midst of heaven, having the everlasting gospel to preach unto them that dwell on the earth, and to every nation, and kindred, and tongue, and people, saying with a loud voice, Fear God, and give glory to him; for the hour of his judgment is come. And worship him that made heaven, and earth, and the sea, and the fountains of waters.” [Revelation 14:6, 7.]
(12LtMs, Lt 54, 1897, 9)
The message we have to bear comprehends the two which have gone before. The truth, precious, saving truth, is to go forth as a lamp that burneth. The Holy Spirit accompanies the truth to hearts that have heard and not rejected and opposed it. There is an effectual renewing in the spirit of their minds, working that good work which causes them to rejoice in obedience to the truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 54, 1897, 10)
I speak in the tent next Sabbath and Sunday afternoon. This gives the ministers a little rest. I shall continue to do this as long as it seems necessary. The Lord is helping me in my old age. I thank and praise His holy name. After I was refreshed on Sunday in Stanmore, I felt the solemnity and greatness of the work in a way that I cannot express. It seemed that I was beholding the glory of the Lord, and being changed into the same image. I must be changed from glory to glory, or I shall never be satisfied.
(12LtMs, Lt 54, 1897, 11)
We need sanctification unto good works and a much more perfect faith than we have. Then our hearts will be filled with gratitude to God. His distinguishing love will keep us in contrition and deepest humiliation before Him. “Not unto us, but unto thy name be the praise.” [Psalm 115:1.] God help us every hour to know His will. May He give us tact and wisdom and power by His Holy Spirit, is my prayer.
(12LtMs, Lt 54, 1897, 12)
Give my love to our dear friends, especially Sister Tuxford, and Brother and Sister Caro, whom I love in the Lord.
(12LtMs, Lt 54, 1897, 13)
Lt 55, 1897
Brethren and Sisters Assembling in General Conference “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia January 10, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 6MR 381-382. To my brethren and sisters who shall assemble in General Conference:
I am unable to sleep past two o’clock a.m. The words spoken by Christ to His disciples are forcibly impressed on my mind. “My meat is to do the will of him that sent me,” He said, “and to finish his work. Say not ye, There are yet four months, and then cometh harvest? behold, I say unto you, Lift up your eyes, and look on the fields; for they are white already to harvest. And he that reapeth receiveth wages, and gathereth fruit unto life eternal; that both he that soweth and he that reapeth may rejoice together.” [John 4:34-36.]
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 1)
Christ had just announced Himself to the Samaritan woman as the Messiah. As this woman had talked with Him, she was impressed with His words, and began to have some conviction of His character. The question arose in her mind, “Might not this be the long looked for Messiah?” She said to Him, “I know that Messias cometh, which is called Christ: when he is come, he will tell us all things.... And upon this came his disciples, and marvelled that he talked with the woman: yet no man said, What seekest thou? or, Why talkest thou with her?” [Verses 25, 27.]
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 2)
As the woman heard Christ’s words, faith sprang up in her heart. In her ignorance and sin she recognized the power of the words addressed to her, and she received the wonderful announcement from the lips of the divine Teacher.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 3)
This woman was in an appreciative state of mind. She was ready to receive the noblest revelation, for she was interested in the Scriptures, and as she studied the Old Testament promise, “The Lord thy God will raise up unto thee a prophet from the midst of thee, of thy brethren, like unto me; unto him shall ye hearken,” the Spirit of the Lord was preparing her mind to receive more light. [Deuteronomy 18:15.] She longed to understand this prophecy; she was hungering and thirsting to know what is truth. Light was flashing into the chambers of her mind, and the water of life, the spiritual life, which Christ gives to every thirsty soul, had already begun to spring up in her heart. The Spirit of the Lord was working with her.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 4)
The plain statement made by Christ to this woman could not have been made to the self-righteous Jews. Christ was far more reserved when He spoke to them.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 5)
The woman was filled with joy as she listened to Christ’s words. The wonderful revelation was almost overpowering. Leaving her waterpot, she returned to the city, to carry the message to others. Jesus knew why she had gone. Leaving her waterpot spoke unmistakably as to the effect of His words. It was the earnest desire of her soul to obtain the living water; and she forgot her errand to the well. With a heart overflowing with gladness, she hastened on her way, to impart to others the precious light she had received.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 6)
“Come, see a man which told me all things that ever I did she said, is not this the Christ? Then they went out of the city and came unto him.... And many of the Samaritans of that city believed on him for the saying of the woman, which testified, He told me all that ever I did. So when the Samaritans were come unto him, they besought him that he would tarry with them: and he abode there two days. And many more believed on him because of his own word; and said unto the woman, Now we believe, not because of thy saying; for we have heard him ourselves, and know that this is indeed the Christ, the Saviour of the world.” [John 4:29, 30, 39-42.]
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 7)
How quickly was the harvest received from the words spoken to this woman. Here indeed good seed was sown, and the conversion of the Samaritans was the harvest. The woman carried the light at once to her countrymen. They came and heard Jesus, and believed on Him. They then invited Him to their city, and many more believed on Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 8)
Just such a work as this the Lord will do in these last days. Dr. Kellogg, with earnest, untiring energy, has testified by his works, that he believes the Word of God, and that he is not content to be merely a theoretical believer. He has put his belief into works. He has faith and works combined. His work in the medical missionary line has had the appearance of being disproportionately large; but he has seen the feeble efforts made by the churches, whose practice has not been proportionate to the light which has been shining across their pathway in strong, steady rays, and he has undertaken to educate his students to do service for the Lord. In this he has only tried to walk in the light.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 9)
By carelessly neglecting the light, by failing to walk in the light, as the Lord has bidden them, our people in Battle Creek have not set a right example. This has been an incentive for Dr. Kellogg to undertake the work they were unwilling to do. He has been doing the very work the Lord has specified should be done. The Lord will give His Spirit and favor to those who will work.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 10)
The incident at the well represents the manner in which Christ will work. He was not received by the learned Jews, and He did not tell them as distinctly who He was as He did the humble woman. Thus He shows us how we may reap and sow for Him. The religion that comes from God is the only religion that will lead to God. Every one who hears and believes, and who has a practical faith in Christ, is represented by the Samaritan woman. In them the living water springs up to refresh others. Every true Christian is a fountain of life. He who drinks of the water of life becomes a missionary; the receiver becomes a giver.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 12)
“I live;” said the great apostle, “yet not I, but Christ liveth in me; and the life which I now live in the flesh, I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave himself for me.” [Galatians 2:20.] All will reveal, by their works, the exact measure of their faith in the gospel of Christ. Heartiness and zeal for Christ’s sake, a readiness to do His will, will testify to the sincerity of our faith. Work for the unfortunate, those lost in the wilderness of sin, is to be carried on during our entire service for Christ; His love and His compassion will appear in our lives.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 13)
The invitations of the gospel are not to be narrowed down and presented only to a select few who, we suppose, will do us honor if they accept the truth. The message is to be given to all. “Ho, everyone that thirsteth,” is the cry, “come ye the waters, and he that hath no money; come ye, buy and eat; yea, come, buy wine and milk without money and without price.” [Isaiah 55:1.] “The Spirit and the bride say, Come. And let him that heareth say, Come. And let him that is athirst come. And whosoever will, let him take of the water of life freely.” [Revelation 22:17.]
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 14)
We need to broaden our labors, and to encourage our workers to do the work that Christ did when presenting the grand truths of the gospel to one who was waiting for light. The end is near. “Say not ye, There are yet four months, and then cometh harvest? behold, I say unto you, lift up your eyes, and look on the fields; for they are white already to harvest.” [John 4:35.]
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 15)
The Holy Spirit will work with the human instrumentalities who recognize and co-operate with Him, and who present Christ as the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world. Did not Christ feel a travail of soul for the redemption of the world? The Holy Spirit will co-operate with those who long, as He did, for the salvation of those who are ready to perish. But church members are not branches of the living Vine if they feel no burden, no travail of soul, for those who are perishing in their sins. Did not Christ devote all His capabilities and powers to this work, partaking Himself of humanity, that He might reach the human race? All this God expects of every one that believes in Christ. Those who are stewards of His grace and knowledge are to live the truth and, under its influence, seek to win others to Christ. In many cases the seed sowing will be immediately followed by the ingathering, as in the case of the Samaritan woman. Souls will be converted, and led to see the truth as it is in Jesus.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 16)
God’s servants are the channels by which light is conveyed to the world. Did not Christ appoint every believing soul, not to be a sermonizer, but to minister to others, conveying the truth to them by precept and example? When this is done, the Holy Spirit empties itself of the holy oil, which is received by the golden tubes, and conveyed to the world, till all are tested and proved.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 17)
The work of the church is to use all the ability at its command, and multiply the channels through which the Holy Spirit can work. But no one is prepared to do justice to His work, as a steward of the grace of Christ, unless he is ready to minister, not to those who know the truth, but to those who are perishing in their sins. Any one who seeks, by word or action, to bind about the work of saving perishing souls is working against God. Let all remember that the field is the world. All self-serving must die if we hope to serve God.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 18)
I recognize that the work Dr. Kellogg has set his heart to do is the work of God. Through the medical missionary work many souls have been enlightened and helped and convicted. All, and more than all, that has been expended in this work has been returned by the results. This is most taxing labor, but it pays. If professed Christians had engaged in this work when their names were first placed upon the church books, there would not now be such widespread unbelief, such depths of iniquity, such unparalleled wickedness, as is seen in the world at the present time. In the invitation to the gospel supper, the Lord Jesus has specified that this work should be done.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 19)
“He that reapeth receiveth wages,” said Christ, “and gathereth fruit unto life eternal: that both he that soweth and he that reapeth may rejoice together. And herein is that saying true, One soweth and another reapeth. I sent you to reap that whereon ye bestowed no labor; other men labored, and ye are entered into their labors.” [Verses 36-38.] Christ pointed out the high and sacred service owed to God by those that received the truth. They are to be His living agencies. He requires their individual service. And whether we sow or reap, we are working for God. The reaper and the sower both receive wages. One scatters the seed; the other gathers in the harvest. One puts the seed in the soil; the other gathers the fruit.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 20)
In the work of ministering, we sow the seed of truth. We know not which will prosper, this or that. Our work is to “sow beside all waters.” [Isaiah 32:20.] An earnest word, spoken for God, will be as seed sown in good ground. But spiritless, uninterested professors will sow seeds of selfishness, and that which they sow, they will surely reap, for there is a chain of influence which connects man and his works with other human beings. These unconsecrated workers will have a harvest that they will not care to reap.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 21)
In the physical world, the seed rewards the sower. First the blade appears, then the ear, then the corn in the ear, and then the harvest. There is an unseen agency at work from the time the seed is sown till the harvest is gathered. The dew, the blessed showers of heaven, which refresh, enrich, and nourish the tiny seed, the sunbeams, which bring life and warmth and gladness, those are all links in the chain of God’s providence. The seed requires the richness of the soil, the air, the dew, the rain. The chain is forged by an unseen agency, even an omnipotent power, which works silently but effectually, linking together the agencies which produce the harvest.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 22)
Seed-sowing is a work which is done by the sower in faith. As it were, he casts away the seed, that there may be an ingathering, and he is rewarded by the harvest. Watch the worker preparing the soil for the seed. The slothful, careless worker only half prepares the soil, and the harvest always bears witness to the character of his work. He was not earnest and diligent in preparing the soil, and he finds nothing but disappointment in the harvest. He did not cultivate the ground thoroughly, and the result is that the crop is a failure, the seed is lost, the worthless harvest bears witness against him. The fruit gathered is not enough to repay him for his labor.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 23)
So it is in spiritual things. From this we are to learn that the character of the worker is not always measured by the apparent result of his work, but by the faithful, honest work done. Our Saviour would have all study nature’s laws, for they are a representation of the laws of grace. In all her works, nature is a teacher of spiritual things. As the ground is prepared for the seed, so the heart must be prepared for the seeds of truth. The weeds of sin and selfishness must be rooted out, for they will produce a harvest that the sower will not be desirous to gather. The good seed that is sown must be cultivated and kept free from weeds. The soil of the heart must not be allowed to become hard. It must be warmed by the bright rays of the Sun of Righteousness. The light must not be quenched.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 24)
He who gave the parable of the tiny mustard seed is the Sovereign of heaven, and the same laws that govern earthly seed-sowing and reaping govern the sowing of the seeds of truth. The gospel is called a mystery, hidden for ages. Human wisdom gains nothing by trying to sound its depths. Paul declares, “For after that in the wisdom of God, the world by wisdom knew not God, it pleased God by the foolishness of preaching to save them that believe.”“As it is written, Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man, the things which God hath prepared for them that love him. But God hath revealed them unto us by his Spirit; for the Spirit searcheth all things, yea, the deep things of God.” [1 Corinthians 1:21; 2:9, 10.] In the gospel seed-sowing, the Word of God is to be communicated as truth; it is to be interwoven with the whole practical life.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 25)
Christ compares a man who hears and is a doer of His Word to a man who built his house upon a rock. Though the floods descended, and the winds blew, the house stood firm. There is a religion of word only. There are those who make a pretense to cultivate the soil and sow seed, but are not thorough; these will never gain salvation. It is only those who hear and do Christ’s Word who will obtain eternal life.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 26)
The attributes clearly defined by Christ in the sermon on the mount, if cherished, bring to the worker peace and joy. But if we do not cherish the Spirit of Christ, we are none of His. If we have not the mind of Christ, we cannot do His will.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 27)
Chaff is found among the wheat, and among professing Christians there are slothful servants, who do not improve their talents. But all who believe in Christ will be faithful and true to principle. There is a great work to be done, and to everyone God has given a work to do. We are living in the last days of this earth’s history, and the question is asked, “When the Son of man cometh, will he find faith on the earth?” [Luke 18:8.] He is coming again in the clouds of heaven, to be admired in all them that believe; and those who would meet Him with joy must not allow the world to interpose between them and their Maker. The world is to occupy a second place in our life-history.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 28)
The kingdom of God is to be our first interest. Heart, mind, soul, and strength are to be given to the Lord. All who are truly united with Christ will be faithful stewards; they will work earnestly for Him. Those who do not give the Lord their entire service may think that they can sit at the great supper without the pure linen garment, woven in the loom of heaven, but they will find that in heaven there is no place for humanity that is not combined with divinity.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 29)
The pure in heart shall see God. His presence can be revealed; comprehended it cannot be. This knowledge is too wonderful for us. There are feelings that cannot be communicated. Some things one cannot say. Words are tame, and our thoughts come far short of taking all in, for there is an infinity beyond our thoughts.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 30)
If we are to be co-laborers with God, we must hold direct communion with Him; we must ask His guidance in everything we undertake. We cannot commit to another the explanation, or ask them to direct us. But how few know what it is to hold intercourse with God. How readily some place the responsibility of their duty on others, and ask them to tell them what to do. We say to all such, you must know your duty from God. Many have depended on their fellow men until they have no individual experience. They are towed along as a barge by a steamer.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 31)
All must see and understand their duty for themselves after seeking wisdom from God. He is the only One to whom you may commit your soul for safe keeping. If you come to Him in faith, He will speak His mysteries to you personally. You may sit together in heavenly places with Christ. We may individually understand God’s will; we may know for ourselves what He would have us do, for He will direct us if we will consent to be consecrated and humble in heart before Him. Our hearts will oft burn within us as One draws nigh to commune with us as He did with Enoch. “Who is this that darkeneth counsel by words without knowledge?” [Job 38:2.] We need Him who is the true Light that lighteth every man that cometh into the world.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 32)
A work that has been strangely neglected must be done. We must bear witness of the light. Who can do this, under the teaching of the Holy Spirit, in language pure, refined, simple, and clear as the running stream? Much cloud and darkness crowds upon us. Yield yourself, your individual self, to God, that you may be purified, cleansed, and sanctified, and you will be enabled to flash light amid the darkness of a sin-loving world. Study the Word which is a lamp to our feet and a light to our path. When you desire wisdom, go to the Light of the world. Do not turn to any living soul; men are but erring mortals; in their human wisdom, they may encourage where they should discourage, and discourage where they should encourage.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 33)
Every lightbearer in the world is in God’s service, and all are to kindle their censers with the sacred fire of God’s own kindling. Then His Word will be given to those whom you would save, not through a dull routine, but in such a way that they will be impressed. Those who never come in vital touch with God, cannot be channels for the truth, for they do not honor God. They have not an experimental knowledge of the truth. A wise man’s eyes are in his head. They are not directed to the ends of the earth, seeking for some one to see spiritually for them. The eyes of a fool are in the ends of the earth.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 34)
It is the privilege of all to receive the heavenly anointing, that they may see the attraction of heavenly things over the things of earth. God calls upon His servants to behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sins of the world. He would not have those in His service pry into everything, whether it concerns their spiritual advantage or not. He wants all to turn away from loathsome, dead matter. Have you found peace and joy in believing? We shall certainly know it if you have, for then your first and most earnest work will be to impart happiness to others. Just as surely as the sun shines in the vault of heaven, so surely you will be a light in the world. But if you have no connection with God, there is no Sun in your heaven to shine forth in beams of righteousness to the world.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 35)
Thank the Lord, if there are those that cannot lead, they can follow. There is work for all to do. We can but breathe the most earnest prayer that men may be trained to have clear perception, and that they may cultivate their God-given talents, so that they may not be deficient in organizing power. O if all who profess to be in the service of God would feel their individual responsibility, and not expect others to be their prop, but stand in their God-given independence, inquiring of God and doing His will, how much more would be accomplished! “Him that cometh to me, I will in no wise cast out,” Christ declares. [John 6:37.] By yielding yourself to God, you gain a oneness with Him. But until we have given ourselves to God, until we are willing to be used by the Holy Spirit, and to do as God thinks best, we shall continue to work neither wisely nor usefully, and we shall know neither joy nor peace.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 36)
The apostle Paul knew that example goes much further than theory or commands. He felt the burden of soul for the poor saints at Jerusalem, and he was constrained to ask the Corinthians to contribute something for them. He presented to them the example of the church at Macedonia. “Moreover, brethren,” he writes, “we do you to wit of the grace of God bestowed on the church of Macedonia; how that in a great trial of affliction the abundance of their joy and their deep poverty abounded unto the riches of their liberality. For to their power, I bear record, yea, and beyond their power, they were willing of themselves; praying us with much entreaty that we would receive the gift, and take upon us the fellowship of the ministering to the saints. And this they did, not as we hoped, but first gave their own selves to the Lord, and unto us by the will of God. Insomuch that we desired Titus that as he had begun, so he would also finish in you the same grace also.” [2 Corinthians 8:1-6.]
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 37)
All we have or have ever possessed is the Lord’s entrusted capital. He has given it to us to test us, to see whether we will serve Him in this life. If we prove that we have the attributes of God, if we do right because it is right, we shall receive a crown of glory.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 38)
The Lord could carry forward His work without the co-operation of the human family. He is not dependent upon any one for their money, or for their time or labor. But He accepts these as tokens of our loyalty to Him. By our faithfulness in these things, we decide our eternal destiny. If we do not co-operate with the Lord by doing His service, by giving ourselves to Him, we will not be judged fit subjects for His pure, heavenly kingdom.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 39)
Our soul, mind, and strength is lent us by God, and He desires us to reach to the highest standard of efficiency. It is our hearts only that God asks for. “My son, give me thine heart,” He says. [Proverbs 23:26.] When this becomes a consecrated temple for the indwelling of the Holy Spirit, nothing will be withheld from God. Then God promises, “A new heart also will I give thee.” [Ezekiel 36:26.] With this will come a sense of responsibility, a desire to keep the way of the Lord, and to do justice and judgment. “Ye are not your own, for ye are bought with a price; therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit, which are God’s.” [1 Corinthians 6:19, 20.]
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 40)
We are God’s by creation and by redemption. No one can live a Christian life and serve himself. We have no assurance of happiness if we do not hold ourselves as God’s consecrated property, ready to do His service with heart, mind, property, and strength. All we have is the Lord’s. All we ever hope to gain by our ability is His, and should be employed in His service. All we possess is lent to us; we are to use it to do the highest service for God. On this earth we are fitting ourselves for the mansions that Christ has gone to prepare for those that love Him, and when He comes the second time, He will take them to be with Him forever. “Occupy till I come,” He says. [Luke 19:13.] At His coming all must render an account as to the use they have made of their entrusted means and capabilities.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 41)
The words of One who took our nature, and became our substitute, are “lo, I come, to do thy will, O God.” [Hebrews 10:9.] This must be the sentiment of our heart and our continual practice if we walk in the footsteps of our Redeemer.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 42)
If we would honor God in heaven, we must honor Him on this earth, where we are being tested and tried. But until we consecrate ourselves, soul, body, and spirit, to the Lord, we cannot do good work either for God or man. The shadow of Satan will be mingled with all we do and say. We will pick and choose our work; our lives will reveal envy, jealousy, and selfishness. We shall seek to be first, and if we are buffeted and tried, we think that we are having a very hard time. But these trials are designed to show us that all we do tastes so strongly of the dish that it is not acceptable. When self and selfishness are expelled from the soul, and the human agent longs to be a co-laborer together with God, everything is seen in a new light.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 43)
Christ died to save the world, and the least men and women can do with their talents and capabilities is to strive earnestly and humbly to imitate the Pattern set before them. The least that Christ expects, and the least that He requires of all who receive Him, is that they bear His yoke and lift His burdens, learning His meekness and lowliness.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 44)
Cast aside every burden that forbids you to follow Christ or that hinders you in this work. Christ came to save the world, and our work is to lift Him up by representing His character. Our life-interest, our first business and calling, should be to work the works of God in harmony with Christ by ministering to our fellow men. Benevolence with all its fragrance, should form, not a part of our character but the whole. Christ has appointed those who receive Him to be channels of light, through which He can shine to the world. They are to be representatives of what grace can do through human agents that are under the influence of the Holy Spirit.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 45)
What was the influence of the work of the Holy Spirit through the apostles of Jesus Christ? The church formed after Christ has ascended and sent the Holy Spirit, did not pull apart. The members were full of the grace of Christ. As the apostles waited at Jerusalem for the fulfillment of Christ a promise, being of one accord, and in one place, the heavenly endowment came in copious effusion, and with great power, as if God had long waited and longed to bestow the heavenly gift, that under the holy unction the disciples might declare Christ and Him crucified.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 46)
What followed the outpouring of the Spirit? Thousands were converted in a day. This was the result of Christ’s sowing, the harvest of His work. The Word proclaimed by the apostles was as a twoedged sword, subduing all things to Christ. This work was not limited to any one country. Christ’s field is the world.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 47)
The Holy Spirit convinced of sin, and all were drawn to unite their interests in the work of advocating truth. One subject was their theme—salvation through Christ. There was no strife for the supremacy. They sought only to see who could best show his loyalty and likeness to Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 48)
The whole multitude of them that believed were of one heart and one mind. The fast-increasing community of believers was animated by one spirit. Every pulse beat in unity, and the gospel was carried to the ends of the earth.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 49)
The language of Christ concerning the Holy Spirit is, “He shall not speak of himself; ... he shall glorify me; for he shall receive of mine, and shall show it unto you.” [John 16:13, 14.] As the Saviour came to glorify the Father by the demonstration of His infinite love, so also the Spirit came to glorify Christ by employing human instrumentalities [to] bear the truth as it is in Jesus to all parts of the world.
(12LtMs, Lt 55, 1897, 50)
Lt 56, 1897
Hare, Brother “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia August 17, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in 13MR 355-358. Dear Brother Hare:
I must speak to you, Brother Haskell, Brother Hughes, Brother Wilson, and Brother Daniells. When we parted with you last evening, I said, We will not hasten the building of the meetinghouse, but last night has changed my ideas materially. I received instruction which I cannot now put on paper fully. The instruction given me was to give to the people the words of the prophet Haggai, “Thus speaketh the Lord of hosts, saying, This people say, The time is not come, the time that the Lord’s house should be built. Then came the word of the Lord from the prophet saying, Is it time for you, O ye, to dwell in your ceiled houses, and this house lie waste,” be left without attention, without coming [into] your calculation? “Now therefore thus saith the Lord of hosts; Consider your ways.... Go up to the mountain, and bring wood, and build the house; and I will take pleasure in it, and I will be glorified, saith the Lord.” [Haggai 1:2-5, 8.]
(12LtMs, Lt 56, 1897, 1)
The question was asked, Shall the house of the Lord be left as the last consideration? Read this chapter of inspiration, and take heed unto it. The first and second chapters contain lessons for us. I received instruction to speak to the people, and tell them that we are not to leave the house of the Lord until the last consideration. There is no place of worship we can secure in which to assemble. In the cities, halls can be obtained, but the place in which we worship is becoming too small for us. This is not according to the will of God. Our first consideration should be to build a house for the Lord.
(12LtMs, Lt 56, 1897, 2)
Again I was instructed that our place of worship should be easy of access, and that the most precious portion of the land should be selected as a place on which to build for God. The question was asked, Have you shown proper respect for the Master? Have you shown the eloquence of true politeness toward God? He is the one from whom all your blessings flow. You have not any good thing but that comes from God. You cannot worship God in a correct manner where you are now. You cannot bow before Him in a suitable position. Build a house for God without delay. Secure the most favorable location. Prepare seats that will be proper for a house of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 56, 1897, 3)
I repeat the light given me by God again and again. Bring to God no mean offering. Let all bring their ability and devising and tact into the work, for it is to stand as a symbol of the respect due to God, the politeness we should ever show before the people to the Lord of heaven.
(12LtMs, Lt 56, 1897, 4)
Our first consideration should have been to erect a house of worship. The words were spoken with emphasis, show politeness toward God. Give decided preference to Him. We will reveal that we honor our God by preparing a place where we may conduct religious services that will harmonize in every possible way with the sacred, elevated character of the truth we advocate. In everything we should show our faith toward God by our works. We cannot see God with the natural eye, but we can reveal Him in the deference and respect and Christian politeness we manifest in our works. Thus we show that we honor God.
(12LtMs, Lt 56, 1897, 5)
I cannot now present all the matter as it was given me. But one thing I am determined upon—that we shall show that we honor and glorify God by building a house for Him. Time is short, but this is necessary. The further it is removed from the school buildings calling the students to go to and from the place of meeting, the better will be the influence. They should not pair off ladies with gentlemen, but ladies with ladies, and gentlemen with gentlemen. Orderly movements should be maintained by all who are making their home in the school buildings.
(12LtMs, Lt 56, 1897, 6)
I will write no more now, but this work must come first of everything. Those who occupy the room in the school building should have a place in which to meet and worship God. The work of God would have been largely advanced if in the place of occupying the room above the mill, we had shown our respect and our view of the holiness of God by building a house of worship. When Abraham was sojourning in his own country, the Lord told him he must leave his kindred, and go into a strange land, and that wherever he pitched his tent his first work was to build an altar for God, where he could worship God with those who were accompanying [him] as pilgrims and strangers.
(12LtMs, Lt 56, 1897, 7)
The Lord would have wrought for us if we had shown our faith by our works, if we had considered the greatness and glory of our God and our obligations to Him. This would have testified to the character of our work as nothing else could have done. We have this neglect to repent of, and if the Lord will forgive our neglect and our stupidity, we will never repeat this mistake, but will make God first, and exalt His service in everything we do.
(12LtMs, Lt 56, 1897, 8)
We will honor God, and show Him true politeness by building a place where He can be our honored guest, to come in and meet with us, where all the association will be of a character that will show that we reverence God, and make Him our first consideration. Has not the Lord given light to his people upon this subject? Have you not had a testimony to bear on this point? Why has this matter been left for the very last? It should have been the very first work done on the school grounds. This would have revealed an altogether different aspect of the work, and would have met the approval of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 56, 1897, 9)
Lt 57, 1897
Hare, Brother and Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia January 20, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in ML 184; 2BC 1023; 4Bio 288. Dear Brother and Sister Hare:
I was much pleased to read your letter. I feel that it is right for you to be in Western Australia at this time. You will have trials there; you will be tempted and tried; but only believe, only trust in God. Trust not in yourself, but in One who is mighty to save to the uttermost all who trust in Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 57, 1897, 1)
We are so anxious, all of us, for happiness, but many rarely find it because of their faulty methods of seeking, in the place of striving. We must strive most earnestly, and mingle all our desires with faith. Then happiness steals in upon us almost unsought; it may be amid aggressive warfare, truth against error. We believe in a general way, but we lose much because we do not trust fully and entirely in God our Maker. When we can, notwithstanding disagreeable circumstances, rest confidingly in His love, and shut ourselves in with Him, resting peacefully in His love, the sense of His presence will inspire a deep, tranquil joy. This experience gains for us a faith that enables us not to fret, not to worry, but to depend upon a Power that is infinite.
(12LtMs, Lt 57, 1897, 2)
A divine voice speaks to you, “Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek, and lowly of heart, and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.” [Matthew 11:28-30.] Receive Christ as an abiding guest, and your hearts will be drawn upward in songs of praise and thanksgiving. “O Lord how manifold are thy works! in wisdom hast thou made them all.” [Psalm 104:24.] “Thou visitest the earth, and waterest it; thou greatly enrichest it with the river of God, which is full of water; thou preparest them corn, when thou hast so provided for it. Thou waterest the ridges thereof abundantly; thou settlest the furrows thereof; thou makest it soft with showers; thou blessest the springing thereof. Thou crownest the year with thy goodness; and thy paths drop fatness.” [Psalm 65:9-11.]
(12LtMs, Lt 57, 1897, 3)
These are all representations of the spiritual blessings of God. The Lord employs the symbols of the natural world to inculcate divine truth. When we go into the fields with Christ in our hearts, a holy influence surrounds us; we open our hearts to God’s great spiritual teaching, and as the things of nature take up the parables of Christ, and minister to us, His counsels appeal to us. Through the varied lessons in nature our Teacher speaks to us of spiritual, invisible things. We hold communion with nature’s God, and rest our souls in His love.
(12LtMs, Lt 57, 1897, 4)
“Commit thy ways unto the Lord, and thy thoughts shall be established.” [Proverbs 16:3.] Even our thoughts are to be brought into captivity to Jesus Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 57, 1897, 5)
We have been passing through a severe crisis here. Trials have come through Brethren Lawrence and Shannon, and their talkative wives. When the work was started here, it was not carried forward in all wisdom. Brother Rousseau is not a manager. He fancied we should need many horses. These have been a heavy expense, and no one could use quite a number of them. Then there are things connected with the mill that have been expensive. The purchase of some of the facilities has not proved to be the best wisdom. Other facilities have had to be purchased.
(12LtMs, Lt 57, 1897, 6)
The result has been that men who have not been favored and employed have criticized. Because they could not receive the highest wages, notwithstanding the means in the treasury were so low, they would not work. For three months Brother Lawrence sat on the devil’s idle stool, tempting the devil to tempt him.
(12LtMs, Lt 57, 1897, 7)
These brethren have found enough, as they supposed, to criticize; and they have been learning in the school of Satan how to do this work with wonderful acuteness. You would think they had been in the school of the critics, learning how to make the most of the enemy’s suggestions.
(12LtMs, Lt 57, 1897, 8)
We met this spirit in Melbourne; and we meet it here at high tide. We have had to carry a heavy load. Some who have come here have had that kind of a missionary spirit that has led them to make every move [to] advantage themselves, apparently without caring for the school interest. The root of selfishness has taken root, and is springing up into a flourishing, poisonous tree, bearing fruit to defile others.
(12LtMs, Lt 57, 1897, 9)
After much labor, Brother Lawrence has begun to see “men as trees walking.” [Mark 8:24.] The Holy Spirit has been moving upon his heart. Brother Shannon is in Africa. His wife is here in Cooranbong. I think there has been a carnival in the synagogue of Satan, but the Lord is working for us. How it will all terminate, I know not. These people who criticize every little mistake made by others are not fond of having the Lord pass judgment upon them. But enough of this.
(12LtMs, Lt 57, 1897, 10)
I learn from Brother Daniells that Brethren Miller and Woods are desirous of coming back to the Echo office. They are coming to that place where they should be. They see that it is a sin to establish a rival institution, to take the means that should go to the Echo office. I am now relieved of a great burden in regard to the Echo office. It needed just the ability, sanctified by the Spirit of God, that those men have.
(12LtMs, Lt 57, 1897, 11)
The Lord has been blessing them largely in North Fitzroy. He has given Elder Daniells precious victories, and freedom in speaking the Word of God. We are hoping and praying that the Lord will work still more. We must have faith. The devil will take advantage of every mind that he can use.
(12LtMs, Lt 57, 1897, 12)
The Lord has given me a very sharp testimony for those who have had no respect for the men who were carrying the load. They would not help to bear this load, but they committed the grievous sin of criticizing and making misstatements, talking at the same time of their great wisdom. This evil comes of self-worship, of making self the center, of admiring and exalting one’s own capabilities. When people allow their minds to become soured, the influence they exert is just that which a soured man might be expected to exert. Could they see their works as others see them, pretense, boasting, and self-sufficiency would be swept away. In the day of judgment none will be more surprised than those who respond to their condemnatory sentence by saying, “Lord, when saw we thee an hungered, or athirst, or a stranger, or naked, or sick, or in prison, and did not minister unto thee?” [Matthew 25:44.] They did not know that they were under the enemy’s generalship, learning of him to do harm, but supposed that they were doing good.
(12LtMs, Lt 57, 1897, 13)
The prophet Nathan’s parable of the ewe lamb, given to King David, may be studied by all. The light was flashed sharply upon the king, while he was in utter darkness as to what was thought of his actions in regard to Uriah. While he was following his course of self-indulgence and commandment-breaking, the parable of a rich man who took from a poor man his own ewe lamb, was presented before him. But the king was so completely wrapped in his garments of sin, that he did not see that he was the sinner. He fell into the trap, and with great indignation, he passed his sentence upon another man, as he supposed, condemning him to death. When the application was made, and the facts brought home to him, when Nathan said, “Thou art the man; unknowingly thou hast condemned thyself,” David was overwhelmed. [2 Samuel 12:7.] He had not one word to say in defense of his course of action.
(12LtMs, Lt 57, 1897, 14)
This experience was most painful to David, but it was most beneficial. But for the mirror which Nathan held up before him, in which he so clearly recognized his own likeness, he would have gone on unconvicted of his heinous sin, and would have been ruined. The conviction of his guilt was the saving of his soul. He saw himself in another light, as the Lord saw him, and as long as he lived he repented of his sin.
(12LtMs, Lt 57, 1897, 15)
I have been compelled to hold up the mirror of the Word of God, and speak to certain ones, saying, “Thou art the man.” [Verse 7.] It has cut deep, but we hope to see the work go much deeper, else these people for whom Christ has died will never see His face; His name will never be in their foreheads. The work has begun well, but we greatly fear that some have formed habits that are so strong that [they] will never see their character in its true bearing.
(12LtMs, Lt 57, 1897, 16)
I think you should see Brother Collins, and faithfully do your duty to him. This you can do, whether it does him any good or not; and you will have done your duty. The Lord will direct you. We see that Satan is making every possible effort to overthrow souls who have not become rooted and grounded in the truth. But God will not leave these, nor forsake those who put their trust in Him. Truth will triumph. God grant that we may triumph with the truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 57, 1897, 17)
We are all quite well healthwise. May and her twin boys are well, also Ella and Mabel. The boys are the best children I ever saw. They are so quiet. They seldom ever cry, and are easily amused. They never seem to be jealous one of the other, and are sturdy, happy, good-natured children. We all miss Willie. I wish I could see you, and talk with you.
(12LtMs, Lt 57, 1897, 18)
In much love.
(12LtMs, Lt 57, 1897, 19)
Lt 58, 1897
Hare, Sister Wesley “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia December 18, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in 12MR 350-353. Dear Sister Wesley Hare:
I have been meaning to write to you for some time, but other things have crowded upon me, and now I can write only a short letter for Maggie to copy.
(12LtMs, Lt 58, 1897, 1)
My health has not been good this summer. I have been very much exhausted for some time, but I am now improving, and I feel very grateful to God for this.
(12LtMs, Lt 58, 1897, 2)
I learn that your health is not as good as it has been. My sister, look to the Lord. He would have you live, I believe, to care for your family. Take right hold of the power of the mighty Healer. Whatever may be your affliction, the Lord would have you come to Him in faith, believing in Him as the One who can heal both soul and body by His mighty power. I point you to the great Physician. He will, I believe, undertake your case. Only believe, and you will see the salvation of God. After you have done all on your part, you may rest in God, feeling that you have committed the keeping of soul and body to Him. You are His property and His child. He loves you, and He can make you well if it is for His name’s glory.
(12LtMs, Lt 58, 1897, 3)
Come to the Lord just as you are. Cast your helpless soul and body upon the mercy and care of the tender Shepherd; and believe, believe, believe. You will indeed see the salvation of God. Let your trust in God be unwavering. Present the promise, and then rely upon the Word that says, “Ask and ye shall receive.” [John 16:24.] Read the fifth chapter of James, and follow the directions as best you can, and if it is for the Lord’s glory, He will raise you up. But act your part faithfully, and cling to the Mighty One.
(12LtMs, Lt 58, 1897, 4)
There is a large interest in Stanmore since the camp meeting. The tent has been crowded most of the time. Meetings have been held every night with the exception of Monday evenings. Now and then they have dropped out the evening after the Sabbath, for so many calls come in for visiting that they have to give up that evening to holding Bible readings. Brother and Sister Haskell, Brother and Sister Starr, and Brother and Sister Wilson are the chief workers.
(12LtMs, Lt 58, 1897, 5)
Brother and Sister Haskell have charge of the mission, where quite a number are being educated as Bible workers, and others are being educated to sell papers and tracts, that the work may be made as far as possible self-sustaining. All day long there is but one person in the home, the girl that does the cooking. Visits are made, and Bible readings given from house to house, for invitations are constantly coming in, and the different families invite their neighbors in to hear. The people seem to be of a better class intellectually than is usually the case, and they will be able to teach the truth to others. Much praying is being done.
(12LtMs, Lt 58, 1897, 6)
Quite a stir is now being made among those newly come to the faith in regard to erecting a meetinghouse. Forty souls have already come to the faith, and my soul grasps no less than one hundred, for the interest is wide and deep and is constantly increasing.
(12LtMs, Lt 58, 1897, 7)
Two weeks ago I spoke in the tent on Sabbath and Sunday. I also spoke last Sabbath and Sunday. The tent was well filled with interested listeners. I have an appointment for next Sabbath and Sunday.
(12LtMs, Lt 58, 1897, 8)
It now becomes necessary to build a house of worship for the Stanmore believers. This will serve also for the Sabbathkeepers in Newtown, who now meet in a hall. We see that the land is going to cost us as much as the meetinghouse, £600. If this house could be erected now, the new believers would have a place where they could worship God according to the dictates of their own conscience. Some of the most reliable families are now hanging in the balances, uncertain whether to obey the light and risk the consequences. We greatly desire that these souls shall venture everything for the truth’s sake.
(12LtMs, Lt 58, 1897, 9)
We now purpose to arise and build, and if any of our people can donate something toward this object, we shall be very thankful to God. We want the standard raised very near Sydney. We desire that the last message of mercy shall be sounded in these suburbs. We ask if there are any who will [come] up to the help of the Lord, to the help of the Lord against the mighty power of darkness.
(12LtMs, Lt 58, 1897, 10)
Every device possible is being set in operation to hinder the work, but those newly come to the faith move right forward, and say what they will do. Some have already pledged £10 and others £5, and as yet no pledges have been asked. It is a great undertaking. Brother Shannon, a builder in Sydney, says that he will be responsible for half the brick. He says that it is nearly as cheap to build with brick as with wood. The matter of location is being discussed. There are some beautiful places there, if the price is not too high. We are praying and waiting and watching. We expect to arise and build, for there is nothing else we can do; and may the Lord help us, is my most earnest prayer. If any of you can help us, do so, and the Lord will bless you.
(12LtMs, Lt 58, 1897, 11)
In much love.
(12LtMs, Lt 58, 1897, 12)
Lt 59, 1897
Hare, Brother; Hughes, Brother September 9, 1897 Missing.
Lt 60, 1897
Hickox, Brother and Sister Stanmore, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia October 25, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother and Sister Hickox:
Your letter is just received. I thank the Lord that His Holy Spirit is working with you both. I reach my hand, my brother and my sister, to clasp your hand, and express my joy that the Lord has wrought in you contrition of soul. He loves you both, and will accept your repentance. I will lay your letter before my ministering brethren, and then we will seek the Lord in this matter, and act in accordance with the light given. Go forward in the name of the Lord from victory to victory. I am so glad that self is not to master you to your ruin. The Lord will work you by His Holy Spirit.
(12LtMs, Lt 60, 1897, 1)
Brother and Sister Hickox, I have much that I would be pleased to say to you, but you are far away, and I am scarcely able to use the pen. You have surrendered your will to God; continue the surrender, for you will find that self will battle for the supremacy. And if God calls you, as Elijah did Elisha, to leave the yoke of oxen while plowing in the field, be ready to understand the message. Now that you have turned your face unto the Lord, you can in earnestness say, “Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?” [Acts 9:6.] Labor now to be approved unto God. Keep the eye single to His glory.
(12LtMs, Lt 60, 1897, 2)
Only when self is crucified, and all things are done with an eye single to the glory of God, will you be safe. His claims, His homage, extend to the words, to the actions. The inward working of the Spirit of God will work outward. The words are to be considered before they are spoken. The spirit that moves to action will subdue everything unto the mind of Christ. As we are to give an account of all the deeds done in the body, the human agent is placed under a wonderful responsibility.
(12LtMs, Lt 60, 1897, 3)
In proportion as the Word of God is honestly entertained and obeyed, and becomes the governing law of your lives, will it impress with its potency and touch with its power every spring of action, every phase of character. We are to be engaged in elevating and purifying that part of our nature which constitutes us sons and daughters of God. In the great work of overcoming, the mind is to co-operate with God in fitting the human agent to do the highest service for Him. Your passions will need to be subdued every day.
(12LtMs, Lt 60, 1897, 4)
If you will follow Jesus, the Lord will manifest Himself to you in the very position you are now in. While seeking to free yourself from your present entanglements, you should increase your own powers, as a sacred duty you owe to God. Learn of the One who is meek and lowly of heart, and by diligence and fidelity in the work you are now doing, you will increase your capabilities of work, of happiness, of usefulness. Your influence is a sacred gift. It is not to be weakened, to become sickly and dwarfed. Bind it up with God, and it will not be misapplied. Influence is a talent. Your voice is a talent. Your intellect is a talent, and all these qualifications are in no case to be squandered. They cannot be misapplied without robbing God. Every talent should be consecrated and improved to the uttermost. But your passions must be conquered through the grace of God, or you will never overcome.
(12LtMs, Lt 60, 1897, 5)
Will not God judge the world in righteousness, and with a rigorous impartiality demand that His own entrusted talents be rendered back to Him with usury? We are not to venture to waste our Lord’s goods. We are to keep ever before us the words of God, “Ye are not your own; for ye are bought with a price: therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit, which are God’s.” [1 Corinthians 6:19, 20.]
(12LtMs, Lt 60, 1897, 6)
We are having a successful meeting here in Sydney. We feel constrained by the Spirit of God to urge every one to dig deep, and lay their foundation sure, to teach, by precept and example, temperance in all things, to endow the hours with such a sanctity that it will be regarded as a sin to waste them. My heart goes out for the young men and women who waste so many precious minutes and hours in indolence and apathy. Every hour of probation granted is God’s gift, to improve as He shall direct, that you may give back to God all His gifts with additions.
(12LtMs, Lt 60, 1897, 7)
“In all things showing thyself a pattern of good works: in doctrine showing uncorruptness, gravity, sincerity, sound speech that cannot be condemned; that he that is of the contrary part may be ashamed having no evil thing to say of you. Exhort servants to be obedient unto their own masters, and to please them well in all things: not answering again; not purloining, but showing all good fidelity; that they may adorn the doctrine of God our Saviour in all things. For the grace of God which bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men, teaching us that denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should live soberly, righteously and godly, in this present world; looking for that blessed hope, and the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ: who gave himself for us, that he might redeem us from all iniquity, and purify unto himself a peculiar people, zealous of good works. These things speak, and exhort, and rebuke with all authority. Let no man despise thee.” [Titus 2:7-15.]
(12LtMs, Lt 60, 1897, 8)
My brother, the words spoken to Nicodemus come sounding down along the line to our time, and they come to you, “Ye must be born again.”“Verily, verily, I say unto you, Except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God.” [John 3:7, 3.] The Lord said of Saul, “And the Lord gave Saul another heart.” [1 Samuel 10:9.] The Lord looketh upon the heart.
(12LtMs, Lt 60, 1897, 9)
“But God forbid that I should glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom the world is crucified unto me, and I unto the world. For in Christ neither circumcision availeth anything, nor uncircumcision, but a new creature. And as many as walk according to this rule, peace be on them, and mercy, and upon the Israel of God.” [Galatians 6:14-16.] The Lord expects that those who accept so great and important a truth shall themselves be sanctified through the truth. My brother, the Lord is soon to come, and I tremble for you, because you have not been sanctified through the truth. Do not look to the imperfections of your brethren and flatter yourself that they are as faulty as you. God has not given them to you for you to copy their imperfections.
(12LtMs, Lt 60, 1897, 10)
As laborers together with God, you are to give a representation in your own character of the character of Jesus Christ. “Take my yoke upon you and learn of me,” said the great Teacher, “for I am meek and lowly of heart, and ye shall find rest unto your souls; for my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.” [Matthew 11:29, 30.] You are to be a representation of Christ. All sin, all hasty, untempered speech is a misrepresentation of His character. If God’s ministers were humble men; if their lives were hid with Christ in God, the Lord Jesus would appear in their words and actions glorified.
(12LtMs, Lt 60, 1897, 11)
Lt 61, 1897
Hickox, Brother and Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia April 12, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother and Sister Hickox:
I felt very sorry when I learned that you had left Melbourne. I would have been so glad could I have had the privilege of seeing you both. I have been desirous of seeing you. I was sorry when I learned that you had left without speaking with Brother Daniells. It was your privilege to speak with him frankly, as one Christian brother would speak with another. You were running behind, but you are not the first one who has been caught in this snare of Satan, and he would lead you into serious difficulty. But you need not have felt that you would be crowded to the wall on that account. I have written frankly to Brethren Daniells and Farnsworth in reference to your case. I feel very much grieved over the way matters have been managed.
(12LtMs, Lt 61, 1897, 1)
When I heard that you were in New Zealand, I thought in a moment, This is the Lord’s work to bring him into a position where he can work in connection with Brethren Crothers, Farnsworth and other experienced laborers in Christchurch. I consider that our brethren have made a mistake. I did not feel just satisfied with your leaving the work of the ministry to canvas; but then I considered the light that had been given that doors would be opened for those in the canvassing field to see the necessities of the different parts of the field. I thought also that it would be a change for you. But my brother, my sister, I am more sorry than I can express that your brethren in New Zealand did not connect you with them in the work. This they should have done. But let not this prove a temptation to you.
(12LtMs, Lt 61, 1897, 2)
There are some things in your character that must be changed. You need to cultivate the grace of humility. You are very strong in your own way, and you will not take caution and reproof, or keep quiet when your fellow laborer, without any suggestion to you, states his ideas. If they do not agree with your ideas, you act as if he were making a drive at you. You hurt yourself by being stirred up over the matter thus. You must learn to yoke up with your brethren and counsel with them. This independence, and the harm it does you in your influence with your brethren, must be seen by you in its true light.
(12LtMs, Lt 61, 1897, 3)
You must not feel so ready to question and oppose the ideas of your brethren with whom you labor. Every time you give way to the impulse of you natural feelings, you are opening the door for the enemy to come in and control your mind and your judgment. Can you not see that you thus make trial for yourself? You set yourself up to be the authority, to be first. A change must take place in your character.
(12LtMs, Lt 61, 1897, 4)
You must not feel that you are above your brethren. You injure the cause of God, and the impression [is] left upon minds that there is no unity, and that the truth we cherish does not make us wise as serpents and harmless as doves. Your feelings will flash out sometimes unexpectedly, and you injure your soul, you hurt the heart of Christ, you give a wrong impression to the minds of those who are in any connection with you. Can you say with the apostle, “For me to live is Christ”? [Philippians 1:21.] That is, Christ is the Author of your spiritual life. His grace is the support of that life, and Christ’s glory the great object for which you are laboring. These words possess a depth of meaning which is the mystery of godliness, better experienced than explained.
(12LtMs, Lt 61, 1897, 5)
“For me to live is Christ.” It is not Paul who is to make himself a center, it is Christ revealed in Paul, with all the graces of the Holy Spirit. Let Christ appear. “I live, yet not I; but Christ liveth in me.” [Galatians 2:20.] When this is the case, the natural temper and attributes of the man will not be ready to spring forth at a word or sentiment advanced. “For me to live is Christ.” I am a Christian. Whatever life, time, and strength I have is Christ’s.
(12LtMs, Lt 61, 1897, 6)
There is a work that you can unitedly do for the Master; but both of you must be willing to bear contradiction, as did your Master, against yourself. Learn in the school of Christ His meekness and lowliness of heart. He is your Pattern. You are both of high temper; but if this temper is molded after the divine Spirit, it will not be your hindrance, your stumbling stone. Is Christ your life? Are your selfish traits of character cut away from your life? Is it His glory alone that is revealed in you and shining in you? Are the bright beams of the Sun of Righteousness mellowing your whole heart, bringing your whole spirit, soul, and body into subjection to Jesus Christ? Have you been quickened together with Christ? Do you realize that you are obtaining the mastery at all times, and under all circumstances in your home life? “For me to live is Christ.” [Philippians 1:21.] Are you representing Him in your forbearance, in your patience, in your true Christian courtesy and your tenderness? Are you learning to be like Jesus?
(12LtMs, Lt 61, 1897, 7)
My brother, you must bear the chisel and the hammer in the workshop of God. When the rough and unseemly traits are cut and hewed away with the ax and the chisel, then will come the polishing, until your character shines forth as a living stone that emits light. Your words, your voice, your attitude, your deportment, my brother and sister, must be mellowed in your connection with each other. Let your home life be your lesson book. Keep back every hasty, careless, hurtful word. There must be no revealing of the masterly spirit in your home. You leave self to take care of self too much. Unless you control self, you will experience a molding and fashioning that will not make you companionable.
(12LtMs, Lt 61, 1897, 8)
Your condition is hopeless so far as anything you can do or accomplish for yourself. You may both have impulses that are indeed good; but when test or trial comes, you reveal that there is an unsubdued self ready to spring to life and burst forth in a vehement manner. Bear in mind that it is the heart that needs to be melted over, changed, transformed by the grace of Christ. It is the spiritual life that is needed. “A new heart,” says Christ, “will I give you.” [Ezekiel 36:26.] The beauties of holiness must appear. Self must be crucified. Christ must live in your lives. Satan is the destroyer of Christlike virtues; Christ is the Restorer.
(12LtMs, Lt 61, 1897, 9)
What means has God appointed for you to accomplish the work of grace in your heart? It is a vital union of your soul with the life of Christ. The sinner must have a constant connection with Christ; he must receive the divine life that flows from his life in words, in spirit, and in works. “As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself except it abide in the vine; no more can ye except ye abide in me.” [John 15:4.] Mark and fathom the meaning of the words, “Except ye abide in me.” It amounts to nothing to act as a Christian occasionally. It is not so much great talents that are needed as humble men who will live by earnest prayer and living faith, and thus advance the cause of their Redeemer. There is great need of humble men, not self-sufficient men. We have enough of these. But men are needed who will rely wholly upon God, who are made “a spectacle unto the world, to angels, and to men.” [1 Corinthians 4:9.]
(12LtMs, Lt 61, 1897, 10)
Now my brother and sister, I want you to live Christ, rejoicing in His unsearchable riches. Yoke up with your brethren, harmonize with them, and do not feel that the work of harmonizing is wholly on the side of your fellow laborer. You need Christ Jesus every hour to make you a savor of life unto life, a fragrant life full of perfume and holiness and grace. That impetuous disposition is always doing you and others harm. Wherever you have hurt your brethren by being impetuous and self-sufficient, I would ask you to take it all away. Confess your defects; confess the injury done to your brother, and then walk humbly and safely before God. He has a work for you to do, but He will not accept the divided heart. The grace of Christ will transform the character so that it will bear any test and trial, and stand in the consciousness that Christ is the Redeemer and sin pardoning Saviour.
(12LtMs, Lt 61, 1897, 11)
Dear brother, dear sister, the Lord wants you to labor for Him in His way, and not in your own way. The question is, Will you become vessels consecrated to the Master’s use? Then your work will be accepted. Study the Word patiently and humbly. The less of self you make to appear, the more will Jesus be magnified. We plead with you to seek the Lord. Make no rash movements, but place yourself where the Lord can use you. Then you will not long be pressed with debt.
(12LtMs, Lt 61, 1897, 12)
In love.
(12LtMs, Lt 61, 1897, 13)
Lt 62, 1897
Hickox, Br-Sr. Refiled as Lt 30, 1896.
Lt 63, 1897
Hickox, Brother and Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia September 7, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in AH 392; CS 256. Dear Brother and Sister Hickox:
I feel tender sympathy for you, and I am praying that you may see matters in a correct light. You must see that one should not manage his affairs in a way that will incur debt. In this country we are on missionary ground, and economy must be practiced on all sides. When one becomes involved in debt, he is in one of Satan’s nets, which he sets for souls. Neither you nor any other must become involved, because the limited treasury will not admit of this. The dearth of means has compelled men and women to suspend their labors; there has been no money to handle. At present there is but one minister in all New South Wales, in Sydney and the suburbs. There was no means to pay other workers. You must see that when men subtract from the treasury before they have earned it, this counts as so much less to support laborers.
(12LtMs, Lt 63, 1897, 1)
I know, for I have tried it, that if we dedicate ourselves, soul, body, and spirit, to God, we will walk carefully before Him. Abstracting and using money for any purpose, before it is used, is a snare. In this way the resources are limited, so that laborers cannot do missionary work. I wish both yourself and Sister Hickox to consider all sides of this question. I talk with you as I would talk with my own son. You must not give place to the devil. Tell me, how much nearer are you to the settlement of your debts? Is the prospect so flattering that you feel it the best thing you can do to continue in the business in which you are now engaged? If the enemy can lead others to go over the same ground, to leave the work and field altogether, it will be a sorry feature in their experience.
(12LtMs, Lt 63, 1897, 2)
Does not the Lord say to you, What doest thou here, Elijah? [1 Kings 19:9.] Who sent you on this journey? I flattered myself that you would unite with Brother Farnsworth in Christchurch, but the enemy has worked his cards so that is shall not be. Suppose others should pursue the same course, and while they bring no means into the treasury, call for means from it? You see that the work of God would be crippled, and would finally become bankrupt. When a man sees that he is not successful, why does he not betake himself to prayer, or change his work.
(12LtMs, Lt 63, 1897, 3)
There are stormy times before us, and the Lord will accept all who can co-operate with Him. Practice self-denial and self-sacrifice. Consider every movement carefully and prayerfully. Walk softly before the Lord. We must preserve a devotedness to God and make straight paths for our feet, lest the lame be turned out of the way. We want none of our laborers to stumble in their walk.
(12LtMs, Lt 63, 1897, 4)
The time in which we can work is short; the night is at hand, when no man can work. Then look carefully, that you take no course in pride and stubbornness that will separate you from God. We pray for you, and I ask you to tell me just how you stand, what you mean to do, and what is the prospect of your engaging in the work. Have you not been losing ground? The Lord help you, my brother, is my prayer, to seek wisdom from God, to be emptied of self, that the Spirit of God may take possession of your heart.
(12LtMs, Lt 63, 1897, 5)
I am interested in you.
(12LtMs, Lt 63, 1897, 6)
In love.
(12LtMs, Lt 63, 1897, 7)
Lt 64, 1897
Hickox, Brother and Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia September 3, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in CTr 169. + Dear Brother and Sister Hickox:
I have words for you. When tried and tempted, why did you not, in the fear of God, carefully consider every step of the way that you have travelled over? Why did you not look on both sides of the question? Why did you not see and severely criticize your own course of action as readily as you have criticized that of your brethren? You have moved unwisely.
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 1)
Some things have been presented before me of which I have not spoken to you or any one. The situation you are in is largely of your own creating. You have no one to blame but yourselves. Your brethren in New Zealand might have helped you to help yourself, but it would not have been in the line of canvassing. You have large temptations. Your supposed obligation to help your relatives in California is not your duty under the circumstances, and would be the very worst move you could make for them. The cause and work of God is your first and highest consideration.
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 2)
There are causes which I have recently had presented before me that leads me to write those words to you. I have withheld them lest, in your tempted condition, Satan would misinterpret them. One case I have had presented before me, just at this time, that has made it necessary for me to write upon some points that I dared not withhold from him. His name I will not now give, but he has brought himself and family into most distressing circumstances through his business management in book canvassing.
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 3)
He has run up a debt of £250 at office, he has borrowed money of men not of our faith, and also of men and women of our faith, until he is in a position where he could be tried in courts of justice if the ones he has drawn money from were to use their influence in this way. It may still be done. We do not know how the case will turn.
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 4)
This man is an intelligent and able speaker. He has done excellently in canvassing for petitions that the name of God shall not be put in the constitution. He has talents, but when he is in business, or handling money in any line, the man seems to have the devil right at his elbow. He is now in a most pitiful situation; but what can be done? He thinks the tract and missionary workers are hard upon him. He says Brother Daniells is kind and considerate, but this is only his opinion.
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 5)
Brother Daniells has lent him money to help him out of difficulty. Now whose money is Elder Daniells handling? It is not his own. What is his position? It is that of a faithful steward of the means over which he has supervision. When men in the canvassing work get into difficulties, they expect that money is to be drawn from the treasury to help them out, only to get into straightened places again, and again to require help.
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 6)
Thus it has been in the case of the man I am writing about. The reproach this man has brought upon the cause is not small; yet he feels very bad that he is not helped more. These experiences brought upon the men who are stewards of the means in the treasury, make it necessary for them to keep a sharp look out to see the supply is not exhausted by these drafts made upon it. When men cannot by canvassing bring every dollar of money into the treasury that belongs rightly to it, let them act like sensible men and stop right where they are until they can be sure that they can work in the canvassing line, that they can bring means into the treasury in the place of robbing it.
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 7)
I write these things to you that you may not murmur and complain and consider yourself hardly used. In their dealing with you, your brethren in New Zealand have made a mistake in not giving you a chance in some line of work when you asked for it; but when they afterward graciously tried to help you, did you treat their efforts kindly and respectfully? Were you willing to be helped? Have you humbled your heart before God? Have you not rather, through your own course of action, brought unnecessary burden and perplexity upon those who were stewards in trust of the Lord’s goods?
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 8)
My brother, you are walking away from the light and placing yourself in a position that will not recommend you to the confidence of your brethren, as a man walking and working under the supervision of the Master, Jesus Christ. He never leads men in the track you have been traveling. If you had put away your pride, and humbled your heart before God, He would have helped you out of all your difficulties. But will the experience you have had qualify you to stand as a representative man before the people? Are you not disqualifying yourself to be trusted, to be depended upon?
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 9)
When Elisha followed Elijah, and traveled with him, he was first given the position of a servant; he had to perform [the] humble duty of pouring water on the hands of Elijah. Yet he kept at the humble work until the last journey. There it was to be revealed to him that Elijah was to be translated. Called as Elisha was from the twelve yoke of oxen and the plough, he followed Elijah without complaint, leaving a wealthy home where he was beloved, to attend the prophet in his uncertain life. He willingly fulfilled the very humblest duties. His connection with Elijah revealed that he had traits of character that would endure test and trial, that he was a valuable young man with precious traits of character. Trials and temptations he had in abundance, but he relied upon God in trying emergencies. His circumstances of wealth and comfort were a temptation. In his home he was fully capable of ruling, but in the service of Elijah he must obtain an experience, he must learn how to serve under a ruler, that he might learn to serve God.
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 10)
Many errors are entertained by men in their vocations. They overestimate their capabilities, and in test and trial reveal that they need a different kind of experience than they have had in order to be a laborer together with Christ. The men who do not see their need of serving God in little things, doing humble work, give unmistakable evidence that they are not fitted to serve in larger things. In overlooking the humble service as non-essential, they bear testimony that they cannot be trusted with larger responsibilities.
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 11)
The idea which prevails in some minds, and which it is difficult to change, an idea which they have permitted to be unconsciously woven into their experience, is that a certain position of gentility and dignity must be maintained else their influence will be marred in their work of preaching. But when these learn to minister, they will know that humble, active service means to interest themselves in the duties of everyday life, and [to] obtain the education essential to do the ordinary duties of life in any small vocation—it may be in tilling the soil, in following the plough, in sowing or in reaping. Service to God means work in different lines. It is not merely to study and contemplate and preach, and allow the hands to remain idle. That religion is spurious which does not reveal itself in labor in Christ’s lines.
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 12)
There is to be no neglect or low estimate of the humble every day duties of life. True conversion to God will act as leaven in every phase of duty in the relationships of life. Then if the Lord sees us faithful in that which is least, diligent and persevering in the use of our physical powers, doing with our hands that which some one must do, He will say, “Come up higher. You may be entrusted with greater responsibilities.” You are to be an educator of the youth who have perverted ideas of the religion of usefulness and duty. They fail to learn the ennobling lessons that will make a man an all-round character in the sight of God, and to be just as useful in the field, in planting, in sowing, in harvesting, in the various duties of the home guard, as in the field of conflict. Such characters will be qualified to discern the deep, hidden treasures of the Word of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 13)
You have shown yourself willing to do the humble duties, which many men who have entered the ministry do not take in and practice. But there is one thing that you have not learned. You cannot bear one word of reproof or question in regard to your course of action. You have had a self-sufficiency, an egotism, and a will of your own. You desire to have your own way whatever course you choose to pursue. In your scholastic life you have made the atmosphere around your soul offensive to your companions. The Lord has permitted circumstances to occur to reveal to you the imperfections of your character. You have yet to learn the humiliating lessons of submission and service, as Elisha served Elijah. You have been headstrong, you have been willful, you have not been submissive. You have brought trouble upon yourself, and have placed yourself in circumstances where, if you will, you may learn the lesson that it is a terrible punishment to any man or women to have their own way, and choose their own course of action.
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 14)
It has recently been presented to me that until your heart is transformed by the grace of God in this respect, you will work against great odds. If your will is crossed, you do not respect the person of age or position. There is a sort of determined resistance on your part. Moses was educated of God to know that he was the one who through the power of God was to deliver the nation of the Hebrews. But he began in a rash way, and this drove him from Egypt. He dwelt in Midian forty years before the Lord entrusted him with his work as leader of Israel. When you, my brother, will learn your lessons at the feet of Jesus, and serve there, you will be much better prepared to do the work essential for this time.
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 15)
I purposed to write you a letter of invitation, and help you both to attend our camp meetings in Sydney and in Melbourne. But the things I now write you have been opened before me, and the Word of the Lord says you are not ready to work in the ministry. Until you shall humble your heart before God, and cease your murmurings and reflections, you would prove a hindrance and not a help. When you are willing to obey God, when your mind is prepared to see and understand that it is your own mistakes that have involved you in difficulty, when your headstrong spirit is subdued by the Spirit of God, then your services will be a savor of life unto life, and not of death unto death. You need and must have a dying to self. You need to humble yourself before God. If your ideas and opinions are crossed, you must not break out like a roaring lion. You have not manifested the meekness and lowliness of Christ, but a harsh untamable spirit which God will not permit to be exercised in His cause and in His work, for you put Christ to open shame by your rudeness and disrespect.
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 16)
These things you must see. These things you must understand. If Christ is enthroned in your heart, you will never manifest that impetuosity of spirit which is a trait in your character, and which will, if indulged, surely close the gates of the city of God against you.
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 17)
The same message is applicable to your wife. Do you ask what will be your future, what work or trial awaits you? I do not know; but this I know that there is a work for you to do for yourself in the name of Jesus and by His grace. And “when thou art converted, strengthen thy brethren.” [Luke 22:32.] When self and all wickedness of spirit dies, there is a work you may do for the Lord.
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 18)
It is a trait of your character to consider your self fully sufficient for any work. It is not a necessity that you should minister in Word or doctrine. But if you will ask the Lord, and be converted; if you will of your own spiritual choice be free and joyous in God; if with gladsome consent of the heart to His gracious call, you come wearing the yoke of Christ, which is that of obedience and service, all your difficulties will be removed, all your murmurings will be stilled, and the many questions that may arise will be solved. You are to learn of Christ and work in His spirit. If your hearts delight not in the Lord, if His ways are not pleasantness and peace, then you want to seek for the first element in genuine religion which is a converted heart, a transformed character. If you will accept this message in simple faith, and act upon it, you will find that many of your ideas and fears and suppositions are groundless. There is need of seeking the Lord right where you are. You have been in danger.
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 19)
I would be glad to meet you any time when you can return with that preparedness for the work that will qualify you to be a co-laborer with Christ. I feel the tenderest sympathy for you, and greatly desire that you shall obtain that advanced experience that is of highest value with God. The Lord has chosen young men to engage with the more experienced to carry forward His work. “I write unto you, young men, because ye are strong, and the word of God abideth in you.” And what is the result of the abiding of the Word of God in these youthful disciples? “Ye have overcome the wicked one.” [1 John 2:14.] God calls young men and young women to His standard to fight manfully for Him the battles of the Lord. But the most earnest warfare must first be against self. A Christian has no excuse for being as masterful and strong in his own way as you have been all your lifetime when not agreed with or treated as an equal or a superior.
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 20)
“I will go in the strength of the Lord God: I will make mention of thy righteousness, even of thine only. O God, thou hast taught me from my youth: and hitherto have I declared thy wondrous works. Now also when I am old and greyheaded, O God, forsake me not; until I have shewed thy strength unto this generation, and thy power to every one that is come. Thy righteousness also, O God, is very high, who hast done great things: O God, who is like unto thee! Thou, which hast showed me great and sore troubles, shalt quicken me again, and shalt bring me up again from the depths of the earth.” [Psalm 71:16-20.]
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 21)
David had once been young, and now was old. His work was almost done. Yet he said, “My lips shall greatly rejoice when I sing unto thee; and my soul, which thou hast redeemed. My tongue also shall talk of thy righteousness all the day long: for they are confounded, for they are brought unto shame, that seek my hurt.” [Verses 23, 24.] Young men have a great work to do, but they should always benefit by the counsel of old men of experience. Men of experience have a cheerful, victorious testimony to bear in regard to the faithfulness of the Lord. David served his generation, and he has given to the generations to come his own experience—his failures, in that he departed from the way of the Lord, and his clear, valuable experience when he called to mind the instruction received of God while he was a careful shepherd of the flocks.
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 22)
My brother and sister, you are making history for the present and the future. The Lord will teach every one who will be taught, everyone who will not become offended with God, and would teach Him, and feels that he could instruct the Lord in better methods of managing. The Lord will teach all the precious truths of His Word to those who will be taught and will be doers of the Word. Then he will engage in the good works to which God would have him dedicate his life.
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 23)
The Lord God of heaven is your Instructor. He will choose His own agents of they will be taught of Him. All that has been done only shows us that much remains to be done. God opens young eyes to see that which enfolds itself in the great roll of the transactions of life. He Himself gives the new thoughts, suggests the new enterprises which stir the soul to action. He calls for service from young men whose natures are receptive, and who are strong in hope and courage, who are self-sacrificing, strong to will, and apt to devise and plan and execute. The Lord gives the plans by which they are to work. Since this is so, how careful should we all be to inquire, “Is this the way of the Lord?” The Lord God of heaven will lead and guide and teach you if you will not be self-confident and presumptuous. He will open ways for you.
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 24)
I greatly desire that you shall humble your hearts before God, and seek Him with the whole heart. You must not let Satan take your crown. Sound words must be brought into actual contact with your life practice, leading to right and correct actions. You must feel the curbing power of the truth upon your impulses and actions, or you will become self-conceited and will follow your own impulses. Cast not aside the divine scheme that God would bring into your life. If you refuse the work of guidance and obedience and control, you will never be purified, never become like Christ. You are to obtain your training for heaven through faithfully doing your appointed work. If you do not heed the voice and instructions of God, He cannot use you.
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 25)
God will make of you a vessel unto honor if you will submit to be molded and fashioned after His divine model. Your own ways, your own natural, impetuous temperament may refuse to submit to the discipline of God. If so, that ends the matter. The Lord will not be dictated to. God forbid that you should become sour and coarse under your training. The Lord will accept you, and work with you, if you will humble your hearts before Him. You have made mistakes, but these are not of a hopeless character if you will see and repent of them before God.
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 26)
I ask you, Will you become a wiser and better man, a stronger man because you have made mistakes and know that you have done this? Brother, brother, the Lord looks pityingly upon you. You may both be conquerors, even if you never engage in the ministry again. You can engage in the common life work, doing your daily duties in obedience to the will of Christ, in faithfulness and simplicity, as cheerful, patient toilers. But if you decide to become a watchman upon the walls of Zion, then you must decide to watch carefully your own spirit. Watch and pray and work.
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 27)
Individual work is to be done in consecration to God. You must be prepared to receive the blessing from God, to drink of the living streams yourselves. And the rich blessings received will be within you like a well of water, springing up into everlasting life. God hath prepared a kingdom for you; He is building for us a city. And while He is building mansions for us, we must build our character after the divine similitude. There must be no pride, no self-esteem, no self-exaltation. Everything you do in the service of God must be in no half-hearted manner, but divinely done. With you both your personal influence may be devised and planned by the Lord that you may save souls to His glory.
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 28)
As the world’s Redeemer apparent failure was constantly confronting Christ. From His birth He contended with poverty. He, the Majesty of heaven, the messenger of mercy to our world, in His own estimation seemed to do so little of that work which He longed to do in uplifting and saving because of the satanic influences that were working in minds and hearts of priests and rulers to oppose His way. “Ye will not come unto me,” He said, “that ye might have life.” [John 5:40.] “O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, that killest the prophets and stonest them that are sent unto thee; how often would I have gathered thy children together as a hen gathereth her brood under her wings, and ye (could not? no) would not.” [Luke 13:34.]
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 29)
Here lies the key to the whole mystery of the impenitence and wickedness and great apostasy of the Jewish nation in Christ’s day, and of the Protestant churches in our day—“Ye would not.” But His lessons are given to us. If you are poor, if you pass through straitened places, Christ also had this experience. He worked at the carpenter’s trade. Many discouraging features pressed His human efforts into hard lines; but He would not fail nor be discouraged, till He had set righteousness in the earth. He did His work with patience and never gave up.
(12LtMs, Lt 64, 1897, 30)
Lt 65, 1897
Hawkins, Brother and Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia April 6, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 3SM 349-350; 1MR 56. Dear Brother and Sister Hawkins:
I am much grieved in spirit because of the turn things have taken. I am sorry that the testimony and influence of Brother and Sister McCullagh should be so readily received, and that you should, without the most careful investigation and without learning from the persons they accuse their side of the question, receive their version of things. Why should you become unsettled and uprooted, drifting on a sea of uncertainty, without knowing yourselves whether these things are so? I know that the Lord has been giving you light. The Holy Spirit has been leading you into greater light. But Brother McCullagh has represented things as he imagines them to be, in a false, strange light. And he has worked with such earnest secrecy, and with such apparent honesty, to sow the seeds of mistrust and unbelief in the truth, and to tear down the very foundations of our faith, that you have become confused.
(12LtMs, Lt 65, 1897, 1)
O my brother, if you consider, cannot you see that if your present position is correct, all your experience before and during the Adelaide camp meeting was a deception. Can you not reason from a higher standpoint? The Lord would have us use the intelligence He has given us. Up to that time, you were seeking light, and the Lord was giving you light from the Scriptures. You were walking in the light, not in accordance with human theories, but in accordance with the Word of the living God. Was the experience gained during the Adelaide camp meeting an idle tale, to be set aside because of the much talking of a man whom you must see has cherished his personal feelings because he imagines himself to have been injured? Supposing that all his imaginings were correct, does that outweigh the evidence that the Lord has given you in regard to what is truth?
(12LtMs, Lt 65, 1897, 2)
My brother, do not make light of the third angel’s message, for it is the God-given message for this time. The message the Lord has for His people is the proclamation of the angels flying in the midst of heaven. “And I saw another angel flying in the midst of heaven, having the everlasting gospel to preach to them that dwell on the earth, unto every nation, and kindred, and tongue, and people, saying with a loud voice, Fear God, and give glory to him; for the hour of his judgment is come; and worship him that made heaven, and earth, and the sea, and the fountains of waters.
(12LtMs, Lt 65, 1897, 3)
“And there followed another angel, saying, Babylon is fallen, is fallen, that great city, because she made all nations drink of the wine of the wrath of her fornication. And the third angel followed them, saying with a loud voice, If any man worship the beast and his image, and receive his mark in his forehead or in his hand, the same shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God, which is poured out without mixture into the cup of his indignation.... Here is the patience of the saints; here are they that keep the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus.” [Revelation 14:6-10, 12.] These messages are connected and bound together. One cannot be carried without the other.
(12LtMs, Lt 65, 1897, 4)
There is spurious sanctification and spurious holiness, but true holiness is wholeness in the service of God. All the requirements of God are blended in the two, loving God supremely, and showing that love by keeping His commandments, and loving our neighbor as ourselves. There is no possibility of separating these two. This is the whole duty of man, but O, how broad are the principles here involved! They reach to the throne of Jehovah, honoring the law of His government and to the very remotest bounds of the earth, embracing all humanity.
(12LtMs, Lt 65, 1897, 5)
Self must not struggle for supremacy. Self is the greatest enemy with which we have to contend. But obedience to all the commandments of God gives self the proper recognition, for we are to estimate ourselves as the property of Jesus Christ, proportionate in value to the infinite price paid for us, while God and His law are made supreme. And the golden chain, reaching from the throne of God, binds up by obedience every man with God through Jesus Christ who gave His life for fallen man. This constitutes a perfect whole, and develops a healthy, symmetrical Christian character.
(12LtMs, Lt 65, 1897, 6)
I cannot write as largely now as I would to you, but bear this in mind, we are praying for you, that your faith fail not, that you shall not continue in an unsettled condition, but place your feet on solid rock, which is the commandments of God and the faith of Jesus.
(12LtMs, Lt 65, 1897, 7)
My brother, I send you a warning, because I have a love for your soul. “These things write I unto you, that ye sin not. And if any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous: and he is the propitiation for our sins: and not for ours only, but also for the sins of the whole world. And hereby we do know that we know him, if we keep his commandments. He that saith, I know him, and keepeth not his commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him. But whoso keepeth his word, in him verily is the love of God perfected: hereby know we that we are in him. He that saith he abideth in him, ought himself also so to walk, even as he walked. Brethren, I write no new commandment unto you, but an old commandment, which ye had from the beginning. The old commandment is the word which ye had from the beginning.” [1 John 2:1-7.]
(12LtMs, Lt 65, 1897, 8)
I have a commission from God to bear this testimony to you. We have the truth as it is in the Word of God, as it is in Jesus. I have passed over the ground carefully, step by step, and the Lord has opened His Word to me in such a beautiful way, and has in such a solemn way revealed the truth in my experience, that I know whereof I affirm. Those who disregard the light God has given in His Holy Word will lose heaven at last. How men can believe and advocate the truth, and testify that the power of the Holy Spirit is speaking to them, and then go away and deny their most holy aspirations, and the Spirit’s teaching, I cannot explain.
(12LtMs, Lt 65, 1897, 9)
I am so sorry that many fall into temptation and a snare, and into many foolish and hurtful lusts, because they do not place themselves, body, soul, and spirit, under the control of the Holy Spirit. How many fall away when they are on the very eve of the great day of God! How many are misled by demons, because they will not receive the message God sends them! They walk in the midnight of temptation. Which convictions shall we account trustworthy—the previous conviction, when the truth was believed and advocated, or the present conviction which leads directly contrary to the Word of God? Does the Holy Spirit lead in two ways, into truth and out of the truth? Does it lead to evil speaking, to accusing, to discord? Will it lead brethren to falsify, and to bear false witness of their brethren?
(12LtMs, Lt 65, 1897, 10)
I feel a deep interest in you, and a deep interest in your wife, because I know that Jesus loves you and has been leading you to the light, that you may proclaim with no uncertain voice the last message of mercy to be given to the world. Place yourself in the channel of light that comes directly from heaven, not in the channel of mist and fog and darkness. Can you regard the judgment of a man as safe, who, though he has had the grand truths of the Word of God to feed upon for many years, and has proclaimed the truth to thousands, will turn square about, and denounce his past faith, and work in an opposite direction? Cannot you well inquire, What spirit has led Brother McCullagh these many years if he has not been advocating the truth? Cannot you ask, What safety is there in trusting such an uncertain guide, although in denouncing his former faith he may claim to be led by the Spirit of God? Certainly, these are great considerations.
(12LtMs, Lt 65, 1897, 11)
By His Holy Spirit, the Lord has been leading you to see greater light in the truth of His Word. Satan comes in to counterwork the very work the Holy Spirit has been doing for you by striving to turn you away from the truth you have recently received. You have opened the chambers of your mind to let the light of heaven shine in; you have opened the door of your heart to welcome the heavenly Guest. Will the experience gained during the time you were searching for light be discarded, and the few weeks’ experience in the past, in connection with Brother McCullagh, warrant you to follow in the path in which he would lead you? His mind is filled with the spirit of the enemy; his voice utters his sentiments. He will lead you to darkness, and to dishonor God, if you let him interpret Scripture for you.
(12LtMs, Lt 65, 1897, 12)
Is not your soul of too much value to be thus trifled with? You are not your own; you are bought with a price. Brother McCullagh has set matters before you in the light of his own imagination, but can you not see that the Holy Spirit never works in this underhanded, secret, evil way? He has betrayed sacred trusts. He has no true light from heaven. He has kindled a fire and compassed himself about with sparks, and is walking in the sparks of his own kindling. “This shall ye have of mine hand; ye shall lie down in sorrow.” [Isaiah 50:11.]
(12LtMs, Lt 65, 1897, 13)
Do you think that the Lord’s Holy Spirit would work upon the mind of any man, causing him to mislead the church at Adelaide, to bring the members into a position of peril, and uproot their faith, while he abused the confidence his brethren had placed in him, thinking he would lead all the members to cut loose from the truth they had held sacred? Did Brother McCullagh think that by his influence he would uproot beyond remedy the faith of the people? Did he think that no efforts would be made to reclaim them? The Lord’s people lie very near His heart of love.
(12LtMs, Lt 65, 1897, 14)
If Brother McCullagh presented truth that he thought would stand the test, why has he done all this cruel work in secrecy? Why did he not come openly to his brethren, who loved him, and had confidence in him? If they had not had confidence in him, they would not have entrusted the work to his hands. Why did he and his wife work in an underhanded manner? Why did he wait till he thought he had created sufficient disaffection to make his case sure? Even those who have no confidence in the truth would condemn him as a traitor, and look upon him as a betrayer of sacred responsibilities. He has uprooted himself, and I am so sorry that he has caused those who know the facts, or will know them, keen soul-anguish. Anything that can now be done for him should be done, to bring him out of this fanaticism and delusion.
(12LtMs, Lt 65, 1897, 15)
Why did you not both, in an honest, straightforward way, lay the matter before Elder Daniells and Elder Colcord? Why did Elder McCullagh build himself up on false statements? If at any time he had come to me, or written to me, that he was in trouble in regard to any thing that I had done, or any thing that I had said, I could and would have helped him. But all the universe of heaven heard his tirade against me. His entire work stands revealed just as it is weighed in the balances of the sanctuary. He will meet it again. But is this the work that is to be expected from those who minister to the flock of God?
(12LtMs, Lt 65, 1897, 16)
There is not one vestige of the Holy Spirit’s working in this experience, which has led to such results. I have no controversy with Elder McCullagh. My life mission is before the world. It is not my work; it is the Lord’s work. I take no credit to myself, for the Lord will deliver me from the “strife of tongues.” [Psalm 31:20.] “By their fruits ye shall know them.” [Matthew 7:20.]
(12LtMs, Lt 65, 1897, 17)
We shall now have to meet and correct the falsehoods that have gone forth from Elder McCullagh and his wife, in order that our brethren may know from whence they come. I must know what he charges against them. To bring before the public a tirade against a woman is not a result of the working of the Holy Spirit, but an inspiration of the spirit of the enemy, to which we shall give no place. Shall we leave souls to drink in temptation because of misrepresentation? No, never; I would be an unfaithful steward did I do this. There now needs to be a true statement placed before the people; and then my work is done. I enter into no arguments, but I cannot allow the work of God, which has borne fruit that has been before the people during almost my whole lifetime, to be brushed away as a cobweb, by whom? A human being, subject to temptation, whom Satan is now sifting as wheat.
(12LtMs, Lt 65, 1897, 18)
If the knowledge and experience that Brother McCullagh has had in reference to my mission is not sufficient evidence, it is because the strongest evidence might be piled upon evidence, and it would not avail. It is not evidence that he wants; it is a new heart. Brother McCullagh has a work to do to undo what he has done. He will do it, or some one else will do it. Did he think that he could tear down that which God has built up? But Brother and Sister Hawkins, you have not had the experience in this work that he has had. The Lord has greatly blessed me in bearing to the people the message He has given me. I assure you that when Sister McCullagh is converted, there will be a different atmosphere in her home.
(12LtMs, Lt 65, 1897, 19)
I ask you, my brother, whom I love in the Lord, was it not your duty to present your difficulties before some of our brethren, if you would not before me? What fairness, uprightness, or straight-forwardness has been shown in Brother McCullagh’s rebellion? Can you admire such a spirit?
(12LtMs, Lt 65, 1897, 20)
Do not be hasty to join the delusion of the enemy. Be not fascinated by the alluring bait which the fallen angels may present. We have an aggressive warfare to fight now at every step. It is a hand to hand fight. O my brother, may the Lord put His everlasting arms beneath you. Let Him hold you. Let Him use you. Be not ensnared. God will lead you if you will be led.
(12LtMs, Lt 65, 1897, 21)
Here is a man, subject to Satan’s temptations, with strong and weak points of character. Can his word transform you, or can your word transform him? It is written, “Prove all things: hold fast that which is good.” [1 Thessalonians 5:21.] Assumption is not worth a straw, for it can be made to favor one’s own selfish ideas. To believe every spirit is to reach the place where we believe that nothing is trustworthy.
(12LtMs, Lt 65, 1897, 22)
Jesus has warned us that deceptive influences will exist. Deceiving and being deceived will go forward until the close of time. The natural tendency of man, unless corrected, will prevail, as in the case of Judas. It is the renewing of the mind that causes a transformation of character. There is spiritual blindness upon every soul in which Christ does not abide.
(12LtMs, Lt 65, 1897, 23)
“There hath no temptation taken you but such as is common to man; but God is faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above that ye are able; but will with the temptation also make a way to escape, that ye may be able to bear it.” [1 Corinthians 10:13.] Day by day a holy Watcher tries every man’s work. Each day the character of the man for that day is being imprinted upon the books of heaven. Just as the polished plates of the artist reveal our natural image, so the great Master Artist takes the imprint of every man’s character, and it stands revealed in the books of heaven. “By their fruits ye shall know them.” [Matthew 7:20.]
(12LtMs, Lt 65, 1897, 24)
What church is safe, what rules would be of any value, if all should pursue the course Brother McCullagh has taken? In his case there has been a most marked departure from the Word of God. He was employed to advance the truth that we as a people believe, and have put forth every effort to advance, a truth which has been presented in all parts of the world. Brother McCullagh knows the past history of our work, but he has not allowed himself to be worked by the Holy Spirit. He has taken himself out of the hands of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 65, 1897, 25)
We now call upon you, my brother, to yoke up with Christ. I know what is truth, because it has been revealed to me by the Word and by the Spirit of God. The Lord will accept you and your wife, whom I love in the Lord, if you will co-operate with the Lord Jesus and learn of Him. When those who have started out in a work similar to yours, have refused to be corrected, the Lord has left them and they have engaged in a work like that of Canright’s.
(12LtMs, Lt 65, 1897, 26)
We want you to return to the Lord. “Return, we beseech thee, O Lord of hosts: look down from heaven, and behold, and visit this vine; and the vineyard which thy right hand hath planted, and the branch that thou madest strong for thyself. It is burned with fire; it is cut down: they perish at the rebuke of thy countenance. Let thy hand be upon the man of thy right hand, upon the son of man whom thou madest strong for thyself. So will we not go back from thee; quicken us, and we will call upon thy name. Turn us again, O Lord God of hosts, cause thy face to shine, and we shall be saved.” [Psalm 80:14-19.] I hope and pray that the words of this Psalm may be the language of your hearts. We have a merciful God. “The Lord God is a sun and shield: the Lord will give grace and glory: no good thing will he withhold from them that walk uprightly.” [Psalm 84:11.]
(12LtMs, Lt 65, 1897, 27)
Lt 66, 1897
Henry, A. R. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia August 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 3SM 84; 7MR 300. + Brother A. R. Henry:
I would that I were upon the ground, that I might see you and talk with you. I have heard of your late movement. I am sorry for you, for you do not realize what spirit has been inspiring you to action. You cannot understand what is soon coming upon the earth. You cannot realize that every case is soon to come up in review before God.
(12LtMs, Lt 66, 1897, 1)
I have tried to do my duty to you and to the Lord Jesus, whom I serve and whose cause I love. The testimonies I have borne you have in truth been presented to me by the Lord. I am sorry that you have rejected the light given. Think you that the course you have taken is an evidence of your love for the cause of God? Had another done as you have done, would it not appear to you as a betrayal of sacred truth? Are you not giving evidence that you are not in vital connection with God? Those who unite with God’s chosen people must be pure, and made white, and tried.
(12LtMs, Lt 66, 1897, 2)
I have been writing on Christ’s warnings to His disciples, found in the twenty-fourth chapter of Matthew. The disciples asked Him, “Tell us when shall these things be, and what shall be the sign of thy coming, and of the end of the world?”“Take heed that no man deceive you,” Christ answered. [Verses 3, 4.] Then, after giving them a list of events that were to happen, He said, “Then shall they deliver you up to be afflicted, and shall kill you; and ye shall be hated of all nations for my name’s sake. And then shall many be offended, and shall betray one another, and shall hate one another.”“And many false prophets shall arise, and shall deceive many, and because iniquity shall abound, the love of many shall wax cold. But he that shall endure to the end, shall be saved.” [Verses 9-13.]
(12LtMs, Lt 66, 1897, 3)
What part are you acting in the scenes described by Christ? Are you betraying your Lord because in His great mercy He has shown you just where you are standing spiritually? He knows every purpose of the heart. Nothing is hid from Him. It is not me you are betraying. It is not me you are so embittered against. It is the Lord who has given me a message to bear to you. Your case is passing in review before God. In the courts of heaven, before the heavenly universe, your case will be investigated. Stop, I beg of you, just where you are. If it is me that you wish to injure, if the Lord permits, I am willing, though seventy years old, to go to America to stand trial. But I do not want you to do despite to the Spirit of God. I fear not the face of man. I know whom I serve.
(12LtMs, Lt 66, 1897, 4)
I know your peril, and I warn you off the ground where you are, for you are treading in the footsteps of Judas. I give you the words that the Lord has given me for you: “Repent and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out.” [Acts 3:19.] For your soul’s sake, I plead with you to seek the Lord. Do not pass beyond the boundary of mercy and light and hope.
(12LtMs, Lt 66, 1897, 5)
I tell you in the name of the Lord that God has a controversy with you, and not only with you, but with those who have been united with you in the work for years, who have departed from correct Bible principles. Again and again the Lord has sent warnings, pointing out wrongs. You among others have been reproved. God called for a decided reformation in the Office; for the spirit in which the work was done, the methods followed in your councils, were not in harmony with the principles of His Word. God will call you and others account for the transactions that have brought embarrassment upon His cause. The Lord has given counsel and warnings, but they were not heeded. With others, you have followed your own impulses. Had you stood firm to principles, the Lord would have prospered His work. O how many times you, with others, have grieved the heart of Christ. But it is not yet too late for you to repent and be transformed in character.
(12LtMs, Lt 66, 1897, 6)
“This charge I commit unto thee, son Timothy,” writes Paul, “according to the prophecies which went before on thee, that thou by them mightest war a good warfare; holding faith and a good conscience; which some having put away concerning faith have made shipwreck; of whom is Hymenaeus and Alexander; whom I have delivered unto Satan, that they may learn not to blaspheme.” [1 Timothy 1:18-20.] “Alexander the coppersmith did me much evil; the Lord reward him according to his works; of whom be thou ware also, for he hath greatly withstood our words. At my first answer no man stood with me, but all men forsook me: I pray God that it may not be laid to their charge.” [2 Timothy 4:14-16.]
(12LtMs, Lt 66, 1897, 7)
The Lord gives messages to those whom He well knows will not accept them, but will brace themselves against them, as though their wrong doings were just and right. But in proportion to the light that God gives, but which has been disregarded and virtually rejected, will be the darkness that will envelop the mind.
(12LtMs, Lt 66, 1897, 8)
Please read and study carefully the thirty-sixth chapter of Jeremiah. This has been presented to me as a warning from the Lord to those in Battle Creek. “And they went in to the king into the court, but they laid up the roll in the chamber of Elishama the scribe, and told all the words in the ears of the king. So the king sent Jehudi to fetch the roll, and he took it out of Elishama the scribe’s chamber. And Jehudi read it in the ears of the king, and in the ears of all the princes which stood beside the king. Now the king sat in the winterhouse in the ninth month; and there was a fire on the hearth burning before him.
(12LtMs, Lt 66, 1897, 9)
“And it came to pass, that when Jehudi had read three or four leaves, he cut it with the penknife and cast it into the fire that was one the hearth, until the roll was all consumed in the fire that was on the hearth. Yet they were not afraid, nor rent their garments, neither did the king, nor any of his servants that heard all of these words. Nevertheless Elnathan and Delaiah and Gemariah had made intercession to the king that he would not burn the roll; but he would not hear them. But the king commanded Jerameel the son of Hammelech, and Seraiah the son of Azriel, and Shelemiah the son of Abdeel, to take Baruch the scribe and Jeremiah the prophet; but the Lord hid them.” [Verses 20-26.] Things will be done in our day and generation similar to the things that were done in the days of Jeremiah.
(12LtMs, Lt 66, 1897, 10)
Please read the thirty-third chapter of Jeremiah, verses one to twenty. “Therefore also now, saith the Lord, turn ye even to me with all your heart, and with fasting, and with weeping, and with mourning; and rend your heart, and not your garments, and turn unto the Lord your God; for he is gracious and merciful, slow to anger, and of great kindness, and repenteth him of the evil. Who knoweth if he will return and repent, and leave a blessing behind him; even a meat offering and a drink offering unto the Lord your God? Blow the trumpet in Zion, sanctify a fast, call a solemn assembly; gather the people, sanctify the congregation, assemble the elders, gather the children, and those that suck the breasts; let the bridegroom go forth out of his chamber, and the bride out of her closet. Let the priests, the ministers of the Lord, weep between the porch and the altar, and let them say, Spare thy people, O Lord, and give not thine heritage to reproach, that the heathen should rule over them; wherefore would they say among the people, Where is now thy God?” [Joel 2:12-17.]
(12LtMs, Lt 66, 1897, 11)
I call upon all, not one man only, but all, to seek the Lord. We are living amid the perils of the last days. Satan is trying to lead astray those who claim to keep the commandments of God, that they may become weak and discouraged. But God’s Word is as firm as His throne. It is the eternal truth that must judge you and me in the great day of Judgment. The heavens and the earth may pass away, the things of the earth may be consumed, but God’s rule of righteousness shall remain immutable, as unchangeable as the throne of God. Christ enjoined His disciples both by precept and example, the strictest observance of all the precepts contained in the law.
(12LtMs, Lt 66, 1897, 12)
In the suit that you have instigated, you have revealed the spirit that for many years has prompted you to action. I have feared that you would be tempted, as Judas was, to betray the Lord Jesus Christ, to betray His truth and His cause. By your own course of action you show what you would do if you were permitted to have your own way. The One with whom you are in controversy reads every motive and every impulse of your heart.
(12LtMs, Lt 66, 1897, 13)
I am very sorry for you, but I cannot smooth over your danger. You are in danger of making shipwreck of the faith, but not because of the reason you assign—that you have been dealt with unjustly. No; for you have been upheld in a wrong course of action, a course of action that God’s Word will not tolerate. God will not sanction unfaithful dealing in any one. I feel very sorry that those who ought to have helped you, did not watch for your soul as they that must give an account. Your course of action would not now be so determined and defiant if those who knew better had not sustained and encouraged you, by linking up with you and giving you their support. This is what grieves my soul the most. They have been untrue to God. They have not sustained by their actions the warnings the Lord has seen fit to give you.
(12LtMs, Lt 66, 1897, 14)
“Despisest thou the riches of his goodness and forbearance and long-suffering; not knowing that the goodness of God leadeth thee to repentance? But after thy hardness and impenitent heart treasurest up unto thyself wrath against the day of wrath and revelation of the righteous judgment of God; who will render to every man according to his deeds; to them who by patient continuance in well doing seek for glory and honor and immortality, eternal life; but unto them that are contentious, and do not obey the truth, but obey unrighteousness, indignation and wrath, trouble and anguish, upon every soul of man that doeth evil, of the Jew first, and also of the Gentile; but glory, honor, and peace to every man that worketh good, to the Jew first and also to the Gentile; for there is no respect of persons with God.” [Romans 2:4-11.]
(12LtMs, Lt 66, 1897, 15)
“Thus saith the Lord of hosts, the God of Israel, Amend your ways and your doings, and I will cause you to dwell in this place. Trust ye not in lying words, saying, The temple of the Lord, the temple of the Lord, the temple of the Lord, are these. For if ye thoroughly amend your ways and your doings, if ye thoroughly execute judgment between a man and his neighbor; if ye oppress not the stranger and the fatherless, and the widow, and shed not innocent blood in this place, neither walk after other gods to your hurt; then will I cause you to dwell in this place, in the land that I gave to your fathers for ever and ever.” [Jeremiah 7:3-7.]
(12LtMs, Lt 66, 1897, 16)
“Behold, ye trust in lying words, that cannot profit. Will ye steal, murder, and commit adultery, and swear falsely, and burn incense unto Baal, and walk after other gods, whom ye know not; and come and stand before me in this house which is called by my name, and say, we are delivered to do all these abominations? Is this house which is called by my name, become a den of robbers in your eyes? Behold, I even I have seen it, saith the Lord.” [Verses 8-11.]
(12LtMs, Lt 66, 1897, 17)
“We acknowledge, O Lord, our wickedness, and the iniquity of our fathers; for we have sinned against thee. Do not abhor us, for thy name’s sake, do not disgrace the throne of thy covenant; remember, break not thy covenant with us. Are there any among the vanities of the Gentiles that can cause rain? or the heavens give showers? art not thou he, O Lord our God? Therefore we will wait upon thee; for thou hast made all these things.” [Jeremiah 14:20-22.]
(12LtMs, Lt 66, 1897, 18)
Says the true Witness, “I would thou wert cold or hot. So then because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spue thee out of my mouth.” [Revelation 3:15, 16.] But the Lord still gives expression to His love. He does not want us to make a failure of spiritual life. He would have all who claim to believe the truth, intelligent whole-souled Christians.
(12LtMs, Lt 66, 1897, 19)
Demas was a convert to Christianity. He was received into full communion with the church. He is mentioned in connection with Luke the beloved physician. “Luke the beloved physician, and Demas greet you,” writes Paul. [Colossians 4:14.] In another letter he sends greeting to Demas. But again we find him writing, “Do thy diligence to come shortly unto me; for Demas hath forsaken me, having loved this present world.” [2 Timothy 4:9, 10.] He chose the world before Christ, and this was the cause of his failure. It is the cause of the failure of many who claim to be Christians. We all need to see our weakness, and strive to remedy our faults of character, else we shall surely become as Demas—drawn away from safe paths into worldly projects and ambitious plans. Thus we shall make shipwreck of our faith.
(12LtMs, Lt 66, 1897, 20)
“Then said Jesus unto those Jews which believed on him, If ye continue in my word, then are ye my disciples indeed; and ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.” [John 8:31, 32.]
(12LtMs, Lt 66, 1897, 21)
All our actions are known to God. Your schemes, your plans, and your purposes are plainly open to Him. You may wrap your mantle about you; you may enclose yourself within yourself; but God’s eye sees all. He searches out every hidden thing. No veil can hide from Him the inmost thoughts. What revelations will be made at the judgment. Then secret thoughts and transactions will be set in the light of God’s countenance. Then men will realize how hateful has been their practice, and to what use they have subverted their Lord’s talents, given to them to be used to His name’s glory.
(12LtMs, Lt 66, 1897, 22)
Lt 67, 1897
Henry, A. R. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia November 8, 1897 Previously unpublished. Brother A. R. Henry:
What a work there is before us to prepare the way of the Lord. His coming is near. And we need to have our lamps trimmed and burning, and to make His paths straight. The Lord has entrusted us with His goods to trade upon, and it becomes us to be His faithful stewards.
(12LtMs, Lt 67, 1897, 1)
The Lord is full of mercy and truth and lovingkindness. His solicitude for us is without a parallel. With what solicitude He contemplated the giving up of Jerusalem. He wept over the impenitent city. With tears and in broken accents He expressed His keen sorrow, “O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets, and stonest them that are sent unto thee. How often would I have gathered thy children together, as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, but ye (could not? No) would not.” [Matthew 23:37.]
(12LtMs, Lt 67, 1897, 2)
Thus we see how hard it is for the Saviour, who gave His precious life for us, to exclude us from any of the blessings of His grace. And the only thing we can do is to respond to such inexpressible love. This alone can satisfy the cravings of His love and benevolence. All He requires is for every soul to love Him, and they be loved by Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 67, 1897, 3)
What can I say for Jesus? Rather, what is there that I cannot say for Him? In Him is the tenderness of the Shepherd, the affection of the parent, and the matchless grace of the living, compassionate Saviour. His blessings are presented before us in the most alluring terms. He is not content to merely announce these blessings, but presented them in the most attractive form, to excite our desire to possess them.
(12LtMs, Lt 67, 1897, 4)
The conduct of man in his insensibility to wrongs was sufficient to blunt the affections and continual outflowing love. Christ’s sensibilities were most acute, for in Him was all that is elevated in mind, high and exalted and noble in sentiment, and fine and delicate in feeling. In His nature was exhibited the perfection of humanity. During His life upon earth He went about doing good. His sensibilities were all in continual activity. Wherever He might look, He saw work to be done.
(12LtMs, Lt 67, 1897, 5)
He saw men perishing, and with tender longing of soul He looked pityingly upon them, and with quivering lips He said, Ye will not come unto me that ye might have life. [John 5:40.] He was grieved every day to see men closing the door of their hearts against Him; men, the object of His tenderest regard, requited His compassion with fixed hostility and defiance. O, why should it be thus? The conduct of man made a constant demand upon Christ’s forbearance, a perpetual drain on His pity, sufficient to exhaust every heart but the one that is replenished at the fountainhead of compassion itself.
(12LtMs, Lt 67, 1897, 6)
At times Christ suffered beyond what any language can express, as He realized that humanity unaided would be extinguished. Supernaturally sustained, He endured the seeing of men, for whom He gave His life, perishing within reach of abundant help if they would but reach out and lay hold upon it. Were it not for the hidden source from whence He drew His reinforcement of strength, He could not have lived. But thus supplied, He failed not, neither was discouraged. His affections languished not, but maintained their beautiful ministry to others.
(12LtMs, Lt 67, 1897, 7)
After His resurrection, His first work was to convince His disciples of His undiminished love and tender regard for them. To give them proof that He was their living Saviour, that He had broken the fetters of the tomb and could no longer be held by the enemy Death, to reveal that He had the same heart of love as when He was with them as their beloved teacher, He appeared to them again and again. He drew the cords of love still closer around them. “Go tell my brethren,” He said, “that they meet me in Galilee.” [Matthew 28:10.]
(12LtMs, Lt 67, 1897, 8)
That Saviour presents His love to you. Will you receive it? He is your Advocate in the heavenly courts, pleading in your behalf. Will you see your God in the courts above, pleading that His blood may avail in your behalf? God grant that you may recognize the voice of your Saviour, accept His love, and co-operate with Him in saving your own soul and the souls of others, is the prayer of your sister.
(12LtMs, Lt 67, 1897, 9)
Lt 68, 1897
Hardy, Brother “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia February 7, 1897 Previously unpublished. + Dear Brother Hardy:
Your son tells me that you have sent a letter to me, but I have not read any communication from you, therefore cannot speak of that of which I know nothing. What you said in the letter I sent to you has been presented to me for some years back, and not one word has passed between your wife and me. We had our first conversation when she asked my advice in reference to your son going to Africa. I gave him my advice because I had a knowledge of the element in Africa, and knew that it would not be for his spiritual interest to mingle with such society. I saw your son as he was passing by with a load of goods for Brother Hansen, when we had a few words. He told me that you had decided that as they had rejected to take your advice in having him go to South Africa, you would not do anything more for them. The Lord has presented this matter to me in such a light that I know it would be at the peril of his soul if he should go; and, again, his duty is with his God-fearing mother just as long as he can be any help and comfort to her.
(12LtMs, Lt 68, 1897, 1)
It is my work to do my duty to the flock of God, irrespective of human judgment and human plans. I am sorry, very sorry, that you have placed yourself in such a position. And I am sorry also that Brother Shannon left Cooranbong to make his statements to you as he viewed matters. In doing this he has strengthened you in your prejudice against the work that God is doing in this place. We would have been pleased to have had the co-operation of yourself and Brother Shannon, for your own good and for the upbuilding of the work here.
(12LtMs, Lt 68, 1897, 2)
Every man has his opportunities and advantages and light to enable him to do a work that God can approve. This is the work of God here in Cooranbong. It is bound to succeed because the Lord is at the back of it. And those who will not themselves lift one ounce of the burdens to be borne, and who is the development of their own self-centered ideas only seek their own advantage, may see things in their own perverted judgment, and represent matters in a light which is not true. The hindrances they thus place in the way are working against God. Unless they have the mind of Christ, and are working in His lines, they will do only harm.
(12LtMs, Lt 68, 1897, 3)
I know that the enemy is not in favor of the work being done here, but I did not expect that such men as Brother Shannon, who had been employed by me and connected with me, and knew the interest I had and the sacrifice I was making to advance the work by right methods and to establish right principles, would feel themselves at liberty to counteract that which we were trying to do, and so misrepresent the work as to discourage those who are not here to see and know for themselves. You can unite with him if you choose; you can help him to lay stumbling blocks in the way of the advance of the work; but in so doing you will make it harder for those whom God is using to carry out His mind and will in working against the forces of the enemy.
(12LtMs, Lt 68, 1897, 4)
These very same influences we have had and to breast against in the establishment of the work in Battle Creek, in Oakland, in Healdsburg, in St. Helena, and in Europe. We found just the same hindrances placed in our way.
(12LtMs, Lt 68, 1897, 5)
There were men then who became offended because things did not go according to their ideas, and they balked and flounced themselves about like a balky horse. They made us all the trouble they possibly could. If some mistakes were made, they talked of these mistakes, they enlarged upon them, they magnified them. But in every place, the Lord has allowed mistakes to be made, in order to reveal character, to demonstrate who are the men of true material who will not fail nor be discouraged, but whose object is to do the will and work of God, turning their mistakes into victories.
(12LtMs, Lt 68, 1897, 6)
Thus it has been in every enterprise. My husband and I started the work in various places, and there were always those who joined the enemy’s ranks and made our work tenfold harder than it needed to be. They would talk of everything that worked disadvantageously, and then stand, having the advantage of aftersight, and tell what should have been done. Had these had the care and responsibility of the work, they would not have done half as well as those who have tried to do a large and important work with limited means.
(12LtMs, Lt 68, 1897, 7)
The Lord does not condemn those who have made mistakes. They have tried to economize: they have tried to save money by purchasing certain things, supposing they would be a success. But they should have invested double the amount that they did, in order to bring the very best article [into] their possession. Those who, like Brethren Shannon and Lawrence, have not lifted and ounce of the burden, have stood as critics, mingling their sentiments together, and working them up to a perfection in their own estimation. But God says of their plans and devising, “It is naught: it is naught.” [See Proverbs 20:14.]
(12LtMs, Lt 68, 1897, 8)
The very men who have been censured are the men who have had to lead out and do something. In our life on earth we are to be as learners, and when we look to God and obediently do His will, He will not leave us to fail of be discouraged in trying to do our best. Apparently, there may be some mistakes, and these may bring sadness and depression: but the Lord has presented to me that in every enterprise entered upon, His people should not fail nor be discouraged. Some who have never carried any burdens will criticize and tell how they would have done the work. They view matters through the colored glasses of their own prejudiced ideas. They pass their decision upon things that they suppose are wrong, when further test and trial proves them to be right, and done at the right time. But let us all bear in mind that it is much easier to pick to pieces other men’s work than to build a better structure ourselves.
(12LtMs, Lt 68, 1897, 9)
We have had obstacles to surmount at every step until advancement has seemed impossible. But great advancement has been made. We do not have the power of control ever accidents and circumstances. The Lord has this in hand, and we have the promise, “All things work together for good to them that love God.” [Romans 8:28.] The Lord prizes the heart service that will be steadfast and true to principle under every and all circumstances, and He will reward every soul who works to do his best. We cannot always see the future with the brightness of day, but we can have faith and hope for the day while we work under apparent discouragement and losses. The work is not ours, but the Lord’s.
(12LtMs, Lt 68, 1897, 10)
We were promised a manager to come from America to take hold of the work here. In waiting for him to come and take the responsibilities of the financial interests, the work was greatly retarded. Then, when we thought that this man would arrive on the next boat, word came that he had been called to do business in another line, so that we had no one. The question arose, Shall we give up the whole enterprise? Shall we now do nothing, and wait? But the word came from the Lord, You are to advance. You will meet with discouragement. Satan and his host, that hindered the messengers of heaven from coming to Daniel to answer his prayer, will seek to discourage every movement made, but do not trust in men, for they will mislead. Do not trust in experts to examine land and give their judgment. Work in God and do your best.
(12LtMs, Lt 68, 1897, 11)
You will have the forces of Satan to oppose. You will have criticisms to meet; you will have misrepresentations; you will have the unbelief and prejudices of those who ought to stand heart to heart and shoulder to shoulder with you. This unbelief will darken other minds. Their selfishness will pain and burden your hearts. While you work, and strain every nerve and muscle, there will be those who, while they can benefit themselves, will manifest interest thus for and no farther, and if you link up with these, they will carry you from weakness to weakness instead of from strength to strength, from darkness to deeper darkness, and not from gloom to day. But if you will put your trust in God, He will be your helper notwithstanding. Love for Him will work out love for your fellow men.
(12LtMs, Lt 68, 1897, 12)
If men will divest themselves of selfishness and self-confidence, they will be brought under the control of the Holy Spirit. Then they will not crush themselves, neither will they crush others. They will feel that a great responsibility is upon them to employ their talents to the glory of God. If their powers are wisely governed and sanctified, if their mind and heart is invested in the work to the purest ends, every day of their engagement in the building up and sustaining of those who carry the heavy load will receive the sanction of God. Christ came to redeem man from his natural, strong, perverted traits of character, and in this process of redemption, strange developments will be made to lead him to see what is in his own heart before he can be fitted for the kingdom of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 68, 1897, 13)
Lt 69, 1897
Hardy, Brother NP 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 4BC 1146; 5BC 1103; 3SM 134-136; 8MR 447; 9MR 213-214. Dear Brother Hardy:
Self will show itself just as it is. But the work of overcoming this evil as Christ overcame has been sadly neglected. In our behalf Christ assumed humanity. He was in all points tempted like as we are. His life was a life of constant trial, for Satan was working to overcome Him. But he did not succeed. Christ resisted the devil. O, that all our brethren who have rough, selfish, impulsive, passionate tempers, would study the life of Christ, and become like Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 1)
Sorrow and trial must come to all, and is beautiful only as it works to polish, to sanctify, and refine the soul as a fit instrument to do service for the Lord. On several occasions the Lord has said to me, The bitterness of grief and humiliation are better than the indulgences of sin. Christ was a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief. He was wounded for our transgressions; He was bruised for our iniquities; the chastisement of our peace was upon Him, and with His stripes we are healed. Disappointments and sorrows would be unbearable if it were not that there is a God of right, of truth, and of love who watches over all His children.
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 2)
“Brethren, be not children in understanding: howbeit in malice be ye children, but in understanding be men.” [1 Corinthians 14:20.] “He that speaketh in an unknown tongue edifieth himself; but he that prophesieth edifieth the church. I would that ye all spake with tongues, but rather that ye prophesied; for greater is he that prophesieth then he that speaketh with tongues, except he interpret, that the church may receive edifying. Now brethren, if I come unto you speaking with tongues, what shall I profit you, except that I shall speak to you by revelation or by knowledge, or by prophesying, or by doctrine? And even things without life giving sound, whether pipe or harp, concept they give a distinction in so the sounds, how shall it be known what is piped or harped?” [Verses 4-7.] “Moreover, brethren, I declare unto you the gospel which I preached unto you, which also ye have received, and wherein ye stand; by which also ye are saved, if ye keep in memory what I preached unto you, unless ye have believed in vain.” [1 Corinthians 15:1, 2.]
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 3)
Will you read these words with a spirit to believe and receive them? It is altogether too late in this world’s history to believe in vain, or do anything in vain. What shall we say of having believed in vain? What a terrible calamity it would be to stake not only time but eternity, stake the welfare of the soul, upon a deception.
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 4)
Paul was approaching the end, when his work was to be rounded off, when these words were spoken. The church to which they were addressed was composed of strange characteristics, which the Lord saw must have sharp treatment. We cannot possibly have a changing religion. The gospel is to be proclaimed and personally received. A general as sent is not enough. There must be an intelligent heart reception of the truth wherein the receiver must stand and perseveringly communicate to others the knowledge received. The truth must be practiced in every respect, holding fast the Word of life, “by which also ye are saved, if ye keep in memory what I preached unto you, unless ye have believed in vain.” [Verse 2.]
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 5)
There is a declaration of the faith that is so diluted by man’s natural traits of character that it has lost its saving virtue by losing its distinctive characteristic of Christlikeness. Although saying you are rich, you will find yourself in the end wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind and naked. When there is a haphazard belief and practice that is not after the lessons of Christ, then you have a faith that is vain. Your heart must either contain the treasures of goodness or the treasures of that which is evil. Out of the good treasure of the heart the receiver of truth brings forth good things. The one who claims to believe, and does not practice, brings forth evil things which wound, discourage, and destroy.
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 6)
I ask you, my brother, not to act like a child in understanding. Act like a child who is practicing the Word of God. Christ says, “Why call ye me Master and Lord, and do not the things which I say?” [Luke 6:46.] The consistency of our conduct in words, in patience, in meekness, will reveal the Christ in the heart. Take yourself seriously in hand, my brother, and move steadily onward step by step to be an overcomer. That which I have written to you are the facts of the past. It was written at the same time that the other testimony was written. At that time I had not had a word [of] conversation with your wife. Whatever you have written to me I cannot speak in reference to, for I know nothing of it. You are a very impulsive, passionate man. I have told you the truth just as it is. I want you to be saved. Sin is a disease, a cancer that is eating away all your prospect of a future holy, happy, sinless life in the heavenly family above. I have spoken plainly to you in letter lest you should not make that repentance that needeth not to be repented of.
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 7)
The soul is of value with God. He gave His life that He might bring moral courage to every man to run to race for the immortal crown that fadeth not away. You are to die to self and behold the Lamb of God that taketh away your sin. Then His own righteousness supplies the vacuums and works in man to fulfill his original destiny.
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 8)
The Lord did not make man to be redeemed, but to bear His image. But through sin man lost the image of God. It is only by man’s redemption that God can accomplish His design for him in making him a son of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 9)
“As many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name, which were born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God. And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us, (and we beheld his glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father,) full of grace and truth.... And of his fulness have all we received, and grace for grace.” [John 1:12-14, 16.] Because of the ransom paid for him, man, by his own choice, by obedience, may accomplish the design of God, and through the grace given of God bear the image that was first impressed upon him, and afterwards lost through the fall.
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 10)
Sin is not to be perpetuated by practice by the one who is born of God. He must become just what God designed he should be—a free soul in Christ Jesus; not free to continue in sin, but free to practice virtue and holiness. “Ye are free.” Therefore use your liberty not to oppress or to speak bitterness, but as the servants of God, as under the rule of Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 11)
Wherever the man is who is a child of God, he must live no idle life. He is not in a region where peace is an abounding element; where no heart throbs, no passion urges itself for demonstration. Satan lives; Satan works. “And every man that hath this hope in him purifieth himself, even as he is pure. Whosoever committeth sin transgresseth also the law; for sin is the transgression of the law. And ye know that he was manifested to take away our sins; and in him was no sin. Whosoever abideth in him sinneth not; whosoever sinneth hath not seen him, neither known him.
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 12)
“Little children, let no man deceive you, he that doeth righteousness is righteous, even as he is righteous.... In this the children of God are manifest, and the children of the devil: whosoever doeth not righteousness is not of God, neither he that loveth not his brother. For this is the message that ye heard from the beginning, that we should love one another. Not as Cain, who was of that wicked one, and slew his brother. And wherefore slew he him? Because his own works were evil, and his brother’s righteous.” [1 John 3:3-7, 10-12.]
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 13)
Read this entire chapter, Brother Hardy. Study attentively the epistles of John, and see what you can learn from them to put into practice. You are to manifest the character of Christ. He exhorts you to “Put on therefore, as the elect of God, holy and beloved, bowels of mercies, kindness, humbleness of mind, meekness, longsuffering; forbearing one another, and forgiving one another, if any man have a quarrel against any: even as Christ forgave you, so also do ye. And above all these things put on charity, which is the bond of perfectness. And let the peace of God rule in your hearts, to the which also ye are called in one body; and be ye thankful. Let the word of God dwell in you richly in all wisdom; teaching and admonishing one another; in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord. And whatsoever ye do in word or deed, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God and the Father by him.” [Colossians 3:12-17.]
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 14)
Every man that is saved will have lived a Christian life, doing God service. It will be by putting His Word into the daily life. “Hereby perceive we the love of God, because he laid down his life for us: and we ought to lay down our lives for the brethren. But whose hath this world’s goods, and seeth his brother have need, and shutteth up his bowels of compassion from him, how dwelleth the love of God in him? My little children, let us not love in word, neither in tongue, but in deed and in truth.” [1 John 3:16-18.] In pure well-being, and actual well-doing, you may become a new man, wiser, happier, and blessed in Christ Jesus. You may show your life to be transformed into a pure life. “That ye may be blameless and harmless, the sons of God, without rebuke in the midst of a crooked and perverse nation, among whom ye shine as lights in the world.” [Philippians 2:15.]
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 15)
O, how little do professed Christians live under the influence and reflect the light of the truth to all that are around them. Christ has said, “Ye are the light of the world. A city that is set on a hill cannot be hid. Neither do men light a candle, and put it under a bushel, but on a candlestick; but it giveth light to all that are in the house. Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good words, and glorify your Father which is in heaven.” [Matthew 5:14-16.] This is one of the primary truths of the teachings of Christ. This is the service God requires of us. As Christians we are to glorify Him in our words and in our works. Profession does not count anything with God if the life is not flavored with the grace of the Saviour unto eternal life. “Ye are the salt of the earth,” He declares, to preserve it. [Verse 13.] “Ye are the light of the world.” Then reflect the light of heaven. Illuminate the moral darkness around you.
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 16)
“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 times past were not a people, but now are 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.” [1 Peter 2:9-11.] “Ye have not chosen me, but I have chosen you, and ordained you, that ye should go and bring forth fruit, and that your fruit should remain: that whatsoever ye shall ask the Father in my name, he may give it you.
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 17)
“These things I command you, that ye love one another. If the world hate you, ye know that it hated me before it hated you. If ye were of the world, the world would love his own: but because ye are not of the world, but I have chosen you out of the world, therefore the world hateth you. Remember the word that I said unto you. The servant is not greater than his lord. If they have persecuted me, they will also persecute you; if they have kept my saying, they will keep yours also. But all these things will they do unto you for my name’s sake, because they know not him that sent me.” [John 15:16-21.]
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 18)
“As thou hast sent me, even so have I sent them into the world.” [John 17:18.] Has there not been a selfish and manifest neglect in disregarding such plain directions as are here given us of God? We are exhorted by the apostle to be living epistles, known and read of all men. And yet how many fail to glorify God in serving and praising Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 19)
The Lord has given to you the privilege of receiving Him by a living, earnest, working faith. Then you may promote the glory of God. You need the new birth of soul. Then your words, your passionate impulses would not be a dark denial of Him. “By grace are ye saved.” [Ephesians 2:8.] This is what the Lord is hungry to do for us poor, defective human beings. He has shown how much He values man in that He gave Jesus to our world to a life of poverty, of sorrow and of death. Our faith in Jesus Christ will work by love and purify the soul. He offers His Spirit day by day to be our sufficiency. We are not only to burn as a dim taper, we are to shine so that others may be led to glorify God.
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 20)
I send you this epistle because I know that you have need of all that I have written to you. I pray that the Holy Spirit will work you, and produce in you a character that the books of heaven may reveal as “complete in Him.” [Colossians 2:10.]
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 21)
We are struggling along the best we can. As God has appointed, you can help us if you will. And the Lord will bless you in doing Him service. But I am so sorry that men will yoke up with the enemy, and do His will in the place of working with Jesus Christ. But they might never know their own selfish hearts if there were not something to develop the objectionable traits of character.
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 22)
The Garden of Eden with its disobedience and the garden of Gethsemane with its obedience are presented before us. What a costly work was that in Eden! How much was involved in the fatal eating of the forbidden tree! But many are following in the very same footprints, in disobedience, in breaking away from the law of God. When men selfishly enter a course of disobedience to God they go on imperceptibly. They do not calculate what the sure result will be when they enter the path of temptation, and make but feeble efforts to resist, and some make none at all. But when the scroll is unrolled, and God looks over it, He will find that He has been denied in that place, dishonored in another place; and as the roll is opened more and more, the results of unchristlike actions are revealed. The Word of God was not fed upon, therefore their actions were not the result of eating the flesh and drinking the blood of the Son of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 23)
The law that God had given to bind man to obedience to Him was the law of love. He commanded that they should love Him with all the heart and soul and strength, and their neighbor as themselves. That law obeyed would have been a hedge about them, to keep them from entering evil paths.
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 24)
But the greatest evil was when man became a law unto himself; when he raised up and followed his own human standard that was in direct opposition to the Lord’s standard. When man fell, the standard of self was uplifted, and it was of just such a character as pleased the carnal mind. The will and way of man became his law. This class harmonize. But the doers of the law of God will not turn to the right hand or to the left, so there is strife.
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 25)
The great Teacher came into our world, not only to atone for sin but to be a Teacher both by precept and example. He came to show man how to keep the law in humanity, so that man might have no excuse for following his own defective judgment. We see Christ’s obedience. His life was without sin. His lifelong obedience is a reproach to disobedient humanity. The obedience of Christ is not to be put aside as altogether different to the obedience He requires of us individually. Christ has shown us that it is possible for all humanity to obey the laws of God. He served as a Son with the Father. Just so we must every one serve with God, not in our own improvised plans. Serving is a living service when self is not made supreme.
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 26)
The serving of the Son of God with the Father has ennobled all service. “I delight to do thy will, O my God:” He said, “yea, thy law is within my heart.” [Psalm 40:8.] David’s heart was enlarged, and he ran in the way of the Lord’s commandments.
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 27)
The work of Christ was not a divided heart service. Christ came not to do His own will but the will of Him that sent Him. Jesus says, Step in the footprints of my Sonship in all obedience. I obey as in partnership with the great firm. You are to obey as in co-partnership with the Son of God. Often you will not see the path clearly; then ask of God, and He will give you wisdom and courage and faith to move forward, leaving all issues with Him. We want to comprehend so far as possible the truly human nature of our Lord. The divine and human were linked in Christ, and both were complete.
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 28)
Our Saviour took up the true relationship of a human being as the Son of God. We are sons and daughters of God. In order to know how to behave ourselves circumspectly, we must follow where Christ leads the way. For thirty years He lived the life of a perfect man, meeting the highest standard of perfection.
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 29)
Then let man, however imperfect, hope in God, saying not, “If I were of a different disposition I would serve God,” but bring himself to Him in true service. Christ has invited you to do this. He says, “Come unto me all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you (convert your entrusted capabilities to God), and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart, and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For,” He declares, “my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.” [Matthew 11:28-30.] That nature has been redeemed by Me. “As many as received him to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name.” [John 1:12.] You are not degraded, but raised, ennobled, refined by Me. You can find refuge in Me. You can obtain victory and be more than conquerors in My name.
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 30)
Brethren who have now gone from New South Wales to South Africa, I entreat of you, If you cannot do anything to help us, for your soul’s sake and for Christ’s sake, lay nothing in the way of the faith of others. We have heard many say, I have no confidence in those who are bearing the responsibilities in this work. It was hard for us to bear; but we said, I will not fail nor be discouraged. If we had believed it was a work inaugurated by men, we would have dropped it quickly. But we know the work will go, for God is behind it and our trust is in Him. This earth is and always will be our battlefield. This is not our work, nor the work of any one person. It is God’s work, and every one who engages in this work must contend for the mastery.
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 31)
We must have firm, earnest purpose, not only to fight, but to press through every obstruction, determined to conquer and lay hold of eternal life. “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 against the wiles of the devil. For we wrestle not against flesh and blood; but against principalities and powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world; against spiritual wickedness in high places.” [Ephesians 6:10-12.]
(12LtMs, Lt 69, 1897, 32)
Lt 70, 1897
Haskell, S. N. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia January 3, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in TMK 227; 4Bio 289-290, 315. + Elder S. N. Haskell
57 Tory St.
Wellington, New Zealand Dear Brother:
I am sending you copies of letters that I have written under discouraging circumstances. My left eye is quite weak. I think it is because I have had so little sleep.
(12LtMs, Lt 70, 1897, 1)
Yesterday, for the first time since my return, I spoke in the chamber above the mill. It is a very trying place. The room was full, and I spoke decidedly of what was expected of those who come to this place. Brother Shannon has done a work here that he will not be proud to own in the judgment. He does not know what spirit he is of. The work of Brother Lawrence also, taken as a whole, will not secure to him a reward in this life nor in the life to come. I hoped he would move off, but I believe he is preparing to remain.
(12LtMs, Lt 70, 1897, 2)
We had to have the little house where the twins were born for Willie’s family. It is not large enough, and we proposed to build a kitchen and veranda to the old house. But we found that this would cost £14, according to the builder’s estimate. With some addition to this amount, I can build two rooms fifteen by fifteen to the small building, but without a decided joining. These two rooms can be so built, as regards foundation, that if Willie builds across the road from our cottage, we can move them to the ground selected, and thus every stroke put on this work will be so much of the house building done. We shall have to wait to hear from Willie as to whether he can dispose of his house, and put the money into a cottage to accommodate his family. But the two rooms must be built, and this may answer their purpose without any more building until money comes to warrant the expense.
(12LtMs, Lt 70, 1897, 3)
We have had a great time in reference to Brother Semmens and the establishment of the Health Home. Through prejudice because of our faith, he could not get the houses he had hoped to procure. But recently these large houses have both been offered him, one at one hundred and twenty pounds per annum. This was the largest building but it was old, and had been added to, and its appearance led us to fear that the leprosy might be in the house, so we turned from it. The next place was on higher ground, and although it did not stand so open and alone, it had a large back yard, running through to the next street. There are fruit trees on the place full of apricots and nectarines. The rooms of the house seem wholesome. One hundred and thirty pounds per year was asked for this, but they threw off ten pounds, and they must pay the taxes.
(12LtMs, Lt 70, 1897, 4)
Brother Semmens accepted this, and he and his family have already moved in. The workmen are fitting up the rooms. As he had no money, I furnished him with twenty-five pounds to make a beginning. The house is within five minutes’ walk of the station. This is a convenience, for there will be less money paid out in cab fare.
(12LtMs, Lt 70, 1897, 5)
Brother Baker and family are accommodated with two rooms, for which they pay ten shillings. I have hired one room, which I shall fit up, and for which I pay four shillings. I have hired this room so that when our ministering brethren shall pass through, and stop over night, they will have this room to lodge in, and pay their board to Brother Semmens. Brother Semmens pays ten shillings for two rooms for his family.
(12LtMs, Lt 70, 1897, 6)
You inquire about school buildings. (Dropped asleep.) The first building is progressing well. We have heard of no trouble. The roof is on, and everything moves satisfactorily. I have just written to Sister James for the loan of some money. I meant to have sent before, but other things came in demanding immediate attention, so it was allowed to pass. I shall send [it] on tomorrow morning.
(12LtMs, Lt 70, 1897, 7)
On Sabbath I spoke in the chamber above the mill, but fear greatly that I shall not be able to do this much. It did appear so badly. We had the room full; but there was, well, I need hardly describe it—almost everything but money. I am fully decided that we must have a meetinghouse. Those who assemble can hardly keep their eyes open, so oppressive is the atmosphere. I did not suffer, for I had the wind blowing upon me while I spoke; but the people did not get much air.
(12LtMs, Lt 70, 1897, 8)
I have just written a line to Brother Anderson, telling him that it is not in his line of work to teach the people, for he lacks the faculty to communicate, and should not deceive himself by working in a line for which he has no vocation. He has a dry, spiritless way of presenting the truth, and is very tedious. He is the Brother Anderson who was on Norfolk Island; but he is not called and chosen of God to be a teacher, and never will be fitted for such work. I advised him to take up some other line of work rather than engage in the work of teaching the truth when he could not communicate his ideas in a manner to interest the hearers.
(12LtMs, Lt 70, 1897, 9)
Now, Brother Haskell, I know it is the duty of some one to be in New South Wales. Brother Baker has a knowledge of the truth, but he is so very moderate. He does not make decided points, and call up the people to advance. With others to help him, he could do much more effective work, for they would be efficient where he would fail. I am distressed at the situation. There is need of workers in the various places all around, but more especially in Sydney. If you should decide to visit Africa again, some time should be spent in Cooranbong and Sydney. I cannot carry the heavy load of writing, and also of speaking. I must not put in so much labor. I came very nearly dying this last sickness, and I am afraid to venture. I would be willing to go and connect with yourself, or some one who would take the brunt, and I come in when I can, and bear my testimony.
(12LtMs, Lt 70, 1897, 10)
I want your help here in New South Wales. What a dearth there is! There is only Herbert Lacey, and he needs to be urged forward. After spending three hours in the hardest kind of labor yesterday, he came this morning to see if I would not speak at Dora Creek. I no sooner begin in my feebleness than work is piled on me in abundance. If the Lord will give me strength, I will do all that I possibly can. I am praying day and night for the restoration of my eyes, and they are improving. I am of good courage in the Lord. I would not urge you out of your path of duty. If you feel that the Lord has work for you to do in New Zealand, then I will cease my urging; if not, come back as soon as you feel free to do so.
(12LtMs, Lt 70, 1897, 11)
We were glad to hear from you, but I was so wrought up to write the matter enclosed, that I could not get off the writing I wished to send you on the last boat.
(12LtMs, Lt 70, 1897, 12)
Why are we so weak in faith? Many hold faith as an opinion. Saving faith is a transaction, by which those who receive Christ join themselves in covenant relation with God as one family, sons and daughters of God. Genuine faith is life, and where there is life there is growth. The life which Jesus imparts cannot but grow more and more abundantly. A living faith means an increase of vigor, a confiding trust, by which the soul becomes a conquering power. He who drinks of the water of life which Jesus gives possesses within himself a well of water springing up into everlasting life. Though it shall be cut off from all created springs, it is fed from the hidden fountain. It is a perpetual spring, in immediate communication with the inexhaustible fountain of life.
(12LtMs, Lt 70, 1897, 13)
The Lord is dishonored when any who profess His name have an emptiness. This misrepresents God. Nothing but Christ manifested in spirit and life and character can reveal God to a world that knows Him not. The soul renewed in the knowledge of God and Jesus Christ whom He has sent demonstrates its divine fulness in a living, growing experience—even the fulness of Him that filleth all things.
(12LtMs, Lt 70, 1897, 14)
The lifeless, professed believer is not a Christian, for such give to the world no correct representation of the Author of truth and holiness. We must have the working of the Holy Spirit, which Christ declares “shall glorify me.” [John 16:14.] We are so faithless, so unbelieving, that the Lord cannot do for us those things which He longs to do. There are doubts in our minds that are very saddening and very difficult to dispel. These doubts that bow down the soul we should each one bravely face, and tell the soul that we must conquer them at once. Make no delay, for there can be no peace where faith is lost. We need not express these doubts, for they may cause some poor soul to stumble. But examine them in the light of God’s Word, then talk them over with Jesus with His Word of promise in your hand, and pray for their removal. Tell the Lord, “Lord, I believe; help thou mine unbelief.” [Mark 9:24.]
(12LtMs, Lt 70, 1897, 15)
Let not doubt be placed in a comfortable, easy chair. It is a dangerous guest when it is left to rankle in the mind and counteract faith. Come to the great Healer and plead, “I cast my helpless soul on thee. I have the promise, ‘The meek will he guide in judgment; and the meek will he teach his way.’” [Psalm 25:9.]
(12LtMs, Lt 70, 1897, 16)
Lt 71, 1897
Haskell, Brother and Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia November 5, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother and Sister Haskell:
Sister Wilson has been conversing with me in reference to Sister Robertson. I cannot advise Sister Robertson to go to Western Australia. I had a conversation with Brother Robert Hare in regard to this matter; but that night instruction was given me to watch for souls as they that must give account. There is need of constant discernment. We need the quickening, vivifying influence of the Holy Spirit, that makes every one in the service of God wise unto salvation.
(12LtMs, Lt 71, 1897, 1)
No haphazard work must be done. To every human being is given a work in personal labor for God. The varied trusts are proportionate to our varied capabilities. Every member of the church is in possession of some trust, some talent, to be used in the service of God. From the lowliest and most obscure to the highest, in the church and in the world, all are entrusted with the goods of heaven, physical, moral, and spiritual. Time, reason, unimpaired intellect, the tender ministry to which some are adapted, these are the gifts of God. None are to make light of the smallest gift.
(12LtMs, Lt 71, 1897, 2)
Some are better fitted for a certain work than others. Therefore the conclusion should not be reached that every one can be a canvasser. Some are so constituted that if they took up this work, they would make a most miserable track wherever they should go. Others are willing, but have no special adaptability for special lines of work. They are not to be set down as faithless and unwilling. The Lord is not unreasonable in His requirements. The church is as a garden in which are a variety of flowers, each one with peculiarities of their own. They are all plants and flowers, but they are different in appearance.
(12LtMs, Lt 71, 1897, 3)
God does not expect that with their varied temperaments His people will be prepared for any and every place. Some can fill one place, while another can do service in another place, while he could not do the work someone else could aptly do. Therefore, let us all remember that there are varied trusts.
(12LtMs, Lt 71, 1897, 4)
In regard to Sister Robertson, if the Lord has marked out her course to the distant field of Western Australia, she will have light in regard to her duty. Sister Robertson is of a peculiar turn of mind. At times a depression comes upon her that makes her wild. Her imagination becomes highly wrought upon. She is then in despair and has little faith for herself.
(12LtMs, Lt 71, 1897, 5)
Those who go to Western Australia should have health, both of mind and body. Flattering inducements should not be presented to Sister Robertson in regard to nursing in Western Australia, with prospects of high wages. The journey to that place will cost her quite a sum, and if she has not the courage and strength to take up the work and carry it through under disadvantageous circumstances, she will be disappointed. She has a delicate constitution, both in mind and body. She could not endure a rough life. She could not endure the responsibilities that would necessarily come upon her. Then her unbelieving friends would make it unpleasant for those who encouraged her to take these responsibilities. Tests are to be made in this case. God will take this sister under His own care if she will submit to His guidance and not be in a hurry. This is the light given to me in regard to the case of our sister. I do not feel it wise to encourage her to go to Western Australia.
(12LtMs, Lt 71, 1897, 6)
In regard to the workers in Sydney, those who are strong and well may do a good work. But I think they should be paid a stated sum, as is any other intelligent worker in others lines of the work. If those at the head of the work are willing to risk everything and walk by faith, they may require it of the workers. If they will risk the price they require for the board of the workers, they may ask the workers to risk something. But to require a certain sum for board, bringing no faith into this matter, and then ask the workers to exercise faith, is not right. Pay the workers a decided sum to meet their living expenses, that there may be equity and justice. In no case accept workers that are not trustworthy. But do not allow the inexperienced workers to do all the sacrificing and all the walking by faith.
(12LtMs, Lt 71, 1897, 7)
I have in mind some workers that labored hard in Melbourne, selling papers and giving Bible readings. All acknowledged that they did a good work. By one young woman’s labor several were brought into the truth. But while there were men teachers who were decided as to what they should do, there were not many who acted as fathers.
(12LtMs, Lt 71, 1897, 8)
These girls came to the Ashfield camp meeting in a most destitute condition in regard to clothing. They were not tidily or becomingly clad. Why did not those in charge of the work where these girls were working act as fathers and mothers to them, and show their faith by loving their neighbor as themselves? Some of our sisters had abundance of clothing for themselves. They could have bought less for themselves and expended some money on their destitute sisters. But while these girls were doing hard work, wearing out their clothing and shoeleather, there were those who did not work one half as hard, and who had not the motherly solicitude or the sisterly discernment to see the necessities of their sisters, and love them as they loved themselves. Pride compassed some about as a garment in regard to their outward appearance.
(12LtMs, Lt 71, 1897, 9)
These girls were doing a good work, but it could be seen that they were becoming more and more destitute of clothing. Their brethren and sisters needed to have the selfishness cut away from their hearts. They needed that faith that works by love and purifies the soul.
(12LtMs, Lt 71, 1897, 10)
I made inquiry, and found that these sisters were in a destitute condition. Then I began to understand how those who had been giving these sisters instruction had neglected to see that they were well cared for. We had to purchase clothing and shoes for these girls before they were respectable or comfortable.
(12LtMs, Lt 71, 1897, 11)
Blessed are the eyes that see the necessities of others as well as their own. I have become thoroughly distressed over the methods that lead some to leave others to exercise faith, while they close their eyes, that they may not see the faith that works by love, which they themselves should have. Let us do straightforward work, for the light which the Lord gave me in regard to those who so manifestly neglected their duty toward these sisters was that they neglected the Lord Jesus in the person of His saints, and the blessing of God could not rest upon such neglect. The whole principle was wrong from the first arrangement.
(12LtMs, Lt 71, 1897, 12)
The Lord has not appointed men who will leave matters at such loose ends, to carry responsibilities. The Lord deals not with partiality. But with men, while some are rewarded abundantly for their work, others, regarded by God, are left in uncertainty. Those with whom they are connected have not interest in them to investigate the cases of the individual workers, to see if they are receiving sufficient to supply their individual necessities.
(12LtMs, Lt 71, 1897, 13)
The Lord Jesus has a special interest in every member of His family. Those who follow Him and are entrusted with a special line of work are to be as carefully and interestedly looked after by those at the head of the work as if they were members of their own family. It is this careless neglect and unfulfilled daily duties toward those who are doing service in the love of Christ that brings the displeasure of God upon His stewards. He cannot impart His Spirit to these neglectful ones. He will arraign them before His bar, saying, “I was an hungered, and ye gave me no meat; I was thirsty, and ye gave me no drink: I was a stranger, and ye took me not in: naked, and ye clothed me not: sick, and in prison, and ye visited me not.... Inasmuch as ye did it not to one of the least of these, ye did it not to me.” [Matthew 25:42, 43, 45.]
(12LtMs, Lt 71, 1897, 14)
We have had great light, great privileges, great opportunities to learn of the ways and works and attributes of Christ. We are left without excuse if we fail in our duty to our brethren and sisters who need encouragement in word and action to strengthen their faith. We glorify God when, by acts of self-denial, kindness and mercy toward our brethren and sisters, we show that we love God supremely and our neighbor as ourselves. In this we show the work of the Spirit of Christ upon our hearts.
(12LtMs, Lt 71, 1897, 15)
The living Christian is not absorbed in self. Neither does he take a fancy to certain persons, praising and exalting them, while he leaves others just as deserving out of his notice. The true Christian constantly endeavors to glorify God by his unselfish traits of character. He bears a living testimony to those who are observing his deportment that he is looking unto Jesus, the Author and the Finisher of his faith, and that by beholding he is becoming changed into His likeness, that His goodness, wisdom, mercy, love, and tender sympathy is being woven into his practice.
(12LtMs, Lt 71, 1897, 16)
How thankful we should be that the Word was made flesh and dwelt among us, and we beheld his glory, character, (the glory as of the only begotten of the Father,) full of grace and truth. “Of his fullness have all we received, and grace for grace.” [John 1:14, 16.] This means that as we receive grace, we are to bestow the same upon those with whom we associate cheerfully employing all our powers and capabilities in God’s service.
(12LtMs, Lt 71, 1897, 17)
Those who cultivate the false motives and spurious principles, which make an appearance only of kindness and charity and love, need to be converted and baptized by the Holy Spirit. Goodness in appearance only counts nothing with God, who reads the secrets of every heart. The converting power of God must cleanse the heart of its love of pretense, love of praise and applause, which excites to action.
(12LtMs, Lt 71, 1897, 18)
The worker for God must have a sense of his duty toward his Maker and a firm, pure, loving spirit of obedience to the precepts of Jehovah, because he loves them. They are the truth which abideth forever. But if these principles are neglected, the workers are not provoked to holy endeavor and sincere love one for another.
(12LtMs, Lt 71, 1897, 19)
God sees not as man sees. He looks at the disposition of the heart, from which the actions flow. But into every institution in our world, under the supervision of those who claim to believe the most solemn message ever given to our world, has come the leaven of selfishness. In lines that some least suspect, this spirit is leaving its impressions of partiality and selfishness. God cannot bless the workers as He longs to do, because by their course of action they separate themselves from Him. In some lines the work of God has become tinged with selfishness. The influence of this sin is destroying the love that Christ has commanded we cherish for one another.
(12LtMs, Lt 71, 1897, 20)
Pure religion is a rare jewel. It is because it is so rare that the Holy Spirit’s operations in their quickening efficiency are not seen upon human hearts. Its holy aims are sure to bring the human agent into sacred, covenant relation with God. When in Christ he becomes linked with God.
(12LtMs, Lt 71, 1897, 21)
The work to be accomplished in Sydney must be carried on in right methods, else in the name of the Lord I will raise my voice in protest. I will not stand unmoved while things go wrong in our institutions and while laborers are employed upon no settled basis, so that they are made subject to want, and are therefore tempted and subject to be swayed from the truth. One thread of selfishness must not be woven into our plans and methods of doing service for God. We are not to seek for the success of certain actions, caring not from what principle they flow. God looks directly at the very heart of every purpose. We must arise and expel the enemy, in whatever form he may come, that those who in susceptibility and discernment are blinded, shall not, by evil suggestions, lead minds away from purity of action.
(12LtMs, Lt 71, 1897, 22)
Silent envy is to be guarded against. God condemns secret slander and injurious surmises. Undue self-esteem is certain to bring the sure result. God humbles the man. God, who seeth and readeth the heart, will judge every man’s work of what sort it is. He only is safe who keeps the Lord ever before him, whose constant plea is, “Search me, O Lord, and know my heart; try me, and know my thoughts, and see if there be any wicked thing in me, and lead me in the way everlasting.” [Psalm 139:23, 24.]
(12LtMs, Lt 71, 1897, 23)
I can write no more on this point. What I have written I know you will harmonize with. I have had an experience which has burned its way into my soul. I am unable to write more now, but I shall write on these subjects more fully. I pray the Lord that many souls who have peace in their present religious state may be stirred to inquire, What manner of persons ought we to be if we would be prepared for the coming of the Son of Man, who shall judge every man’s work, and reward every man as his work shall be?
(12LtMs, Lt 71, 1897, 24)
In love.
(12LtMs, Lt 71, 1897, 25)
Lt 72, 1897
Haskell, Brother and Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia December 1, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 9MR 371. Dear Brother and Sister Haskell:
I received your last communication. Thank you for your faithfulness in writing to us. We rejoice in the Lord for His power and His grace and His great love for the souls that are perishing. We will understand that it is our place not to fail nor be discouraged. There should be that faith and trust in God that will ask for wisdom and facilities and that will believe.
(12LtMs, Lt 72, 1897, 1)
“He that spared not his own Son, but delivered him up for us all, how shall he not with him freely give us all things?” [Romans 8:32.] Might we not inquire, How shall we not for His sake freely give Him all things? Shall we see souls perishing around us, and not manifest a zeal and love for them proportionate to their value? The unfathomable depths of the love of God were stirred with divine benevolence in the infinite sacrifice made. “For God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life.” [John 3:16.] Shall the shallow streams of our gratitude be only as a ripple on the surface? What did Jesus do? He who was rich for our sakes became poor, that we through His poverty might become rich. The mysterious Godhead descended to our rescue. We see Him descending from depth to depth of humiliation in our behalf, until the shameful cross arrested His farther descent, and made it impossible to step lower.
(12LtMs, Lt 72, 1897, 2)
This example is set before us. This is the value which the Lord places upon the human race. Shall man then fail to act his part to redeem his fellow men? This work of redemption moved the universe. Is it not sufficient to move and stir our souls? Shall we not work for the recovery of man? Shall we not place ourselves under the Holy Spirit’s working, that every jot of the ability and talent which God has given us may be united with the Master-worker, Jesus Christ, to seek and to save the lost? Where is our faith? We are invited by the world’s Redeemer, “Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly of heart, and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.” [Matthew 11:29, 30.] Here is a new bond of union in our co-operation with Jesus Christ for the recovery of fallen man.
(12LtMs, Lt 72, 1897, 3)
Christ our Advocate is our High Priest. He has entered into heaven for us, and the whole universe of heaven goes out at His command to the help of the unselfish, interested worker. We are to be faithful, courageous, true as steel to the Captain of our Salvation: “For we have not an high priest that cannot be touched with the feelings of our infirmities, but was in all points tempted like as we are, yet without sin.” [Hebrews 4:15.]
(12LtMs, Lt 72, 1897, 4)
We are engaged in a great work. “Let us therefore come boldly to the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy, and find grace to help in every time of need.” [Verse 16.] “For verily he took not on him the nature of angels, but he took on him the seed of Abraham.”“Wherefore in all things it behoved him to be made like unto his brethren, that he might be a merciful and faithful high priest in things pertaining to God to make reconciliation for the sins of the people; for in that he hath suffered being tempted, he is able to succor them that are tempted.” [Hebrews 2:16-18.]
(12LtMs, Lt 72, 1897, 5)
We are engaged in a great work, and we cannot leave it or be diverted from it. The highest work of God is the redemption of the fallen race. He calls for all the faculties and powers of His co-workers to be put to the tax for this one achievement, the salvation of souls, the triumph of His grace and love. For this Christ came into our world. This was the object ever before Him, to seek and to save that which was lost. He gave His life that man, through the offering of Himself, the incarnate God, through faith in Him, might secure that life that measures with the life of God. He has the care of every soul in view. He has made abundant provision to save to the uttermost all who come unto Him by faith, believing that His blood cleanses them from all sin. He laid down His life for His sheep, and the reward of His sufferings is to see souls saved, to see of the travail of His soul and be satisfied.
(12LtMs, Lt 72, 1897, 6)
The Lamb of God taketh away the sin of the world. He giveth the grace of His Spirit. O what love, what matchless love! Creation was originated in the purpose of God to glorify Himself in the redemption of the fallen race. “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.” [Ephesians 3:9-11.]
(12LtMs, Lt 72, 1897, 7)
Why, I ask, are those who claim to believe the truth so indifferent? Why do they not manifest a zeal proportionate to the work to be accomplished? The Lord calls for the exercise of living faith, for the exercise of practical work. Just before His ascension, one step from the Father’s throne, Christ declared, “All power is given unto me in heaven and in earth.” [Matthew 28:18.] The gift of Jesus to our world embraced all heaven. Why are we so unbelieving?
(12LtMs, Lt 72, 1897, 8)
The Holy Spirit is engaged to work with human agencies to minister the grace of Christ, to make the salvation of souls a certainty. The merits of My righteousness, Christ said, shall be given to all who receive and believe in Me. The Holy Spirit will give grace and peace, and bless you with the fulness of all spiritual blessings. The pledge is made to Christ by the Father that He will give to man all the love He bestows on Christ if they will come back to their loyalty in faith and repentance. Christ will be their surety, to render an account to God for the perfection of His own perfect obedience and righteousness for every one who will wear His yoke.
(12LtMs, Lt 72, 1897, 9)
God accepts us in the Beloved. Then let unbelief be dismissed. The promise is, We shall be blessed with all spiritual blessings which come from an unfailing source, the Fountain of life. “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ.” [Ephesians 1:3.] “Who hath saved us and called us with a holy calling; not according to our works, but according to his own purpose and grace, which was given us in Jesus Christ before the world began.” [2 Timothy 1:9.] Again we read, “Paul, a servant of God, and an apostle of Jesus Christ, according to the faith of God’s elect, and the acknowledging of the truth which is after godliness, in hope of eternal life, which God that cannot lie promised before the world began; but hath in due time manifested his word through preaching which is committed unto me according to the commandment of God our Saviour.” [Titus 1:1-3.]
(12LtMs, Lt 72, 1897, 10)
Brethren, I say unto you, Have faith in God. Let all taste and see that the Lord is gracious. You know whence cometh your help. You know that you are to work for the salvation of souls, and to save those that are perishing out of Christ. This should be the very highest interest of all who believe. Those whom the Lord has drawn with his love and kindness are to draw others to the Saviour. He is waiting to receive every soul. The Lord never forgets to be gracious to those who are humble and contrite in heart. Your divine Surety has pledged you to God through his own righteousness. The Lord Jesus pledged Himself to present to His Father a church without spot or wrinkle or any such thing. He has paid the price for your ransom, He has engaged to perfect his grace in every soul, that man may be complete in him. Men forget their obligations to God; but God never forgets His pledged word to all who seek Him with a whole heart.
(12LtMs, Lt 72, 1897, 11)
Let us put away the sin of unbelief. Let us consecrate ourselves to God, soul, body, and spirit. Our life was taken into union with Christ’s human life and Deity combined. “It is Christ that died, yea rather, that is risen again.” [Romans 8:34.] “He ever liveth to make intercession for us.” [Hebrews 7:25.] Then let us reach the highest standard of Christian character. Ever bear in mind that the Lord is expecting more of us than we give Him. The cry of souls ready to perish in ignorance and in sin is swift to reach His ear. “He shall deliver the needy when he crieth, and the poor also, and him that hath no helper.” [Psalm 72:12.]
(12LtMs, Lt 72, 1897, 12)
“And at that time shall Michael stand up, that great prince which standeth for the children of thy people: and there shall be a time of trouble such as never was since there was a nation, even to that same time: and at that time thy people shall be delivered, every one that shall be found written in the book, and many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake, some to everlasting life, and some to shame and everlasting contempt. And they that be wise shall shine as the brightness of the firmament; and they that turn many to righteousness as the stars forever and ever.” [Daniel 12:1-3.]
(12LtMs, Lt 72, 1897, 13)
Make ready a people to stand in the day of the Lord. We have no time to lose. The Lord is coming; the end is near. “Many shall be purified, made white, and tried; but the wicked shall do wickedly, and none of the wicked shall understand.” [Verse 10.] And the Lord will say to those who are obedient to His commandments in a world of disobedience and transgression of His law, “I will betroth thee forever; yea, I will betroth thee unto me in righteousness and in judgment, and in lovingkindness and in mercy. I will even betroth thee unto me in faithfulness; and thou shalt know the Lord.” [Hosea 2:19, 20.]
(12LtMs, Lt 72, 1897, 14)
I entreat of you who know the truth to practice the truth. Time is short. Let not your hearts be diverted from the last great work of warning. God does not give this work of ministering to those whose garments are defiled by sin, but to those who are being purified, made white, and tried. Say unto the people, ye messengers of God, “Cast away from you all your transgressions whereby you have transgressed, and make you a new heart and a new spirit; for why will ye die, O house of Israel? For I have no pleasure in the death of him that dieth, saith the Lord God: wherefore turn yourselves, and live ye.” [Ezekiel 18:31, 32.]
(12LtMs, Lt 72, 1897, 15)
Have faith in God. We dishonor Him by our unbelief. Pray, and watch unto prayer. He is touched with the feelings of our infirmities. He is merciful, one who can have compassion on the ignorant, and on them that are out of the way.
(12LtMs, Lt 72, 1897, 16)
The fountain has been prepared for every [one] to wash and make them clean in the blood of the Lamb. How long shall our weakness in Christian experience last? Arise, and trim your lamps that they may be brightly burning, flashing their bright and saving beams on to the pathway of others. O, I see so much to be done! I long for confirmed strength, that I may work as I desire to work. It may be that I shall be spared to sound the last note of warning to a perishing world. The Lord’s will be done if it is otherwise. I will plead for souls. Give us sheaves to be given to God; O, give us sheaves. I will have faith in God. I call upon all to have faith in God.
(12LtMs, Lt 72, 1897, 17)
“Wash you, make you clean” from all sin in the blood of the Lamb. [Isaiah 1:16.] “The Lord is a strong tower. The righteous runneth into it, and are safe.” [Proverbs 18:10.] This God must be all our confidence and all our trust. The streams of grace must be fresh, and fertilize our own souls, thus they will be in us a well of water, springing up into everlasting life. Let the praise of God go forth from human lips. Praise Him with heart; praise Him with soul. Let the voice speak forth His praises at all times. It should be thus, and it will be thus when Christ is abiding in the soul. Our sufficiency is in God. The name of the Lord is a strong tower. The righteous runneth into it, and are safe.
(12LtMs, Lt 72, 1897, 18)
Lt 72a, 1897
Haskell, Brother and Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia December 14, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother and Sister Haskell:
I received your letters and read them with interest. I am sure that the Lord is at work. It is not always wise to do constant work, as you are now doing, but if necessity demands that it be done for the saving of souls, then you must have faith that the Lord will give you strength and grace according to your day. The Lord is your strength. He will be your salvation. He will give you grace sufficient for your labors. But lay hold upon him, who has said, “Lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world.” [Matthew 28:20.] We must bring all the sunshine possible into our work. You must take periods of rest. It is essential, when there is so great a necessity for every jot of strength and energy and aptitude to meet the circumstances around you, that you feel that you can not only touch the garments of Christ, but walk with Him as your companion, and through faith receive His healing touch to revive the mind and body for the work.
(12LtMs, Lt 72a, 1897, 1)
It is our privilege to believe in the health-restoring power of God, the health-giving beams of the Sun of Righteousness. You may carry with you this endorsement of the power of God in your important work, “I am the resurrection and the life.” [John 11:25.] Christ wants you to grasp more of heaven’s abundant resources. “Be of good cheer,” He said; “thy faith hath made thee whole.” [Matthew 9:2, 22.] Why do we not have faith? Be assured that at this stage of the work, when souls are making decisions to become loyal and true to all the commandments of God, Satan’s agencies will appear with vitalizing power to work against God. But greater is he that is in you than the power that controls them.
(12LtMs, Lt 72a, 1897, 2)
Christ’s peace will be imparted to all who love God and keep His commandments. Says the Psalmist, “Great peace have they that love thy law and nothing shall offend them.” [Psalm 119:165.] From Christ goes forth a power that gives men life and peace, which tunes the heart to offer praise and thanksgiving to God, and fills the heart with love for Him and for one another.
(12LtMs, Lt 72a, 1897, 3)
Faith is the spiritual hand that touches infinity. The inner glory of God in the soul will shine forth in word, in looks, in prayers, to all who are seeking to save the souls that are ready to perish. God wants to take away the infirmities, that faith may spring up in the heart, and carry with it the healing beams, even the Redeemer’s glory. We should sing with the Psalmist, “O Lord, my God, thou art very great. Thou art clothed with honor and majesty: who covereth thyself with light as with a garment, who stretchest out the heavens like a curtain, who layeth the beams of his chambers in the water, who maketh the clouds his chariot, who walketh upon the wings of the wind.” [Psalm 104:1-3.]
(12LtMs, Lt 72a, 1897, 4)
May the Lord bless the work that is now being done, is my prayer.
(12LtMs, Lt 72a, 1897, 5)
Lt 73, 1897
Haskell, S.N. Refiled as Lt 40, 1896.
Lt 74, 1897
Humphries, Brother NP February 7, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in TDG 46; TMK 94. Brother Humphries:
The Lord is calling for you, “Return unto me, and I will return unto you.” [Malachi 3:7.] You are in a dangerous position. Spiritually, you have been going backward instead of going forward. If the Lord had not guarded and protected you moment by moment from dangers which you did not see, from perils which you did not discern, you would not now be among the living. Your life has been graciously preserved. You are regarded by the Husbandman as an unfruitful tree, but His hand is stretched out still, and He says, I will give him renewed advantages. I will make My goodness and mercy pass before him. I will renew My invitation, and then, if he bears no fruit, let him be cut down.
(12LtMs, Lt 74, 1897, 1)
My dear brother, what have you been beholding? By beholding the imperfections of men and women, you are gradually becoming changed into the same likeness. Make a decided change, and look to Jesus, that by beholding His perfection, you may become changed into His image. Then His spirit will take possession of your mind and character. By your piety and godliness, by your words and actions, by your spiritual activity for truth and righteousness, you will represent Christ. When a man turns away from human imperfections, and beholds Jesus, a divine transformation takes place in his character. He fixes his eye upon Christ as on a mirror which reflects the glory of God, and by beholding, he becomes changed into the same image, from glory to glory, even as by the Spirit of the Lord.
(12LtMs, Lt 74, 1897, 2)
“If any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of his.” [Romans 8:9.] Turn your eyes from the imperfections of others, and fix them steadfastly on Christ. With a contrite heart, study His life and character. You need not only to be more enlightened, but quickened, that you may see the banquet that is before you, and eat and drink the flesh and blood of the Son of God, which is His Word. By tasting the good Word of life, by feeding on the bread of life, you may see the power of a world to come, and be created anew in Christ Jesus. If you receive His gifts, you will be renewed unto holiness, and His grace will bring forth in you fruit unto the glory of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 74, 1897, 3)
The Holy Spirit reveals Christ to the mind, and faith takes hold of Him. If you accept Christ as your personal Saviour, you will know by experience the value of the great sacrifice made in your behalf upon the cross of Calvary. The Spirit of Christ, working upon the heart, conforms it to His image, for Christ is the model upon which the Spirit works. By the ministry of His Word, by His providences, by His inward working, God stamps the likeness of Christ upon the soul.
(12LtMs, Lt 74, 1897, 4)
To possess Christ is your first work, and to reveal Him as One who is able to save to the uttermost all who come to Him is your next work. To serve the Lord with full purpose of heart is to honor and glorify His name by dwelling upon holy things, by having a mind filled with the vital truths revealed in His Holy Word.
(12LtMs, Lt 74, 1897, 5)
You can be a great blessing spiritually to your family, or you can be a great hindrance. That which you sow, you will also reap. What will be your harvest, my brother? Can you look forward with pleasure to the reaping time?
(12LtMs, Lt 74, 1897, 6)
The Lord has presented before me the cases of several who were sowing bad seed. Their thoughts and their words were far from being of that character that God can approve. These men have been blindly exerting an influence that is not spiritual, that does not strengthen the church. They are enshrouded in darkness; they are dishonoring God by scattering away from Christ. They have not exerted a healthy influence in the church, neither have they recommended the truth to others by exerting a right influence outside the church.
(12LtMs, Lt 74, 1897, 7)
Brother Hardy has indeed been a hard man in his home, unfeeling, unlovable, selfish, and self-seeking. His words of faultfinding and criticism have harmonized with your words. By your association together, his feelings and your spirit, which is so unlike Christ, have been strengthened. This kind of religion is not the religion of Christ, but a deception, a delusion of the great deceiver. His service is hard service, and is indeed to receive very hard wages.
(12LtMs, Lt 74, 1897, 8)
Could the veil have been withdrawn from before you and Brother Hardy, could you have seen what I saw, your tongues would have been silent. An angel was represented to me, writing in a book the words spoken under the influence of another spirit than that of Christ, a self-sufficient, self-deceived spirit. The words spoken, the spirit manifested, revealed the attributes of Satan. Said Christ, “He that is not with me is against me: and he that gathereth not with me scattereth abroad.” [Matthew 12:30.]
(12LtMs, Lt 74, 1897, 9)
Another messenger spoke, saying, “As he which hath called you is holy, so be ye holy in all manner of conversation; because it is written, Be ye holy; for I am holy. And if ye call on the Father, who without respect of persons judgeth according to every man’s work, pass the time of your sojourning here in fear. For as much as ye know that ye were not redeemed with corruptible things, as silver and gold, from your vain conversation, received by tradition from your fathers, but with the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot; who verily was foreordained before the foundation of the world, but was manifest in these last times for you.” [1 Peter 1:15-20.]
(12LtMs, Lt 74, 1897, 10)
“If we believe not, yet he abideth faithful: he cannot deny himself. Of these things put them in remembrance, charging them before the Lord that they strive not about words to no profit, but to the subverting of the hearers. Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth. But shun profane and vain babblings; for they will increase unto more ungodliness.” [2 Timothy 2:13-16.]
(12LtMs, Lt 74, 1897, 11)
Christ is to be known by you. He is a spirit of liberty, leading away from the bondage of Satan to holiness, enabling us to serve God in righteousness and true holiness all the days of our lives. He has given you liberty to come near to God by faith, to enjoy communion with God, to worship God in Spirit and in truth, and in the beauty of holiness. You may be a partaker of the divine nature.
(12LtMs, Lt 74, 1897, 12)
Christ does not accuse and condemn. He invites you, “Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.” [Matthew 11:28-30.] Goodness, meekness, gentleness, patience, and love are the attributes of Christ’s character. If you have the Spirit of Christ, your character will be molded after His character. But “if any man have not the spirit of Christ, he is none of his.” [Romans 8:9.]
(12LtMs, Lt 74, 1897, 13)
Lt 74a, 1897
Haskell, Brother and Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia March 1, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 3SM 338-339; 7MR 386-387; CTr 357. Dear Brother and Sister Haskell:
We received Brother Haskell’s letter the evening after the Sabbath. We were glad to hear from you that your interests are united as one. May the Lord bless this union, that you may be a strength and support to one another at all times. May the peace of God rest upon you, is my sincere desire and earnest prayer.
(12LtMs, Lt 74a, 1897, 1)
“Go stand and speak unto the people all the words of this life.” [Acts 5:20.]
(12LtMs, Lt 74a, 1897, 2)
I am pleased, Brother Haskell, that you have a helper. This is that which I have desired for some time. The work in which we are engaged has made us one in Christ Jesus to diffuse the knowledge of Jesus Christ. It is your privilege to have happiness in your new relation to each other, in ministering the gospel to those who are in darkness and error. We can sympathize and unite in the grand work which you and I love and which is the one great object ever before us, the enlargement of the kingdom of Christ and the celebration of His glory. In everything which relates to this we are united in the bonds of Christian fellowship, in companionship with heavenly intelligences.
(12LtMs, Lt 74a, 1897, 3)
We are never alone. We can never put forth the least effort for the advancement of the work of God in our world, but the act thrills through all the universe of heaven and makes us co-laborers with God; united with the heavenly principalities and powers, all our sympathies are absorbed. Thus our strength and efficiency are to be united in the design of Christ as His agents connected with the great firm to secure other agencies and combine them with those already in operation, to restore the moral image of God in man. The (page torn) labor by our connection with Him, you will unitedly do the work of God on earth as the principalities and powers in heaven do the work assigned them. Because of the light given me, I am fully possessed with the conviction that through your united agencies, as sanctified instrumentalities, light shall be reflected to the salvation of many souls that are now in darkness and error. I know you have not lived unto yourselves but unto Him whom you love and whom you serve and worship.
(12LtMs, Lt 74a, 1897, 4)
Each angel is at his post, waiting for the cooperation of human channels to give efficiency and power to the truth in the restoration of fallen man. This was Christ’s work; this is our work. The angels of God are to be regarded as ever present with the interested, consecrated worker, perpetually stimulating, strengthening, and encouraging the efforts of the laborers on earth. By the eye of faith we are fighting in view of the whole universe of heaven. There is plenty of help and strength for us in God, for the heavenly agencies are mighty. Their divine influence is with all we do and all we say to advance the glory of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 74a, 1897, 5)
These agencies are abundantly mighty; their efforts with human endeavors, and through the medium of our faith, will shed a softening and subduing influence upon our course of action. In the economy of God all the powers of heaven cooperate with the whole-hearted, earnest workers in this world in carrying forward His design in saving the lost. The claim of relationship and mutual influence not only passes from one member to another of the church militant, but through all the family of heaven, uniting both worlds for the saving of a perishing world.
(12LtMs, Lt 74a, 1897, 6)
Never are we absent from the mind of God. God is our joy and our salvation. Each of the ancient prophets spoke less for their own time than for ours, so that their prophesying is in force for us. “Now all these things happened unto them for ensamples: and they are written for our admonition, upon whom the ends of the world are come.”1 Corinthians 10:11. “Not unto themselves, but unto us they did minister the things, which are now reported unto you by them that have preached the gospel unto you with the Holy Ghost sent down from heaven; which things the angels desire to look into.”1 Peter 1:12. The Bible has been your study book. It is well thus, for it is the true counsel of God, and it is the conductor of all the holy influences that the world has contained since its creation. We have the encouraging record that Enoch walked with God. If Enoch walked with God in that degenerate age just prior to the destruction of the world by a flood, we are to receive courage and be stimulated with his example that we need not be contaminated with the world, but amid all its corrupting influences and tendencies, we may walk with God. We may have the mind of Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 74a, 1897, 7)
Enoch, the seventh from Adam, was ever prophesying the coming of the Lord. This great event had been revealed to him in vision. Abel, though dead, is ever speaking of the blood of Christ which alone can make our offerings and gifts perfect. The Bible has accumulated and bound up together its treasures for this last generation. All the great events and solemn transactions of Old Testament history have been, and are, repeating themselves in the church in these last days. There is Moses still speaking, teaching self-renunciation by wishing himself blotted from the Book of Life for his fellow men, that they might be saved. David is leading the intercession of the church for the salvation of souls to the ends of the earth. The prophets are still testifying of the sufferings of Christ and the glory that should follow. There the whole accumulated truths are presented in force to us that we may profit by their teachings. We are under the influence of the whole. What manner of persons ought we to be to whom all this rich light of inheritance has been given? Concentrating all the influence of the past with new and [increased] light of the present, accrued power is given to all who will follow the light. Their faith will increase and be brought into exercise at the present time, awakening an energy and an intensely increased earnestness, and thorough dependence upon God for His power to replenish the world and send the light of the Sun of Righteousness to the ends of the earth.
(12LtMs, Lt 74a, 1897, 8)
God has enriched the world in these last days proportionately with the increase of ungodliness if His people will only lay hold of His priceless gift and bind up their every interest with Him. There should be no cherished idols and we need not dread what will come, but commit the keeping of our souls to God as unto our faithful Creator. He will keep that which is committed to His trust.
(12LtMs, Lt 74a, 1897, 9)
*****
I did not expect to write in this line, but you have it as fast as my pen could go over the paper. I commenced writing about two o’clock a.m. I am making no copy of this, but will copy it when you shall come up here to Cooranbong. I had to copy the letter sent to you from Brother Daniells.
(12LtMs, Lt 74a, 1897, 10)
I cannot see how it can be wisdom for you to go to Adelaide just as our school is about to commence. Someone of experience is needed here, and I know of none who can take hold here as you both can do at this time. I cannot see how this can be otherwise. There is a work to be done here and there is no head to plan or devise, and we need you both to take hold. I cannot do this. I must devote time to writing. Your experience, Brother Haskell, united with that of your wife, will be just the help we need, and I cannot see how it can be your duty to go to Adelaide or to New Zealand.
(12LtMs, Lt 74a, 1897, 11)
I had written to Brother Daniells in reference to the situation of things before his letter came demanding more help, if it were possible to furnish it. But I do [not see] that it would be wisdom for you to leave for any place [as we are now] situated. We need workers here; and some visits and some help must be given to Sydney. When the work shall be brought up properly here, and the school opened, I can consent, but I cannot consent for you to leave me now; I cannot think it your duty to do so.
(12LtMs, Lt 74a, 1897, 12)
There is a work to be done here which has been strangely neglected. I wish to take Brother and Sister Haskell to visit in the country—some very nice people. I have hope they may receive the truth. Let Brother Daniells call Brother and Sister Wilson to their help. I would be glad if you could go to Adelaide, for with your experience you could give them just the help they need, by the opening of the school is now so near we must have you here. You understand about these things. Let Brother Daniells himself go to Adelaide and help them. He is close by. How could Brother Daniells think it duty to take any help from this locality, where we have so little? There is executive ability needed in Sydney, and especially just now in Cooranbong; but I will not write more now.
(12LtMs, Lt 74a, 1897, 13)
Come back home as soon as possible. We have had our girls go twice to the blackberry patch, and we have had our blackberry short-cake. Yesterday they decided that their short-cake was the best they have yet had. We have now fifty quarts canned. We have plenty of grapes.
(12LtMs, Lt 74a, 1897, 14)
We will be pleased to see your wife, who has been so long nigh, and yet so far off.
(12LtMs, Lt 74a, 1897, 15)
Last Sabbath we had a large turnout, expecting to hear you.
(12LtMs, Lt 74a, 1897, 16)
Well, please come as soon as you can.
(12LtMs, Lt 74a, 1897, 17)
In much love.
(12LtMs, Lt 74a, 1897, 18)
Lt 74b, 1897
Haskell, Brother and Sister; Starr, Brother and Sister; Wilson, Brother and Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia December 16, 1897 Previously unpublished. My dear Brother and Sister Haskell, Brother and Sister Starr, Brother and Sister Wilson:
Be of good courage in the Lord. The Lord has far more interest in the work in Stanmore and suburbs than it is possible for any of us to manifest. We must remember constantly the words, “Ye are laborers together with God; ye are God’s husbandry, ye are God’s building.” [1 Corinthians 3:9.] As laborers together with God, the Lord will make you His lightbearers. You are connected with One who tells you, “All power is given to me in heaven and in earth.” [Matthew 28:18.] You need not fear failure or defeat. With hands uplifted to God, revealing to all that you make God your strength, you will be brought in close relation to the people and to God. We will grow while we work.
(12LtMs, Lt 74b, 1897, 1)
As we work, we see the need of prayer and of striving continually for a deeper insight into the mystery of God’s love to us through Christ Jesus. In beholding His glory, we are reflecting His image from glory to glory, to a more perfect character. It is the Christlikeness we bear with us before those who are seeking for truth that thaws the frozen-up affections of their souls and our own souls as well. There will be times when you will find you will have to lay hold of souls as represented in Jude, pulling them out of the fire, hating even the garments spotted with the flesh. [Jude 23.] Reach down deep, pull hard, never let go your hold upon the line of faith and determined purpose. Draw, draw, draw, for all the work is of God and the universe of heaven draws with you.
(12LtMs, Lt 74b, 1897, 2)
Satan is striving for the mastery, but so long as you center your faith in God, he will not succeed. An arm that is Infinite is stretched out to sustain the worker. Hold fast to the One for whom you labor. Sudden and desperate effort is at times required. There must be no such thing as failure or discouragement. Some may seem to be unimpressible, but you do not know what battles are going on in the soul, of truth against error and error against truth. You may have to repeat the same words again and again, but they are not lost; they are becoming fastened as a nail in a sure place.
(12LtMs, Lt 74b, 1897, 3)
It takes time for the enlightening of the understanding. Sin has darkened the reasoning powers of man so that he does not discern the sacred from the common. But hold fast to every soul; be importunate in prayer. There are those who profess to be Christians, who have had an experience in the things of God; these will receive the truth. Others think they know it all and will not heed instruction. The darkness of error has blinded their perception; therefore wait patiently. Get them often on their knees to pray with you, and angels of God will be present to water your own souls with the showers of His grace, tender your own hearts and their hearts, and it will be a blessed season to both.
(12LtMs, Lt 74b, 1897, 4)
The Lord will take these poor souls if they will come and stand under His banner in loyalty. “A new heart will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you.” [Ezekiel 36:26.] This is the divine breath of God to the soul of the true seeker. God will give you His healing power. We will rely upon Him, for He is our great Physician of the body as well as of the soul.
(12LtMs, Lt 74b, 1897, 5)
We are praying for you every day, and in the night seasons. Be strong in God, yea, be strong in the power of His grace.
(12LtMs, Lt 74b, 1897, 6)
Lt 75, 1897
Ings, Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia July 3, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in 7MR 76-77. Dear Sister Ings:
I feel sad that I cannot also address Brother Ings. But the tree, faithful standard bearer is at rest. We did flatter ourselves that with you he would come to Australia, but as far as he is concerned, this hope is quenched. If I were within reach of you, I would visit you, and encourage your heart. First the little son was separated from the father and mother, and now the husband and father has fallen asleep in Jesus.
(12LtMs, Lt 75, 1897, 1)
“Here is the patience of the saints, here are they that keep the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus.” [Revelation 14:12.]
(12LtMs, Lt 75, 1897, 2)
“And I heard a voice from heaven saying unto me, Write, Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord from hence. Yea, saith the Spirit, that they may rest from their labors; And their works do follow them.” [Verse 13.]
(12LtMs, Lt 75, 1897, 3)
The blessing of he Lord has attended your husband’s labors, and he will be missed. Our dear brother was loyal to God. It was his pleasure to co-operate with Jesus Christ, to cheerfully wear the dear Saviour’s yoke, and cheerfully lift the burden of obedience, doing the commandments of God. For centuries the consolation of believers has been the declaration of Christ over the rent sepulcher of Joseph: “I am the resurrection and the life. He that believeth on me, though he were dead, yet shall he live.” [John 11:25, 26.] Let nought but gratitude fill your heart; for the life of Jesus becomes the sustaining cause of all who receive him as their personal Saviour. Christ was the spiritual life of your husband.
(12LtMs, Lt 75, 1897, 4)
“I will not leave you comfortless; I will come to you. Yet a little while, and the world seeth me no more; but ye see me: because I live, ye shall live also.” [John 14:18, 19.] The resurrection of Christ from the dead makes it certain that all who believe in Christ as their personal Saviour, because He lives, they shall live also. His continual living agency on high ensures the fact that his death and resurrection brings to them life and immortality.
(12LtMs, Lt 75, 1897, 5)
Your husband will live in the hearts of those who love God. As time passes you will miss him more and more. May the Lord strengthen and comfort and bless you. The Lord Jesus will be to you an ever present help in time of need. On Him you may rely. His death and resurrection are to be ever kept fresh in the minds of those who receive and believe in Him as their Redeemer. The resurrection of Christ is the assurance of our salvation. He is the source of our life. “Because I live, ye shall live also.” [Verse 19.] We have a living Saviour. In this we may all rejoice. Christ is not in Joseph’s new tomb, but is our Friend at court, pleading in our behalf. Approach your Saviour with full assurance of faith, for He ever liveth to make intercession for you. Upon Him you may depend for comfort and peace.
(12LtMs, Lt 75, 1897, 6)
Never forget that the Saviour’s loving presence continually surrounds us, and we are invited to come to Him when we are weary and heavy laden. He says, “Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly of heart, and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.” [Matthew 11:29, 30.] Seek Him as One who wants you to find Him to the joy of your soul. This will give vitality to your faith and earnestness to your prayers. Never approach your Lord with the impression that He is far from you. He is near thee, even at thy right hand to help thee. Be sure to trust the keeping of your soul to Him. You are His by creation, and you are His by redemption.
(12LtMs, Lt 75, 1897, 7)
Lt 76, 1897
Irwin, George A. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia July 22, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 8MR 56-57, 191; SpM 95-96. + Dear Brother George A. Irwin:
Your letter written from the campground, Oakland, California, June 6, 1897, was received July 20, 1897.
(12LtMs, Lt 76, 1897, 1)
I appreciate your consideration in regard to W. C. White connecting with me in my preparation of writings and bookmaking. I would be pleased if this could be so, but I am not at all confident that this plan will be carried out.
(12LtMs, Lt 76, 1897, 2)
I have another proposition to make; it is that Sister Peck, who is now in South Africa, shall unite with me in my work. I must have a lady worker. She is desirous of coming as soon as someone can take her place. When I left America, I was assured that Brother and Sister Starr would come to Australia with me, and would help me in every way possible. This plan was carried out only a few weeks. At Harbor Heights the resolution was made that W. C. White devote more of his time in helping me. But he has been so loaded down with responsibilities that I can seldom get an opportunity to present matters of importance before him, and which I have felt compelled to send every mail.
(12LtMs, Lt 76, 1897, 3)
I have a very large amount of matter which I desire to have come before the people, but I have no one to consider these matters with me. If I could have Sister Peck and Willie, I could get off important things much more perfectly. I ought to have some one to whom I can read every article before sending it to the mail. This always helps the writer, for the often discerns more clearly what is wanted and the slight changes that should be made. It is an important matter to keep in its simplicity all that matter which I write. I am sure my two editors endeavor to preserve my words, not supplying their own in the place of them.
(12LtMs, Lt 76, 1897, 4)
I am pleased to report that my head is [as] clear as it has ever been. I want to exercise my mind and pen while I can. I have little trouble with the rheumatism. Long-standing difficulties have been healed, and I dare not complain. I know it is impossible to create the heavenly gifts; but they are appointed for us. God has given them [to] us through the riches of His grace. They are ours if we will receive them into hearts that are prepared for them. I want the windows of my soul to be opened to the heavenly dew, the sunshine and the reviving showers.
(12LtMs, Lt 76, 1897, 5)
Christ is acquainted with all our peculiar weaknesses, all our wants and griefs. He appreciates the human beings for whom He has done so much. When about to suffer, bearing the sins of the whole world, He left us a rich legacy—“even the Spirit of truth, whom the world cannot receive, because it seeth him not, neither knoweth him.”“But ye know him,” He said, “for he dwelleth with you, and shall be in you. I will not leave you comfortless: I will come to you. Yet a little while and the world seeth me no more; but ye see me: because I live, ye shall live also.” [John 14:17-19.] What a legacy is this!
(12LtMs, Lt 76, 1897, 6)
I pray that the Lord by His Holy Spirit will work to arouse the church. I am very anxious for all in Battle Creek. I hope there will be a reformation in the publishing house and in the church. If there is not a decided change in the heart, if from every worker there is not sent forth a pure, holy current, disease, spiritual consumption, will be revealed in him and in the work which he is handling. Souls have departed from the counsel of God, and by their head-strong passions, impatient of control, have set an example that has been fatal to others. The Lord has allowed them to have their own way and their own will, and they have abused their opportunities, rushing into methods and schemes and actions which God does not endorse. We have had sufficient warnings from God to work in Christ’s lines, to humble self, and exalt the Lord in our hearts. I pray that the Physician of souls may undertake the case of each one, that they may fear and tremble before Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 76, 1897, 7)
You mention the school. I pray the Lord that He will stand at the head of the school as Principal, and that all may work under His divine guidance. If the Lord’s will is done, students will not be encouraged to remain in the school for years. This is the devising of man, not the plan of God. Those who come to the school, if they put their minds into studying the Book of all books, will, through prayer and close, deep research, obtain in a much shorter period of time a knowledge of Bible education. They will learn of Jesus in the school of Christ. The years of study of those books which should not be made study books unfits students for the work to be done in this important period of this earth’s history. One young man, after five years’ study, has come from the school unfitted to teach or preach. He has to unlearn and unload a mass of rubbish which will disqualify him for efficiency in any line of the work to be done for this time.
(12LtMs, Lt 76, 1897, 8)
It makes my heart ache when I consider how many would be glad of the privilege of a short period in the school, where they can be brought up on some points of study. There are those who would consider it an inestimable privilege to have the Scripture opened to them in its pure, unadulterated simplicity, to be taught how they can keep out of the argumentative, debating methods, and come close to hearts, how simple direct, straightforward lines they might learn how to teach the truth so that it shall be clearly discerned. These years of study are cultivating many habits and methods in the students that will cripple their usefulness. They need to go through another process of education and unlearn many things that they have acquired.
(12LtMs, Lt 76, 1897, 9)
The proper methods have been presented to me. Let students with their mental studies call into exercise the physical and moral powers. Let them work the living machinery proportionately. The constant working of the brain is a mistake. I wish I could express in words just that which would express the matter. The constant working of the brain causes a diseased imagination. It leads to dissipation. The education of five years in this one line is not of as much value as an all-around education of one year.
(12LtMs, Lt 76, 1897, 10)
Let the students take up the work of using the knowledge they have obtained. Let them impart to others the benefits they have received. The Bible studies are to be diligently kept up. If the students will humbly seek Him, the Lord of heaven will open their understanding. They will take time to review their studies in book knowledge; they will critically examine the advancement they have made in the schoolroom, and will combine with their studies physical exercise which is most important in obtaining an all-round education. If young men and women would grow up into the full stature of Christ Jesus, they must treat themselves intelligently. Conscientiousness in methods of education is just as essential as in the consideration of the doctrines of our faith.
(12LtMs, Lt 76, 1897, 11)
The student should place himself in school, [and] if he can, through his own exertion pay his way as he goes. He should study one year, and then work out for himself the problem of what constitutes true education. There is no dividing line. Whether ye eat or drink or whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory of God. The learning heaped up by years of continued study is deleterious to the spiritual interests. Let teachers be prepared to give good counsel to the students who shall enter the schools. Let them not advise students to give years to the study of books. Let them learn, and then give to others that which they have received and appreciated. Let the student set himself to work at manual labor, thus acquiring an education that will enable him to come out with solid principles, an all-round man.
(12LtMs, Lt 76, 1897, 12)
Lt 77, 1897
Jones, C. H. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia July 9, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 4Bio 294, 313. + Dear Brother C. H. Jones:
Last month I sent you a letter in regard to the shares taken by me in the Healdsburg school. I hope that something will be done by our brethren in California, by taking these shares, to relieve me from these responsibilities. We need that money very much to invest in the work here. We are in great need of a meetinghouse. So many more students have come to the school than we expected, and more are coming, that we are being literally crowded out of the room in the school building that we designed as a chapel.
(12LtMs, Lt 77, 1897, 1)
The second school building is only enclosed, not plastered. The upper story is divided into two rooms, one serving as a chapel, the other as boy’s dormitory. This is unfinished, and is not yet divided off into separate rooms. We do not feel that it is right to thus crowd the gentlemen students into one compartment, partitioned off into rooms only by cotton curtains. We have a good class of students, but young men will become demoralized if they have no place for retirement or prayer.
(12LtMs, Lt 77, 1897, 2)
We exhausted our funds in starting the school. I borrowed £1,000, on which I pay four and a half per cent interest, and £100, on which I pay 5% interest. Since I came to Australia $1,500 has been entrusted to me without interest. I have this sum to pay when it is called for. It is from Elder Haskell, who has been very desirous that the work in this country shall be a success. I know he needs this money, but he will not ask for it because he understands the way in which I am situated.
(12LtMs, Lt 77, 1897, 3)
I write this to you that you may understand the situation. I need means to cancel these debts as soon as possible, without having the means drawn from me from other sources. We must build a plain and commodious meetinghouse, and we must put up the main school building, as it was designed from the first. But the church building must go up directly. This we need. Moving our meetings into it will give the entire second story to the study is as sleeping rooms. This is a necessity if we would close the door to temptations that are liable to occur, and that are now bringing in a condition of things that is unpleasant, and detrimental to the discipline and order that must be maintained.
(12LtMs, Lt 77, 1897, 4)
My resources are becoming limited. We are in a new field, and we have not even the “A” of facilities with which to carry on our work. We hope soon to see a different order of things. When Brother Harper stipulated that the $1,000 which he loaned for the work here would be required in one year, I ought to have refused the loan at once, declining to receive any such help. This simply meant that at his call $1,000 of my own money must replace his $1,000. But we were in a very cramped place, and it was a temptation to us to use the money for advancing the different lines of work.
(12LtMs, Lt 77, 1897, 5)
The Lord does not require me to take such burdens upon me. These things have cost me many sleepless nights, trying to devise and plan some way out of the difficulty, that we might see the work advance instead of standing still. It has been push, push, at every step, to roll the load up the hill; yet I kept saying, I will not fall nor become discouraged. I will push the load. But I could not prevent sickness and complete exhaustion coming upon me again and again.
(12LtMs, Lt 77, 1897, 6)
The Lord has not ordered it to be thus. He never designed that many should be eased, while his chosen instrumentalities stagger under an almost insupportable load. The ways of the Lord are equal. It is the planning and devising of human minds who do not have God to plan with them that makes the work so very hard, and so very trying to those who will carry the load, even though they lose their life in so doing.
(12LtMs, Lt 77, 1897, 7)
The blessing of the Lord is upon me, giving me physical and spiritual health at the present time. After W. C. White left I was put to my wits’ end to know who would stand by my side to help me and Bro. Hare. We could not count upon any one. We had sent for Brother Haskell, but his coming seemed shrouded in uncertainty. In the providence of God he came, and the Lord revealed to me that God had chosen him to share the burdens.
(12LtMs, Lt 77, 1897, 8)
I never, in opening the work in any new field, saw such satanic devising to hinder our advancement as we have experienced here. Men who were thought to be trustworthy, as Shannon and Lawrence, became instruments in the hands of Satan to make the work just as hard as possible. They should have helped if they had put self out of sight, but this they did not know how to do. The human element triumphed; the divine, Christlike element was not manifested. These men have not gathered with Christ, but have scattered abroad. One day they will see this matter in an altogether different light from that in which they now view it. I hope that this spiritual enlightenment may come before it is too late for wrongs to be righted.
(12LtMs, Lt 77, 1897, 9)
Night after night I have been unable to sleep, and have dressed and prayed at twelve, one, and two o’clock, and then taken up my writing. I have had to stand firm as a rock to duty and to principle, and keep the matter, in clear, straight lines, line upon line, precept upon precept, here a little and there a little, before those who claimed to believe the truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 77, 1897, 10)
The chief reason why there are so few conversions to Jesus Christ is the daily lives of His professed followers who make self the highest consideration. It has been repeated to me over and over again: Actions speak louder than words. The self-serving lives of men are counterworking the work of God. Every life is a sermon, either for Christ or against Him. Those who are true Christians will not allow themselves to be controlled by a perverse, unruly spirit, but they will testify to the atmosphere which surrounds the soul. Their lives will show whether Christ lives in them or whether Satan occupies the throne of the heart. An unselfish life is the most powerful influence that can surround the human soul.
(12LtMs, Lt 77, 1897, 11)
In this new field it has been demonstrated that the hearts of those who name the name of Christ are indeed revealed by the words and actions. If high and pure and holy things are not earnestly sought for and cherished, the professed believer will condescend to men of low degree. The untamable tongue will run riot; it will not be restrained. The words will not be elevated by that which is holy; and Satan will put upon them his attributes. By their words they will reveal the character of the treasure they have stored in their hearts.
(12LtMs, Lt 77, 1897, 12)
The betrayers of sacred trusts will work faithfully with the great traitor. Those who have not the spiritual anointing will be deceived, and will show that they are not yoked up with Christ but with satanic agencies. The tongue, which is a world of iniquity, will do its work of sowing seeds of dissension, its work of misrepresentation, its work of falsifying that which God approves. The harp of the soul will send forth discontent notes; harsh, jangling discord will be heard. Those who do nothing to advance the work, but strive to retard its progress, will, by their inconsistent principles and practice, counterwork the most strenuous efforts to increase spirituality. But the Lord will not serve with men’s unruly hearts or their unruly tongues.
(12LtMs, Lt 77, 1897, 13)
To counteract the influence which the Lord presented before me as existing, required ceaseless vigilance, and was a most painful effort. The false representations of men have been heard and received by their brethren, and these representations have sowed seed which is as tares among wheat. We have had the apostasy of McCullagh to contend with. We have had his falsehoods and those of his wife to meet. If anything would have given me assurance, had I been in uncertainty, which was not the case, it would have been the wonderful bitterness coming from the evil treasure of the souls of those who had been on this ground, but who had placed themselves on the side of the enemy, to work against the purpose and will of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 77, 1897, 14)
I rejoiced that I had the help of Brother and Sister Haskell. These God appointed to be my companions in establishing a school in this place. So many had spoken against locating a school here, wherever they went leaving the influence of tongue and talent on the enemy’s side that we feared the first term of school would be very weak. But we determined to act in faith, and every preparation that our means would allow was made. There are now sixty in attendance, besides the teachers, and several more students are coming in a few days. We thank the Lord that notwithstanding the poisonous talk that disturbs our memory, we see that the Lord has and is blessing us.
(12LtMs, Lt 77, 1897, 15)
A heart is known by the words uttered. The caution is given, “Keep thy heart with all diligence; for out of it are the issues of life.” [Proverbs 4:23.] Who spoke these words? The Lord Jesus, whose we are by creation and by redemption. He knows all the mysteries of the human heart. A fragrant life will be known by the fragrant words that fall from the lips. In order to produce spiritual music, the heart must be in tune. It must learn its lesson from Christ, and then words will be spoken that will testify to the melody of a soul in harmony with God. Gratitude offerings of love and faith pour forth in thanksgiving. Gracious notes of melody roll forth. Penitence, faith, love, joy, and hope vibrate in unison. The whole soul becomes a consecrated temple, sounding forth the praises of Him who hath called us out of darkness into His marvelous light.
(12LtMs, Lt 77, 1897, 16)
I am thankful to God that the unholy, wicked misrepresentations have not destroyed our hope or faith. But all these have made it more essential for us to stand at our post of duty. We must hold fast to the hand of Christ, and never let go.
(12LtMs, Lt 77, 1897, 17)
All the determined opposition that we have met has only strengthened, established, and settled me in the belief that this is the location we should occupy. Were it not, Satan would not labor with such intense energy to discourage us and drive us from the ground. All who truly love God will prove strong enough to stand the strain. Temptations will come, to teachers and to students. Will we conquer them, or will we be conquered? Christ is testing every soul on this ground. He demands loyalty. Who will be true to Him? Who will stand on guard day and night, maintaining a vital connection with God? The underlying principle of heartlife and homelife and churchlife is supreme love to God and love to our neighbor.
(12LtMs, Lt 77, 1897, 18)
The battles we have had to fight for the last half century will have to be met and fought over and over again. We must stand constantly on guard. It is he that endures to the end that will be saved. We have advanced thus far, and we do not mean to go back one step. We intend that this school shall be all that God designs it shall be. We intend that the enemy and all that have consecrated themselves to his service shall be disappointed. During the time that this school has been in session we have seen that the Lord has worked through His chosen servants to bear a living testimony in presenting truth, new and old, from His Word to teachers and pupils. The Lord Jesus is the head Manager. He will give His grace. He has been doing this, and He will continue to bless us if [we] give our hearts into His keeping, to be softened, subdued, refined, elevated, and ennobled.
(12LtMs, Lt 77, 1897, 19)
Brother Haskell had gone to Sydney to see Brother Daniells, who is to hold meetings in different halls on the religious liberty question. The Lord is strengthening me, and I praise His holy name. When Brother Haskell first came here, I seemed to lose all strength. I had been holding up, speaking and praying in our meetings, bearing my testimony in public and private, hoping to save some poor, deceived, deluded souls. When Brother and Sister Haskell came to unite with the school, Brother Haskell as Bible teacher and Sister Haskell as matron, I felt that I could begin to lay off the load. Then I began to realize that my strength was gone. I could not get strength to exercise. I was in a state of nervous exhaustion. For several weeks I did not attend meeting or family prayer, and I did not sit at the table with my family. Thus I remained day after day, my weakness forbidding me to attend meeting. But I thank the Lord that I am now gaining in strength. I have spoken two Sabbaths in succession, and have given three morning talks in the school. I shall continue to speak for a time each day.
(12LtMs, Lt 77, 1897, 20)
I now desire to work with all my ability to erect a meetinghouse. The students will have opportunity to use their talent of physical strength in helping what they can, but the money is the difficulty. I want the $1,000 now invested in shares in the Healdsburg school. I know if our people understood our situation, they would take these shares and would send me the money. Then there is the money that had to be taken from me for Brother Leininger. I want my brethren in California to lift this burden from me, and let me have that money to invest in this new field. Will you see what can be done? If I can make a beginning, others will rally to the work, doing what they can. Should I stand under this pressure? I say, No. Relieve me. I ought to be relieved by my brethren in California.
(12LtMs, Lt 77, 1897, 21)
Lt 77a, 1897
Jones, C. H. Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia July 9, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother C. H. Jones:
I will write to [you] in regard to Brother Gibbs. I think you should consider his case carefully. I have, you know, plainly stated to you the difficulties existing with Brother Maxson and [of] allowing Dr. Maxson and his family connections to come in to run the sanitarium when the testimony was borne that he could not run the sanitarium as manager or superintendent, and then that these important interests, notwithstanding, had been put into his hands was a great mistake. He has been pleased to do a work that does not belong to him to do, and that notwithstanding the light that God has given that he was not a manager. Yet he was placed in union with his brother-in-law as superintendent and manager.
(12LtMs, Lt 77a, 1897, 1)
I now again present that which I have before given you in reference to Dr. Gibbs. He will come in if he is invited to come. I shall say no more, but please look at the letters I have written you before Dr. Maxson consented to serve. I will not burden my soul over this matter. May the Lord help you to make right decisions is my prayer.
(12LtMs, Lt 77a, 1897, 2)
I have just returned from speaking to the teachers and students in regard to general hygiene. I opened the meeting with prayer. I felt deeply the necessity of the Lord’s special working upon the hearts of the students. I believe the Lord will work and give us the victory. We want a living faith demonstrated with works. May the Lord grant us His grace every hour. We hope that there will be no do-nothings—the persons who ignore all work and all personal responsibility. How will stand the pages of history in the book of heaven? Will there be off against their names a mournful—“trees in the vineyard but only cumberers—darkening with their unproductive boughs the ground that other fruit-bearing trees would occupy”? We greatly desire to understand how to treat all cases as we should. We know that every effort should be made, that is possible, to bring souls from darkness to light.
(12LtMs, Lt 77a, 1897, 3)
I thought quite strange [the] sending away of so many responsible men from Battle Creek in this crisis. Had Elder Olsen remained, to evidence before those who had his influence to sustain the wrongdoer, it would be the right thing to do, to show that he would stand free to do the will of God irrespective of consequences. I see no light in sending men away from Battle Creek when of all places in the world it is now that men of experience and fidelity are needed.
(12LtMs, Lt 77a, 1897, 4)
If Brother Olsen had indeed sanctioned any wrong in the men who are now under great temptation, why did he not remain and seek to save these men? His course of action is not right. He should have done everything possible to have helped the men out of the wrongs he had, by his influence, helped them in their delusion and deception. I know that Satan will take another tack to work. He has no idea of giving up the contest. He will appear in another line to carry his projects through to the end.
(12LtMs, Lt 77a, 1897, 5)
These men might have been saved if Elder Olsen had been faithful to his responsibilities. My heart aches as I think of all the unfaithfulness, notwithstanding all the light the Lord has given to His people, line upon line, precept upon precept. But the sad part of it is but few understand or know anything about the warnings God has given; but some do know, and some have known, and I am so sorry that the history of the past has been as it has, but I will write no more.
(12LtMs, Lt 77a, 1897, 6)
In haste.
(12LtMs, Lt 77a, 1897, 7)
Lt 78, 1897
Jones, C. H. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales December 7, 1897 Previously unpublished. C. H. Jones
Pacific Press
California Dear Brother:
I have just received a letter from Edson, stating that in order to obtain means, he had been compelled to sell you half the interest in his coming book. This I cannot consent he should do. Send him five hundred dollars, and charge the same to my account. Tell him by letter that this is my request. It has been opened before me that Edson has been unwise in using money for his boat, when he needed every dollar to invest in the books he would publish. He has made a mistake, but I shall not leave him in the hands of any power that has presided at the Review & Herald office. If the Lord will help me, I will not permit again that which was done by the Review & Herald office in regard to the book Gospel Primer. When those who did this work stand before the throne of God, they will wish that the record of it could be wiped out.
(12LtMs, Lt 78, 1897, 1)
Please send Edson White the money he needs, and I shall stand my chance. If any one has a part in the income of his book, it will be his mother, for value received of me. The money received by me above the actual debt, I will donate to the cause of God, to build up the work in the Southern Field.
(12LtMs, Lt 78, 1897, 2)
I am determined that the arrangement Edson has made shall not stand. Please do as I have stated. I made arrangements with Dr. Kellogg to look after Edson’s interest, and furnish him with the necessary means to complete his book; but I suppose the Doctor’s many cares have made him forget.
(12LtMs, Lt 78, 1897, 3)
I wish to know if you have done anything in the matter I wrote you about, regarding the money that was taken from me for Brother Leininger and Mrs. Scott. I am waiting to see what you and our responsible men in California will do. If you put the matter before the churches, telling them just how the case stands, I am sure that they have heart enough to see that it is not fair or just for me to carry the burdens which belong to their own conference.
(12LtMs, Lt 78, 1897, 4)
Perhaps it will be best for me to get out a statement, and send it to every church in California. If you do not do something in this matter, this will be my next resort, for I know that this burden should not be placed on me.
(12LtMs, Lt 78, 1897, 5)
New fields are opening here constantly. Our last camp meeting in Sydney created a living interest. We thank the Lord for this. A meetinghouse must now [be] built to accommodate the believers in Sydney and the suburbs near. I have subscribed £25 toward this; Elder Haskell, £25; Elder Starr, £10; and Elder Baker, £10. Several others have subscribed. One couple, who have recently come into the truth, pledged £20. It is the land costing so much that makes it difficult for us. The cost of the land will be as much as the cost of the building.
(12LtMs, Lt 78, 1897, 6)
The work that has been going forward in Stanmore is deepening and broadening. Many are convinced of the truth, and are taking their position, while some who have been interested are losing their interest. The interested ones are being closely followed up. The interest in the camp meeting at Melbourne has been remarkable. During the meeting hundreds could not get into the tent. Hundreds stood on the outside. A splice of thirty feet was put in the tent, and yet it would not hold the people. Even yet, though the camp meeting has broken up, the people still come to the evening meetings. Only six or ten have taken their stand, yet there will be more. I believe that many souls will be converted. The interest seems much as it did in 1843.
(12LtMs, Lt 78, 1897, 7)
Camp meetings must be held in different parts of Melbourne. A great work is to be done in sounding the last message of mercy to the world. We need means now, and we must have means. I ask you again to make a fair statement of these matters to the conference. If you and others say, We cannot take the means from our conference, how will your decision stand on the books of heaven?
(12LtMs, Lt 78, 1897, 8)
Will you let me bear the whole load, or will you call upon the churches of California and ask them to take the shares from me? It is not now my duty to do this for the California Conference. I would gladly do it if I were not in a destitute field, where I have to invest means in deepening and broadening the work. I ask you to relieve me of Brother Leininger’s case. You said that you would see Willie first and counsel with him in reference to the matter; I have not heard one word from Willie regarding this, but I know that he would [not] let this weight fall upon me if you presented matters as you could easily do. I tell you that it is not right. Let the people lift this load; do not let it all fall on me. Had I thought that it would have been allowed to fall on me, I would not have done as I have.
(12LtMs, Lt 78, 1897, 9)
Lt 79, 1897
Jones, Mr. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia July 14, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in SD 241. + Mr. Jones:
I have an interest for your soul, and I must speak to you the message of truth. The mere name of “Christian” is of no manner of use to any soul. Unless he is such in heart and purpose, he will prove a ready victim to the snares and entanglements of Satan, to do his will and purposes. If the truth which you have been hearing is not rooted in the heart, you cannot stand against the corruptions of this degenerate age. There is only one power that can make us steadfast and keep us so—the grace of God in truth. The human agent who confides in aught else will be disappointed.
(12LtMs, Lt 79, 1897, 1)
I was sorry indeed for you as your case was presented before me, because you have had just that experience which will make you the sport of Satan’s temptations. But if you will now turn square about—no half way work, but with your whole mind placed on the Lord’s side—the Lord will lift up a standard for you against the enemy. Wisdom from above will be your guide; and while in God’s strength you hold your convictions of the truth of God firmly, you will not be left a prey to the baseless delusions that flood the world. Educate your mind in an opposite direction. If you are studying to obtain a better knowledge of a Saviour’s love, you have the sure promise of being kept by the power of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 79, 1897, 2)
We have great fears in your case that you will trust in a nominal religion; but a nominal Christianity is worthless. This class is the most difficult to reach. Those who have had opportunities to obtain a knowledge of the truth, yet are not in the truth or the truth in them, will always be misleading. Every soul is to stand for his individual self. In the day of test and trial none can buy or borrow oil of his neighbor. He must have the oil of grace in his vessel with his lamp. This is solid experience, and this experience should grow into knowledge, and this knowledge obtained by most earnest prayer will be fed by the faith that is in Christ Jesus.
(12LtMs, Lt 79, 1897, 3)
I entreat of you to heed the warnings given you, and seek the Lord with all your heart. If you do this, you will find Him. Turn your attention particularly to yourself, and let nothing from any source engage your mind or heart. Then you may obtain spiritual perception. You will have a hand to hand, and foot to foot, battle with Satan, for he supposes that he has you fast. But Christ has died for you, and He will save you if you will seek Him with all your heart. This is your only hope.
(12LtMs, Lt 79, 1897, 4)
A miserable evil spirit is upon you. You do not have any sense of how offensive your words are to God, and of what an influence you are exerting over others. But if you will seek Him, the Lord will help you out of this long cultivated habit of frivolity and disregard of order and discipline in Christ’s lines. His voice in His Word has called to you, He has pleaded with you. It is that voice that has said, “Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden; and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart; and ye shall find rest unto your souls.” [Matthew 11:28, 29.]
(12LtMs, Lt 79, 1897, 5)
The Lord speaks to the poor, Satan-bound, deceived souls who allow their capabilities and power of influence to be worked by satanic agencies. They produce no fruit to the glory of God. Their religion is one of convenience. While they profess to believe in Jesus, their works give as unmistakable evidence to the contrary as if they said, “I know not the Man.” [Matthew 26:74.] “If thou knewest the gift of God,” said Christ, “and who it is that saith to thee, Give me to drink, thou wouldest have asked of him, and he would have given thee living water.” [John 4:10.] Mark the words, “If thou knewest the gift of God.” Who is that gift of God? All things come to us from God through His abundant mercy and goodness; but One is the gift of God, the greatest of all gifts, and which brings all others in its train. Of this gift Paul speaks when he says, “Thanks be unto God for his unspeakable gift.” [2 Corinthians 9:15.]
(12LtMs, Lt 79, 1897, 6)
Every blooming flower, with its delicate, beautiful tints and sweet fragrance, is given for our enjoyment and happiness through that One Gift. The sun and the moon were made by Him; there is not a star that beautifies the heavens which He did not make. There is not an article of food upon our tables that He has not provided for our sustenance. The stamp and superscription of God is upon it all. Everything is included and abundantly supplied to man through the one unspeakable Gift, the only begotten Son of God. He was nailed to the cross that all these bounties might flow to God’s workmanship.
(12LtMs, Lt 79, 1897, 7)
“If thou knewest the gift of God, ... thou wouldst have asked of him, and he would have given thee living water.” [John 4:10.] Prayer must be preceded by an intelligent knowledge. If thou knewest the gift of God, thou wouldest have asked of Him, and He would have given thee living water.
(12LtMs, Lt 79, 1897, 8)
Christ called the attention of the woman of Samaria from the inferior gifts that supply the temporal necessities, to the eternal. “Whosoever drinketh of the water that I shall give him, shall never thirst,” He says. This draught is furnished from a reservoir that never fails. The knowledge of God and obedience to Him make fallen man one with Jesus Christ. Everlasting life is revealed in the gospel. Here alone is sufficient provision to satisfy all hunger and all thirst. “He that drinketh of the water that I shall give him,” says Christ, “shall never thirst;” for the water that I shall give him shall be in him a well of water, springing up with its refreshing, revivifying strengthening streams unto everlasting life. [Verse 14.] Through it the weary, exhausted, burdened soul finds rest.
(12LtMs, Lt 79, 1897, 9)
I would say to you, young man, that now is the time for you to be converted. All this frivolity is as natural to you as your breath. It is a family inheritance which will work for you all as a most powerful hindrance to your entrance into the kingdom of heaven. It is your stumbling block, and you know not at what you stumble. All the Jacob’s wells in the world will fail to satisfy your thirst. You are fallen through sin. You have never been converted to the truth. Your heart is not in the service of God. We wish that it were; but do not deceive yourself, for it is not. Your religion is not worth a straw.
(12LtMs, Lt 79, 1897, 10)
If the Holy Watcher should say to you, “This night thy soul shall be required of thee,” could Christ trace off against your name, “Well done, good and faithful servant; enter thou into the joy of thy Lord”? [Luke 12:20; Matthew 25:23.] No; for you have not yet taken your position on the Lord’s side. You are in spirit and practice as one who has not received the truth in the love of it. You are drifting, drifting, drifting, without God and without hope in the world. You have a pretense of being a Christian, but you are not one.
(12LtMs, Lt 79, 1897, 11)
You are not deceived here, for had you read the Bible to any purpose, you would know this without my telling you. That Word declares, “As many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name.” [John 1:12.] This power comes only to those who believe on His name. Every genuine believer in Christ in the first place obtains a knowledge of Christ, and that knowledge is of a character to generate confidence through heart obedience to His Word. Then comes that confidence that sustained Paul. He believed that Jesus, in whom he had believed and trusted, was able to keep that which he had committed unto Him against that day when He should be glorified in His saints, and be admired of all them that believe. This committal is first committed to the believing one in His name, and the believing one becomes a son of God. The gift of God which is life and truth and righteousness, gives him confidence to commit all to his Redeemer who has honored him with His name and His character.
(12LtMs, Lt 79, 1897, 12)
If your mind will become rational in regard to your soul’s eternal welfare, you will make a decided change in your behavior. All your sprees and selfish indulgences will become abhorrent to you. You will see and sense that your whole life has been a system of robbery of God. “Ye are bought with a price,” God says, “therefore glorify God in your body and in your spirit, which are God’s.” [1 Corinthians 6:20.] No single talent entrusted to any man appears of little consequence, but the Lord has appointed a place for that talent that it may be used in blessing others. It makes every difference not only to your future, eternal interest how you use the Lord’s talents, whether small or great; it makes every difference in this life whether your course of action is approved or disapproved of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 79, 1897, 13)
Those who are really Christians will realize that this life is not to be one long holiday, to see how much pleasure they can get out of it. Christ lived not to please Himself. And it is Christ who gave His life for the saving of your soul, that you might appreciate the gift and come unto Him, that you might have power to overcome your natural temperament, co-operate with Him in cutting loose from the companionship of Satan, and become wise in Jesus Christ. You must consent to wear Christ’s yoke, the yoke of restraint; and to lift Christ’s burdens of perfect, entire obedience. You have His testimony, “My yoke is easy, and my burden is light.” [Matthew 11:30.]
(12LtMs, Lt 79, 1897, 14)
You are under responsibility to God during every moment of your probationary time. You may ignore your responsibility; you may refuse to yoke up with Christ; you may allow Satan to put his yoke upon your neck and make you the slave of sin—for you will wear either the yoke of Christ or the yoke of Satan—but there is no getting rid of the words of Christ, “He that is not for me is against me; and he that gathereth not with me scattereth abroad.” [Matthew 12:30.]
(12LtMs, Lt 79, 1897, 15)
Your talents should be cherished as of value. Christ has lent them [to] you to improve in the service of God. But you will never know to what you are appointed until you come to your senses, and awake to the duties that lie close to you, and which you have neglected, even the ordinary duties of life. Your talents should be employed in making the home life that which will be most acceptable to God, to be all that He requires of you. But unless you are yourself converted, heart and soul, you will fill no appointment of God in any place. Your choice is before you.
(12LtMs, Lt 79, 1897, 16)
You have excused yourself for spending your life in positively dishonoring God by saying that God does not expect us to be too strict in little things. But you or any man who has adopted such ideas are under a delusion. You have despised the counsels of the Word of God and followed where Satan has led the way.
(12LtMs, Lt 79, 1897, 17)
Will you lay your soul a manacled victim upon the altar of your lust? Jesus gave His own life to ransom you. What have you given Him in return in faithful service? I do not want you to forget that there is an account to be rendered to God for the work you might have done in blessing humanity and glorifying His holy name. Every talent is His, and entrusted to you for a purpose. Nothing that He has given you will be left out of His reckoning though you have left them out of your reckoning largely. How much owest thou unto thy Lord? Your unused talents are making you a man of opportunity that the devil can handle, and you do not perceive how your words testify against you.
(12LtMs, Lt 79, 1897, 18)
Bear in mind that day by day, hour by hour, you are laying up the material that will decide your destiny for eternity. Your whole work is passing in review before God, and is being bound up action by action, and word by word, until the second advent of Christ to the world. You are in possession of entrusted talents. Now is the time to trade with your Lord’s goods. At His return He will reckon with His servants, to know what every man has accumulated by trading.
(12LtMs, Lt 79, 1897, 19)
This is to be an individual work. The talents returned are to be proportionate to the talents received. And bear in mind that the rewards of the future kingdom will be proportionate to the work done in the hours of probation. “Behold I come quickly, and my reward is with me, to give to every man according as his work shall be.” [Revelation 22:12.]
(12LtMs, Lt 79, 1897, 20)
“And you hath he quickened, who were dead in trespasses and sins; wherein in times past ye walked according to the course of this world, according to the prince of the power of the air, the spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience; among whom also we all had our conversation in times past in the lust of the flesh, fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind; and were by nature the children of wrath, even as others. But God who is rich in mercy, for the great love wherewith he loved us, even when we were dead in sins, hath quickened us together with Christ, (by grace are ye saved;) and hath raised us up together, and hath made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus: that in the ages to come he might show the exceeding riches of his grace in his kindness toward us through Christ Jesus. For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God.” [Ephesians 2:1-8.]
(12LtMs, Lt 79, 1897, 21)
The actual reward given will depend upon how earnestly we do our appointed work here. Each day you live you are making your mark for eternity. Then I entreat of you to make diligent work. God will accept no half-hearted service. Be careful; do not devote your time to self-pleasing. You cannot afford it. Do not consider it the privilege of yourself or any other to form attachments at the school. Keep the one idea in your mind that you are here for a purpose—to obtain a knowledge of truth, and to learn that your life has been wasted in unimportant things. Life is a talent committed to our care. Get this firmly fixed in your mind. It is mysterious and sacred. It is the manifestation of God Himself, the source of all life. Next to the angelic beings, the human family, formed in the image of God, are the highest and noblest of his created works. Therefore it is a solemn thing to live. When once lost, if it is not hid with Christ in God, the life is gone forever.
(12LtMs, Lt 79, 1897, 22)
I entreat of you to ponder the words I have written to you, for I am desirous that in this school term you shall have a personal experience in religious things, and do God service. A religion that comes from God is the only religion that will lead to God.
(12LtMs, Lt 79, 1897, 23)
Lt 80, 1897
Jones, A. T. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia December 9, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in PH146 8-15. Dear Brother:
I received your letter, giving an account of your efforts to set things right in the office. This is the thing that was needing to be done; but there are things which I have had presented to me in regard to the responsible men in the General Conference and the Review and Herald office of a very aggravating character. God will not sanction their scheming to make money in ways that He calls unjust. The measures which they have taken to turn those who have prepared books from their rights, the Lord calls dishonest. The Lord has presented before me the work that has been done in this line, and I have written in regard to it again and again. It is defrauding. The Lord has declared that He will blow upon the gain they receive from every such work. Unjust dealing stands charged against them.
(12LtMs, Lt 80, 1897, 1)
A close investigation should be made of the principles which have led to this unjust dealing, this sin of covetousness. Special methods have been devised to bring profits into the office, which will result in tenfold greater subtraction in other lines than that which they thought they had gained. These principles have produced corruption in business transactions. If the testimonies sent to Elder Olsen are in your hands, you have the light which has been given. This crooked dealing began with Aldrich and Walker. The Lord opened up these things. There are sums of money unaccounted for.
(12LtMs, Lt 80, 1897, 2)
Those who claim to be Christians, who deal in real estate, soon become contaminated. Those who claim to be Seventh-day Adventists are warned of the Lord to close up that line of business and seek a business that is not so fraught with temptations. It is for their present good and eternal interest to do this. Those who believe the truth in the heart will not enter the broker business. The business of the real estate agent, the broker, and all such businesses are a snare to the soul. The real estate agent soon comes to the place where pure, straightforward honest dealing is separated from his course of action. Robbery and deceit and untruthfulness are practiced, and these things are corrupting in their influence.
(12LtMs, Lt 80, 1897, 3)
Were the Lord Jesus upon the earth today, He would reprove the same practices that He reproved in the courts of the temple. To the church members He would say, “Take these things hence. It is written, My house shall be called a house of prayer; but ye have made it a den of thieves.” [John 2:16; Matthew 21:13.] These denunciations He has uttered for years against the managers in the office of publication. The opinion of those handling sacred things has been that God did not expect them to be too liberal in business deal. The income must be brought into the work and cause of God; therefore, scheming and artful presentations and false representations have been made. And if it is never revealed in this time of probation, the future will show accounts standing in the books of heaven that reveal dishonesty, sharpness in business deal. These can never be washed away by the blood of the Lamb until full repentance and restitution show the conversion of the soul from sinful practices to righteousness.
(12LtMs, Lt 80, 1897, 4)
All these sharp practices in deal have dishonored God. They misrepresent His character and work through the very instrumentality that should be kept free from every taint of defilement and corrupting principle. Will they read and be instructed by the case of Achan?
(12LtMs, Lt 80, 1897, 5)
My brother, you have taken hold of the lesser evils; will the investigation now go to the higher responsibilities? Will every principle be considered? Were the minds of the men who have united in sustaining this sharp practice so darkened that they could not see that the tendency of these methods of deal was to destroy purity and justice and holiness in so sacred a work?
(12LtMs, Lt 80, 1897, 6)
The practices carried on for years have been reproved. They have been an offense to God. Have those men who have stood in high places supposed that they could depart from righteousness in their dealing, and God look on indifferently? Have those men dismissed the Word of God from their counsels? Have they consented to blind their eyes and reason to a straightforward manner of deal in handling the work of God? Shall men who stand in high places and lay their souls a manacled victim on the altar of lust be sustained?
(12LtMs, Lt 80, 1897, 7)
“Seek ye first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness,” said Christ. [Matthew 6:33.] This is the positive requirement of God. But this, the simplest, plainest injunction contained in the Word of Him who is judge of every man’s actions, has been deliberately set aside. Men connected with the Review and Herald office have departed from Christian principles to carry out a system of sharp practice. They have flattered themselves that it was the cause of God to be advantaged at the loss of others, therefore they would gather from every source possible to bring money into the treasury. But God declares, I hate robbery for burnt-offerings. [Isaiah 61:8.]
(12LtMs, Lt 80, 1897, 8)
Systems and rules have been made that bear not the signature of God, for they militate against the principles of the law of God. Men have managed things in a selfish, egotistical manner. After making laws, they have treated them as did the Jews, as of more consequence than the laws of God, the principles of which they were breaking every day. They laid burdens upon men’s shoulders grievous to be borne, and then carried out to the letter their presumptuous rules and regulations which dishonored their Creator.
(12LtMs, Lt 80, 1897, 9)
Every moment of the life of a Christian should be one of high-souled integrity. The speculations that have been entered into are a shame to the cause and work of God. We have a most solemn message to give to the world. The Lord is coming. The end of all things is at hand. Everything connected with the Review and Herald office should be clean and pure, holy and undefiled. In every action we perform we are to keep the eye single to the glory of God. All dishonest intriguing, all secret plans to obtain the advantage, wraps up a curse in the heart of the one who entertains such suggestions; and the larger the advantage gained, the more decided will be the disapproval of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 80, 1897, 10)
The men handling sacred responsibilities have been faithfully warned off the ground they were travelling upon. Had they heeded the warnings and counsel to let God be recognized as a party in all their business transactions with their brethren and fellow men, they would have kept ever before them as their maxim, “Thou God seest me,” as sacredly as when bowed before God in prayer. [Genesis 16:13.] In keeping the Lord ever before us, we shall be warned and fortified. He who forgets the just and holy principles of truth in the days of busy activity is like the man who feels that he needs no pilot, and casts himself overboard in the most dangerous seas.
(12LtMs, Lt 80, 1897, 11)
God calls upon all who claim the name of Christians to keep their eyes fixed upon the Author and Finisher of their faith. They are to act under the divine eye, to adopt the divine standard, to make God their counsellor in all their proceedings. Selfish cheap ideas, little mean advantages, should not be allowed to steal in and mar the nobility of the principles that should control all the proceedings in temporal matters. And how much more particular should we be in our deal with those of like faith in any line. In this capacity men are to act as God’s entrusted stewards. Whether God appointed them to stand in positions of trust, or whether they set themselves there, the holiness and justice and truth of God should shine forth in every action.
(12LtMs, Lt 80, 1897, 12)
It is of the highest importance that every worker should be connected with God in order to be enabled to repress the first leaning to an evil action. When sinners in Zion entice them, they must not consent. Every true child of God will have courage to repress the unprincipled, to rebuke sin and encourage that which is pure. Then the fear of the Lord would be evidenced as the beginning of wisdom.
(12LtMs, Lt 80, 1897, 13)
The man whose heart is imbued with the Holy Spirit will not do an unrighteous act toward his fellow man. He will consider that that man, poor though he may be, is the purchase of the blood of the Son of God. The Lord has put the price of that man’s soul before the universe of heaven and before the world—the price of His own life. The cross of Christ testifies to the value that the Lord places upon every human being. Then let man be careful how he treats his fellow man for he is bought with a price.
(12LtMs, Lt 80, 1897, 14)
A grave mistake has been made in allowing engrossing business matters to burden the ministers who are handling sacred things, so that their sense of the sacred becomes dim and mingled with the common, crushing out godliness from the soul. Inspired by Satan, men have framed scheme after scheme. Not content with the prosperity of the cause of God by dealing righteously and with justice and mercy, those in positions of trust have sought to obtain control of everything that they could, to manage them in their way, to the disadvantage of others. Their plans always seemed to them too limited; they thought they must branch out and grasp more and still more power and control.
(12LtMs, Lt 80, 1897, 15)
They wrapped themselves up in scheme after scheme, and entanglement after entanglement until there seemed to be no bounds to their ambitious desires, when they were not fitted to carry much smaller responsibilities properly and honestly and in the fear of God. They gathered into their embrace many responsibilities so engrossing as to distract their attention from the high concerns of eternity, the soul’s highest interests. Thus the clear discernment of those who should have understood spiritual things departed. The cause of God was made a matter of merchandise. They laded themselves down with many things from which they should have kept entirely clear, until their spiritual eyes were blinded. They kept up an unsanctified activity.
(12LtMs, Lt 80, 1897, 16)
I might go to much larger lengths in these matters, but what will it amount to? Those who have entered into the scheming principles, those who have co-operated in this work of injustice, have so confused their senses that righteous principles are not discerned. Would it not be wise to clear the King’s highway, that the Lord may remove His displeasure for the moral degeneracy of His work? Holy things are brought down to a common level. The cause of truth has been dishonored. Men greedy of gain have brought their evil propensities into the work of God. They have resorted to any means that they might obtain what they wanted. “Who is wise? and he shall understand these things; prudent? and he shall know them; for the ways of the Lord are right, and the just shall walk in them; but the transgressors shall fall.” [Hosea 14:9.]
(12LtMs, Lt 80, 1897, 17)
Lt 81, 1897
Jones, C. H. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia May 27, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in CS 263; 1MR 184-186, 189-191. + Dear Brother Jones:
We received your letter today. The question in regard to applying the tithes for incidental expenses connected with the church is referred to. You say that this has not been done in Oakland for years. I am glad to hear this. I answer in accordance with the light recently given me of God, and which has led me to write so much on this matter, that it is a mistake for our churches to appropriate the tithe for any other purpose than to sustain the ministry. The Lord will not work in your favor if you do this. If all that God requires of His people had been done, in securing laborers who will open the Scriptures to others, there would be no more money in the treasury than would be required to sustain the work in the field. There are but few working where there should be many.
(12LtMs, Lt 81, 1897, 1)
And if there is a surplus of means in the treasury, there are many places where it may be used strictly in its appointed lines. In many places the dearth of means is so great that workers cannot be employed to do missionary work. Every dollar of the money put into the treasury is not needed in California. Let the Lord’s money be donated to support the ministers in foreign countries, where they are working to lift the standard in new fields. This is God’s money, and He designs that it shall be used in sustaining the ministry, in educating a people to prepare to meet their God.
(12LtMs, Lt 81, 1897, 2)
In this country there are men who are kept out of the field because there is no means in the treasury to sustain them. The tithe is not to be consumed in incidental expenses; that belongs to the work of the church members. They are to support their church by their gifts and offerings. When this matter is seen and realized in all its bearings, there will be no questions on this subject. Through His servant Malachi, the Lord gives a most solemn warning in reference to this matter. He says, “Bring ye all the tithes into the storehouse, that there may be meat in mine house, and prove me now herewith, saith the Lord of Hosts, if I will not open you the windows of heaven, and pour you out a blessing that there shall not be room enough to receive it.” [Malachi 3:10.]
(12LtMs, Lt 81, 1897, 3)
The Lord has revealed to me that when the members of the church in Oakland shall learn to deny themselves, when they shall consecrate themselves to God, when they shall practice economy as true-hearted sons and daughters of God; when they shall expend much less for outward display, and shall wear plain, simple clothing without unnecessary adornments; when their faith and works shall correspond, then they will be the Lord’s true missionaries and will have clear discernment and spiritual understanding. They will have a sense of the sacredness of God’s work. They will see the necessity of the tithe money being faithfully paid into the treasury, and reserved for the sacred work to which God designs that it shall be devoted—to carry the last message of mercy to a fallen world. God’s people are to lift the standard of truth in every place where the message of mercy has not been proclaimed.
(12LtMs, Lt 81, 1897, 4)
Every soul who is honored in being a steward of God is to carefully guard the tithe money. This is sacred means. The Lord will not sanction your borrowing this money for any other work. It will create evils you cannot now discern. It is not to be meddled with by the Oakland Church, for there are missions to be sustained in other fields, where there are no churches and no tithes. When the men who, as God’s messengers, have their work to do [and] will do it in a straightforward manner, the church of Oakland will take care of the duties belonging to it individually. The members will furnish the means to sustain these extra expenses. But by using the tithe for these expenses, or filling the gaps made in business lines, you lift from them a burden which they should, as a church, carry.
(12LtMs, Lt 81, 1897, 5)
Time, precious time is passing into eternity, and the work that should be done in saving perishing souls is left undone. Keep your hands off the Lord’s reserve fund. That means is to do a great work before probation shall close. Not one-hundredth part of the work that should be done in California is being done. Missionary workers are few. It is most painful to me to see how little is being done in self-sacrificing effort, in bringing up the church to sense their individual responsibility and the necessity of self-denial. Look at the congregations coming into the houses of worship in Battle Creek and Oakland, and see how much money is expended in dress that should go to the Lord’s cause. But you cannot, as responsible men, be clear in the sight of God unless you shall practice more economy and self-denial yourselves, unless you shall bear a testimony that will cut its way to the heart of self-indulgence.
(12LtMs, Lt 81, 1897, 6)
It makes me heartsick to see the most sacred, solemn truth ever given to our world have so little influence upon the life and character of many who profess to believe the Word of God. What is the matter? The truth is not practiced. The life of the world’s Redeemer is our example in all things. There is much more in the word of God than many have discovered. There is practical godliness that must be brought into the life and character. There are heights and depths that we might reach if there were less self-indulgence and more consecration to God.
(12LtMs, Lt 81, 1897, 7)
If you have more means than you need to settle [with] your ministers in a fair, liberal, Christian manner, there are other places where you can help, where there are but few people and poor, and the tithe is limited. Send the Lord’s money to them. This I have been repeatedly shown is the way to do. I was listening to the voice of the heavenly messenger on this subject, and the directions given were that other churches who had buildings and facilities should help in foreign countries where there is very little tithe money. The Lord’s vineyard is large.
(12LtMs, Lt 81, 1897, 8)
God’s money is to be used to support the ministry, to proclaim the truth. I ask you to send the extra tithe to this part of God’s moral vineyard. Here there is a constant demand for work; but we cannot use the men who could do God service, because there is no “meat” in the Lord’s treasury to sustain the workers. [Verse 10.] The Lord has shown me that when those who are in office will do their appointed work and bind about their many supposed wants; when they shall practice the self-denial that God enjoins, and encourage economy in every line as it is their duty to do by setting the example, there will be a solemn, straightforward testimony, [with] hearts and lips touched with holy fire, coming forth from the great center in California and Battle Creek that will have an influence on smaller churches.
(12LtMs, Lt 81, 1897, 9)
When the people will, as in the church in Oakland, excuse themselves from sustaining their own church demands, that church is in deep need of a ministry that is of a different order than that which it has had. The men who are handling sacred things will need to discern more clearly spiritual things; and if they will begin to rely upon the tithe money to use in the several places where there is a gap and where means are needed in Battle Creek and Oakland, the Lord will surely remove His blessing from these churches. You know nothing experimentally of the poverty in foreign countries. We need some of your abundance here. When men shall be properly exercised to present to the people their duty as Christians to support their church expenses; when they shall themselves present more abundantly their gifts and offerings to carry forward the work, then God will bless the faithful messenger, and He will bless the members of the churches, for He says, “I know thy works.” [Revelation 2:2.]
(12LtMs, Lt 81, 1897, 10)
Then who will be aroused to sense their duty in this respect, and act their part in the fear of God? Self-denial is to be presented to the people, and offerings called for in donations. Said the messenger of heaven, “It is not the Oakland Church, the Battle Creek Church, the Healdsburg Church, or the San Francisco Church who should draw from the treasury of God to supply their weekly incidental expenses, incurred in accommodating the people as they assemble together to worship God. Let every soul consider, and humble himself before God.”
(12LtMs, Lt 81, 1897, 11)
Again, The lax way which many churches have of incurring debts, and keeping in debt, was presented before me. In some cases a continual debt is upon the house of God. There is a continual interest to be paid. These things should not and need not be. If there is that wisdom and tact and zeal manifested for the Master that God requires of every one of His servants, there will be a change in these things. The debts will be lifted. Self-denial and self-sacrifice will work wonders in advancing the spirituality of the church. Let every church member do something. Let the necessity of each acting a part be most strenuously impressed upon the worshipers.
(12LtMs, Lt 81, 1897, 12)
The Healdsburg college and church need not be loaded with debt as it is. This shows unwise stewardship. God calls for self-sacrifice. He calls for offerings from those who can give, and even the poorer members can do their little. And when there is a will to do, God will open the way. But the Lord is not pleased with the management. He does not design that His cause shall be trammelled with debt. Self-denial will enable those who have done nothing in the past to do something tangible, and show that they believe the teachings of the Word, that they believe the truth for this time. All, both old and young, parents and children, are to show their faith by their works. Faith is made perfect by works. We are in the very closing scenes of this earth’s history; yet there are but few who realize this because the world has come in between God and the soul. There is little appreciation of the value of the truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 81, 1897, 13)
Lt 81a, 1897
Jones, C. H. Stanmore, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia December 20, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 8MR 456-457. Dear Brother Jones:
I wish to say to you that I am sadly disappointed in the cuts prepared for such a book as the Life of Christ. I consider that if Brother Reaser accepts such figures that his eye and taste has lost its cunning. You cannot expect me to be pleased with such productions. Look at these figures critically, and you must see that they are either made from Catholic designs or Catholic artists. The picture of Mary has a man’s face, the representations of Christ with the two fingers prominent, while the others are closed, is wholly a Catholic sign, and I object to this. I see but very little beauty in any of the faces, or persons. There is the scenery of nature, landscape scenery, that is not as objectionable, but I could never rest my eyes upon the face pictures without pain.
(12LtMs, Lt 81a, 1897, 1)
I would much prefer to have no pictures than representations that are not representations, but disfigurements of the true. This is my opinion. Where is the discerning eye? Better pay double price, or treble, and have pictures, if pictures must be had, that will not pervert facts. I wish there had not been an attempt to make one representation, but send out the book and let it make a place for itself. I call these faces in the pictures and scenes so poorly represented that it is a perversion of the facts. If this is Reaser’s work, I cannot accept him as a designer, and if he can accept such pictures, I cannot respect or honor his judgment. Do not spoil my book by disfigurements which lower the facts and the matters they represent.
(12LtMs, Lt 81a, 1897, 2)
Brother Reaser needs the sanctification of the senses to understand the spirituality of truth. He may study European artistic skill, but there will be seen in nearly all designs the Catholic features.
(12LtMs, Lt 81a, 1897, 3)
While I was perplexed and so distressed over the matter, the light given me was to read the warnings of God against similitudes and pictures. There is a perverting influence in pictures. (Deuteronomy 12:28-32): “Take heed to thyself that thou be not snared by following them, after that they be destroyed from before thee; and that thou inquire not after their gods, saying, How did this nation serve their gods? even so will I do likewise. Thou shalt not do so unto the Lord thy God; for every abomination to the Lord, which he hateth have they done unto their gods; for even their sons and their daughters have they burnt in the fire to their gods. What things soever I command you, observe to do it: thou shalt not add thereto, nor diminish from it.”
(12LtMs, Lt 81a, 1897, 4)
If the study of the artist in Europe results in such designs as are presented before me in the faces and persons as these, the book is better without them. Let Brother Reaser become familiar with the sanctification of the Spirit of Christ. My idea is that the less illustrations that are cheap and ill-favored we have in the book the better. From the light given me of the Lord there is a wonderful departure from God’s Word in presenting pictures in any papers; many of them are such a blotch that it is no recommendation to our papers that have the most solemn, sacred truths ever given to our world.
(12LtMs, Lt 81a, 1897, 5)
Again I say, I think the book would bear the endorsement of heaven far more without these pictures then with them.
(12LtMs, Lt 81a, 1897, 6)
I will write more fully on this subject when I get home.
(12LtMs, Lt 81a, 1897, 7)
Lt 82, 1897
Kellogg, J. H. NP August 1, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in 21MR 289-291. Dr. J. H. Kellogg
Sanitarium
Battle Creek Dear Brother:
I scarcely know how to write to you. I hoped yesterday evening after the Sabbath to receive the Vancouver mail, but it did not come, and my mail for America must go tomorrow morning.
(12LtMs, Lt 82, 1897, 1)
I have read the manuscript Willie sent me for the book Christian Temperance. I see nothing that I object to except the subject of drug medication. As matters have been opened to me from time to time, as I have been conducted through the rooms of the sick in the sanitarium and out of the sanitarium, I have seen that the physicians of the sanitarium, by practicing drug medication, have lost many cases that need not have died if they had left their drugs out of the sick room.
(12LtMs, Lt 82, 1897, 2)
Cases have been lost that had the physicians left off entirely their drug treatment, had they put their wits to work and wisely and persistently used the Lord’s own remedies—plenty of air and water—the fever cases that have been lost would have recovered. The reckless use of those things that should be discarded has decided the case of the sick.
(12LtMs, Lt 82, 1897, 3)
I will not educate or sustain the use of drugs. I try not to speak of these things, but if the book is already out, I shall have to insert something, that I may place the truth of the matter before the people. After seeing so much harm done by the administering of drugs, I cannot use them, and cannot testify in their favor. I must be true to the light given me by the Lord.
(12LtMs, Lt 82, 1897, 4)
The treatment we gave when the sanitarium was first established required earnest labor to combat disease. We did not use drug concoctions; we followed hygienic methods. This work was blessed by God. It was a work in which the human instrumentality could co-operate with God in saving life. There should be nothing put into the human system that would leave its baleful influence behind. And to carry out the light on this subject, to practice hygienic treatment, and to educate on altogether different lines of treating the sick, was the reason given me why we should have sanitariums established in various localities.
(12LtMs, Lt 82, 1897, 5)
I have been pained when many students have been encouraged to go to Ann Arbor to receive an education in the use of drugs. The light which I have received has placed an altogether different complexion on the use made of drugs than is given at Ann Arbor or at the sanitarium. We must become enlightened on these subjects. The intricate names given the medicines are used to cover up the matter, so that none will know what is given them as remedies unless they obtain a dictionary to find out the meaning of these names.
(12LtMs, Lt 82, 1897, 6)
The Lord has given some simple herbs of the field that at times are beneficial; and if every family were educated in how to use these herbs in case of sickness, much suffering might be prevented, and no doctor need be called. These old fashioned, simple herbs, used intelligently, would have recovered many sick who have died under drug medication.
(12LtMs, Lt 82, 1897, 7)
One of the most beneficial remedies is pulverized charcoal, placed in a bag and used in fomentations. This is a most successful remedy. If wet in smartweed boiled, it is still better. I have ordered this in cases where the sick were suffering great pain, and when it has been confided to me by the physician that he thought it was the last before the close of life. Then I suggested the charcoal, and the patient slept, the turning point came, and recovery [was] the result. To students when injured with bruised hands, and suffering with inflammation, I have prescribed this simple remedy, with perfect success. The poison of inflammation was overcome, the pain removed, and healing went on rapidly. The most severe inflammation of the eyes will be relieved by a poultice of charcoal, put in a bag, and dipped in hot or cold water, as will best suit the case. This works like a charm.
(12LtMs, Lt 82, 1897, 8)
I expect you will laugh at this, but if I could give this remedy some outlandish name, that no one knew but myself, it would have greater influence. But Dr. Kellogg, many things have been opened before me that no one but myself is any the wiser for in regard to the management of sickness and disease—the effect of the use of drug medication, the thousands in our world who might have lived if they had not sent for a physician and had let nature work the recovery herself. The simplest remedies may assist nature, and leave no baleful effects after their use.
(12LtMs, Lt 82, 1897, 9)
I have been studying my own case. I have not applied to any physician since living in this country. I did pay four pounds the first year for electric baths, which did me no good. If indisposed, I would just as soon think of calling in a lawyer as a physician.
(12LtMs, Lt 82, 1897, 10)
I have recently left off the use of all liquids, such as homemade coffee, with my meals. I eat my food as dry as possible. The result is excellent. In the morning I take lemon and water. I drink nothing between meals unless it be occasionally some lemon and water. At the table I do not eat many things, either. I use dry peas boiled, then strained, then baked, and canned tomatoes. When fresh, I use the tomatoes uncooked, with bread. This is my principal article of food.
(12LtMs, Lt 82, 1897, 11)
I write you this because I asked you some questions in reference to the heart. But now, after bringing myself to a very strict diet, I find no special difficulty. When overtaxed, I suffer from exhaustion and inability to breathe. But I think I shall not die but live to declare the works of the Lord. I adhere strictly to the two meal system, and know this to be a blessing to me. If I could walk much, I would do considerable walking, but my right hip will not admit of this. I am as active upon my feet, in walking about the house and about my premises, as I have been at any period in my life.
(12LtMs, Lt 82, 1897, 12)
But I must close this. I wish to say that I am never troubled with an offensive breath or a bad taste in my mouth. I relish my food. I enjoy apples very much, but good apples are not to be obtained here as in America. A few barrels of Northern Spys, such as we used to have in America, would be a treat. But we cannot procure these here.
(12LtMs, Lt 82, 1897, 13)
With much love to you, and your wife and children.
(12LtMs, Lt 82, 1897, 14)
Lt 82a, 1897
Kellogg, Brother and Sister [J. H.] Summer Hill, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia February 10, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in 21MR 188-192. Dear Brother and Sister Kellogg:
I thought I should have time to write you a letter to go by this mail, but we were fully employed in writing to Africa, and then word came to us from Brother Haskell that he had arrived in Sydney last Sabbath from New Zealand, and would very much like to converse with me in reference to furnishing the Health Home. In three hours we were speeding to the train with our fastest team, conjecturing all the four miles and a half whether or not we would be able to catch the train to Sydney. We were in season, the train was out of season—delayed in Newcastle, twenty miles from Morisset Station. We reached Strathfield, changed cars for Summer Hill, and arrived at the Health Home at 11 o’clock p.m.
(12LtMs, Lt 82a, 1897, 1)
Sara and myself slept scarcely any through the night, but went into the city to purchase needed things to furnish a room in the Health Home, for which I pay one dollar a week to help them in the rent. Brother and Sister Baker hire two rooms for which they pay ten shillings per week. Brother and Sister Semmens pay ten shillings a week. We do hope to get the house in something like presentable shape for them to do justice to the patients who shall come. Sister Semmens had worked very hard up to the time of her confinement and she is not as well as we could wish. She has a nice boy, one week old last Monday. I think she is much worried over a deformity in her child. He has a double hare lip, and it is very hard for him to nurse. She is a very sensitive woman, and this keeps her back. I know this in one cause of her weakness. The want of means has made it very hard for them both, but this could not be helped. I have done what I could. I advanced thirty-five pounds, and the health foods have been highly appreciated.
(12LtMs, Lt 82a, 1897, 2)
It takes a long time for goods via London to reach us, but they have come in good order. I have not seen the things you said were sent to me. I have not had time yet to investigate the matter. I have learned that Brother Semmens is doing well selling the health foods, but we have our talk today over the possibilities and probabilities of the situation. We feel thankful that you could give them this timely assistance. They appreciate it very much, for they have been in most straitened circumstances in his efforts to do anything.
(12LtMs, Lt 82a, 1897, 3)
You cannot appreciate in Battle Creek our hand-tied condition. I shall move forward cautiously and as fast as we can and not incur debt. This we must not do if we can avoid it. Elder Haskell proposes to furnish a good-sized room economically, and then when patients that can pay come, charge them a reasonable price for room, board, and treatment. Here many things cost double than we have to pay in America, therefore it means something to furnish rooms, and the rent is three pounds per week. We shall have to build a sanitarium, and I wish we could do this at once, but I fear it will not be done, for unless help comes from abroad it cannot be done.
(12LtMs, Lt 82a, 1897, 4)
Brother John Wessels says he is engaged where he is, and he would want the advice and counsel of those at Battle Creek before becoming located in Australia. We are sorry; we hoped he could come on here at once, and then we could have his judgment and devisings and planning. But, as usual, we must bear these burdens. But I am drawn upon in so many different ways, I almost become confused as to that which needs doing the most. All these things seem to cry out, “Take hold of me first.”
(12LtMs, Lt 82a, 1897, 5)
We are going to do our best under the circumstances. We must have a physician and proper helpers. I consider that there is nothing that can give character to the work like a proper entering into [of] the work of hygienic treatment for the sick, but as we are so helpless so far as money is concerned that everything moves so slow and so hard you have to watch closely to see if they move at all.
(12LtMs, Lt 82a, 1897, 6)
I know if I should visit America I should lift my voice and exert a far greater influence in behalf of foreign missionary fields than I have done with my pen. I know from the light the Lord has given me that means could be made to flow in many cases in different channels from those in which they are now running—selfish indulgence. I know that thousands of dollars are used for things that are supposed to be a necessity, but which are not necessities. If they loved the Lord God supremely and their neighbor as themselves, would they not see the necessities of their neighbor, to help him save his soul? Would they not consider the extra indulgences they allow themselves? Luke 10:27.
(12LtMs, Lt 82a, 1897, 7)
The Lord Jesus was reading the heart of the lawyer as an open book, reading the hearts also of the Pharisees who suggested that he should ask that question, for they wished to tempt Him, lay a snare for Him, that His speech should condemn Him. Our Lord did not reply to the question, but He gave the lawyer the benefit of answering his own question. “Master, what shall I do to inherit eternal life? He said unto him, What is written in the law? how readest thou? And he answering said, Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy strength, and with all thy mind; and thy neighbor as thyself. And he said unto him, This do, and thou shalt live.” [Verses 25-28.]
(12LtMs, Lt 82a, 1897, 8)
My brother, my sister, what can we do, what can we say to those whom we know do not obey the first four precepts of the decalogue, neither the last six, when we consider that this plain answer is truth, and that those who are not obeying the law of God in precept and example are, notwithstanding they make the highest profession, living in disobedience to the whole principles of the moral law? That law of God will teach the whole duty of man. He turned the confusion upon themselves: “Thou has answered right: this do, and thou shalt live, for on these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets.” [Luke 10:28; Matthew 22:40.]
(12LtMs, Lt 82a, 1897, 9)
Then the Lord, in answer to the question of the lawyer, “And who is my neighbor?” shows them what is true love, and the relation in which all mankind stand toward their fellow men, each interested for one another. [Luke 10:29-35.] The scene was presented in parable form, but had been a true transaction to the letter, and quite a number knew this to be fact. One of those Samaritans they so much despised was the only one who helped the wounded, bruised, and half-killed man and neighbor.
(12LtMs, Lt 82a, 1897, 10)
Here are represented the stony hearts, who supposed themselves to be the only true religionists in the world, the only nation who did righteousness. It was a descendant of Abraham who was in so pitiful a condition, lying on the road so cruelly wounded, passed [by] by priest and Levite. Those who professed to be religiously exalted to heaven in point of privilege saw the great need that man had of a neighbor who could be touched with the feeling of his infirmities and alleviate his distress.
(12LtMs, Lt 82a, 1897, 11)
The Samaritan was touched with pity, and although the sufferer was a Jew, he assisted him and showed himself a brother, a friend. We need, every one who claims to be a child of God, to do all in our power to relieve physical distress, and we need also to have that faith that works by love, to be laborers together with God.
(12LtMs, Lt 82a, 1897, 12)
Not alone are efforts to be made for those in the byways and hedges, but for those in the highways. We need every penny that is not a positive necessity to be expended in making ourselves comfortable, to do the necessary work for others who are in need. I appeal to those who are in comfortable circumstances to be content with such things as they have and devote their gifts and offerings to God’s treasury, “that there may be meat in mine house.” [Malachi 3:10.] In this way you will demonstrate that you have a determination to love God with all your heart and your neighbor as yourself. This, Christ has given as the conditions of eternal life. Then let us not only be readers of the Word, but believers of the Word and doers of the Word.
(12LtMs, Lt 82a, 1897, 13)
Consider how much money has gone in purchasing needless trinkets, needless indulgences, that might have been placed in the Lord’s treasury to set ... [words missing] ... heavenward, revealing that you are cooperating with God, as in His service, to do His will. You are highly honored to be co-workers with God. The Lord is trusting our fidelity. We must be content to be policy workers in the Lord’s line. The Word tells you your high duty, which He requires of all in His service. Fix your eyes upon the cross of Calvary and learn your lessons, and begin your practical experiments of sowing liberally. Sow through denial.
(12LtMs, Lt 82a, 1897, 14)
We want very much the means that are being expended needlessly, because there are so many selfish wants that absorb the Lord’s goods. [There are] letters coming in constantly from different places where there are one, two, and again whole families and neighborhoods converted by reading Great Controversy, or Daniel and the Revelation. They have not seen the face of an Adventist. They beg for help to be sent them. They begin to cry, Give us food and not husks to nourish our spiritual strength. Brother Baker has just gone out one hundred and fifty miles to meet one of these calls.
(12LtMs, Lt 82a, 1897, 15)
One man writes, “I have been reading Great Controversy. I have accepted the Sabbath. Two of my daughters and a son are united with me. We want you to come here and baptize us. Our neighbors are asking for a minister. I think they will be baptized too.”
(12LtMs, Lt 82a, 1897, 16)
Such letters come in frequently, and only one minister in all New South Wales. There is no money to pay laborers, no money to pay missionaries. Let every one to whom you shall read this consider, Have you any idols in your house that you can dispose of and send in many rivulets flowing to God’s house, “that there may be meat in mine house”? [Verse 10.] Ye are the light of the world. Are you indeed? Is your light burning brightly? The faith in doctrines we hold dreads nothing but being covered beneath the bushel. Open the way by your self-denial, your self-consecration, and let everything—your means, your entrusted talents, all your capabilities—do service for God, that the work may advance in this region. We call for you to do all in your power to bring the truth before souls that are in darkness of error. Will you gather up treasures and make them provide for necessities as far as possible?
(12LtMs, Lt 82a, 1897, 17)
We expect too little from the inherent power of the gospel. We would rejoice to see a revival of the true missionary spirit. Let every one consider and enter the field as home missionaries, as missionaries in foreign fields. The Lord has given every man his work. Can you have any doubt, if you enter this field to give Bible readings, to hold forth the Word of life in humble reliance upon the Holy Spirit’s power? His grace will be given to every self-denying one, earnest to do God service. God would have all your idols abolished.
(12LtMs, Lt 82a, 1897, 18)
Begin the work of sowing while you are continually gathering up the seed to be sown, ever educating your God-given powers that they may do better service. Sow beside all waters. Illumination must be given; religious inculcation of ideas is essential through our schools, through the press, for this is a most important instrumentality proportioned to the extent of its far-reaching knowledge communicated. Work, work with brain and with strength and with heart, and God will open the way and bless every effort. Press the work, urge it forward. Let self die. Let Christ live in you in every effort made.
(12LtMs, Lt 82a, 1897, 19)
Sara says this must go without delay. In much love.
(12LtMs, Lt 82a, 1897, 20)
(Only half completed. Excuse all mistakes; cannot look it over. I call for help in the name of the Lord for this field. I know it can be given.)
(12LtMs, Lt 82a, 1897, 21)
Lt 83, 1897
Kellogg, J. H. Summer Hill, Sydney, Australia February 14, 1897 Previously unpublished. + Dr. Kellogg Dear Brother:
Bear with me as I again present to you the subject of John Wessels coming to Australia. He says he will come if the Foreign Mission Board [F.M.B.] sends him or advises him to come. The way I regard this matter is—the F.M.B. is not capable of deciding such questions. The men who give themselves as Brother John Wessels proposes to do, to a missionary work have the benefit of a higher council than the F.M.B. to depend on in making decisions. He should seek God for counsel. It is either his duty to come here or it is not. How can the Mission Board decide such a question?
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 1)
As I have been made to understand the manner this Board has treated such questions, if he takes the matter to his God he will be taught of God, and will locate himself as God shall direct him. If he has faith in God and trusts in Him who is wise in counsel, he will not be left in uncertainty. The heavenly Teacher is infinite in wisdom, He cannot err. If we ask of God we have the promise that He will hear, He will answer us. “If any man lack wisdom, let him ask of God, who giveth to all men liberally, and upbraideth not and it shall be given him. But let him ask in faith nothing wavering, for he that wavereth is like a wave of the sea, tossed to and fro.” [James 1:5, 6.]
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 2)
We need help here. Never can the work advance unless we have more workers than we have now in the Health Home; and unless we have more means, for we can no more set in operation any approach to the work you are doing than the children who were required to make bricks without straw.
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 3)
Why not yourself and wife, after the close of the General Conference, come away from your business and severe taxation, to Australia and rest awhile? We need just the help you can give us in New South Wales. They need in Melbourne the very help you can give them. If you knew one half [that] we have stood against here in this country to make the least success in advancing the work, you would be surprised that we have done even what we have.
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 4)
The course that some have pursued has been a hindrance in the place of being a help. It was a grievous disappointment for us to come to the decision, according to the light given me of God, that some were exerting an influence that was giving a wrong mold to human minds and therefore to the work. These men know not what spirit they are of. Brother Shannon has carried the leaven of evil to Johannesburg to work against us in Cooranbong, against the whole school enterprise and its managers. Brother Lawrence is about to leave for New Zealand. These hindrances will be removed out of the way, but what kind of witness will they bear as they go from Cooranbong? These men of grey hairs ought to do a different work than they have been doing. Their only hope is to fall on the Rock and be broken.
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 5)
The words which Christ addressed to Nicodemus are highly appropriate to these cases. “Ye must be born again.” [John 3:7.] But we want no such spirit as these have manifested to be retained on the school ground.
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 6)
Cannot you come and visit Australia and New Zealand, and is it not really your duty to do this—have a change and rest from your burdens, and then give us the very help that we need in our great necessity? I understand your situation in Battle Creek. You have been gathering more and more burdens upon yourself until you are loaded down and pressed as a cart beneath sheaves. The Lord made known the duty of the people in Battle Creek. There were means to move out of Battle Creek to locate in districts where the truth had not been proclaimed. They could as families settle in towns and cities, then watch their opportunities and cry unto God for wisdom to know how to work. When they shall take up the work with humble, sanctified hearts, working in Christ’s lines, by personal effort they can communicate light to others. This may require self-sacrificing efforts, but it will be a blessing to them to be where they can do service to the Master.
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 7)
The people in towns and cities have not received the light as God has repeatedly shown me they should have it. A firm, steady, earnest influence in living the truth would be the very representative work the Lord has given them to do. They could take up the same lines of work that you have been doing, in a limited degree, proportionate to their facilities, and the Lord would be their sufficiency. Nothing will or ever can give character to the work in the presentation of truth as that of helping the people just where they are. A work properly conducted to save poor sinners that have been passed by by the churches will be the entering wedge where the truth will find standing room. A different order of things needs to be established among us as a people, and in doing this class of work there would be created an entirely different atmosphere surrounding the souls of the workers, for the Holy Spirit communicates to all those who are doing God’s service, and those who are worked by the Holy Spirit will be a power for good in lifting up, strengthening, and saving the souls that are ready to perish.
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 8)
The Lord has not looked upon Battle Creek favorably because they have neglected to do the very work which the Lord has told them was their duty to do. Through neglect of working in Christ’s lines a condition of things has been brought into the work that has eclipsed high and holy interests. There have been heavenly intelligences waiting for human agencies with which to co-operate. Had they worked the works of God, they would have discovered human minds that have been once cultivated but who have been buried up in self-serving, in dissipated habits, in intemperance, who with suitable encouragement will spring into their places. There are many of this class that will respond to the right kind of labor; but they need to be recognized and to have firm, patient, earnest labor given them in order to uplift them.
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 9)
There are schools that may be established, not in the elaborate way as Union College, or as Battle Creek College, but after a more simple style, with humble buildings, and then there should be teachers who will conduct them after God’s plan, as near as they can understand, after the school of the Prophets. Their teachers should be men and women who not only have a knowledge of the truth, but who are doers of the Word of God. “It is written” will be voiced by them. Connected with the school the missionary line of work should always be engaged in to help the class who are fallen, degraded, left wounded, and bruised and ready to perish.
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 10)
There will be found those who have once preached the Word and been considered able ministers, who have failed because they did not see the necessity of strict temperance in all things. Objectionable hereditary and cultivated tendencies have brought them under temptations, and in the place of overcoming through the grace of God they yielded and fell. There are men who have had high qualifications entrusted them of God who have been apparently able ministers. But Satan spread his net for them, and they were taken in the snare on point of appetite. Their reform was presented before them, but they would not heed the words of warning.
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 11)
I have been shown that the medical missionary work will discover in the very depths of degradation men who once possessed fine minds, [the] richest qualifications, who, by proper labor, will be rescued from their fallen condition. It is the truth as it is in Jesus, brought before the human minds after they have been sympathetically cared for and their physical necessities met. The Holy Spirit is working and co-operating with the human agencies that are laboring for such souls, and some will appreciate the foundation upon a rock for their religious faith. Much painstaking effort will be required. There is to be no startling communication made of strange doctrine to these subjects whom God loves and pities, but as they are helped physically by the medical missionary workers, the truth for this present time is to be presented. The Holy Spirit co-operates with human agencies to arouse the moral powers; the mental powers are awakened into activity and these poor souls will, many of them, be saved in the kingdom of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 12)
The enemy has worked his best to prevent this missionary work from being done. There has been [a] going over the same ground, with the idea to help ministers to obtain a better knowledge of the Word, when these very men should have been working for souls that are in the darkness of error, to impart the knowledge they have already received from the Word. And as they try to teach others, depending upon the grace of Christ to help them, searching the Scriptures as diligent students, they will gain by practice a knowledge of the Word, and their understanding will be greatly enlarged as is expressed in the fifty-eighth chapter of Isaiah. Practice makes perfect. As diligent students, read the Word. Be doers of the Word, and the Holy Spirit will be close by every worker. The love of God will be kindled in the soul of the one who is ministering, in doing the very work the Lord has appointed to be done in missionary lines.
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 13)
The servants of God should have a high sense of the work to be done for a fallen world, in giving the messages of warning and the invitations to the great supper prepared for all to come to the gospel feast. The work of many will be first to show the tender sympathies of the Good Samaritan, in supplying the physical necessities, feeding the hungry, bringing the poor that are cast out to their house, gathering strength from God every day, that through His grace they may reach to the very depths of human woe and misery and help those who cannot possibly help themselves.
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 14)
This is being fishers of men, and in doing this work they have a favorable opportunity to set forth Christ as crucified among us. Such labor entered into will form a heritage of light.
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 15)
We thank the Lord for the medical missionary work that has already been done, but there is a large army of workers that is to engage in the same class of labor in different locations in cities, and the by-ways and hedges. There is more enlightenment to be given to those who are perishing in their sins. There will be very singular cases brought to notice who need not only the necessities of physical wants supplied, which is as essential as the first work, but to be brought into connection with sanitariums and homes that can present pure, correct principles for medical restoration. There are many who will catch hold of the hand stretched out to save them.
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 16)
Not only young men and women but those of all ages will be found who have been dead to all aspirations, who will respond as hope and light flashes in upon them, for the Holy Spirit is close beside the one who is ministering upon the human mind and the heart of those dead in trespasses and sins. And as a retrospective view is brought to their hitherto benumbed senses, there will be many things brought to mind that make them burn with shame at the thought of the influence which they have been exerting, calculated to enfeeble weak souls by their practice and example—those who have been brought within the sphere of their influence. They see them enfeebled, dilapidated, without moral force, moral wrecks to communicate their evil practices to others. Parents’ hearts are broken.
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 17)
Brothers and sisters and relatives speak of these poor souls as hopeless, but God looks upon them with pitying sorrow and tenderness. He understands all the circumstances which have led these poor souls under temptation, which has separated them from God. How can the youth of this generation escape the terrible dishonor of wasting their inheritance given them of God, selling their birthright as did Esau for a mess of pottage, betraying sacred interests entrusted to them for the blessing of humanity? They indulge in intemperate appetites and through greed to obtain money fall into dishonest practices.
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 18)
These poor souls need to be brought in connection with high, pure, Bible principles. But first the restoration work must commence in giving them healthful food and furnishing them facilities for clean bodies and clean clothing, and some sparks of gratitude will begin to flash forth. Then they are prepared to listen to you as you shall open to them the Word of God. You can bring them to Jesus the great Healer. Angels are helping in this work to restore and bring [them] back to the One who has given His life to redeem them. The Holy Spirit is co-operating with you in this working upon the heart, and the Spirit reproves of sin, of righteousness and a judgment to come.
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 19)
But if they are brought into connection with a people who will not leave the work incomplete, but will give them every advantage of personal labor, the image of God will [be] restored in many [of] these poor forsaken ones, and God and the heavenly angels will rejoice over them with singing.
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 20)
Those who have never become enfeebled through demoralizing habits can know only how to pity and love these poor souls through the love they have for Jesus their Redeemer, who gave His life for these degraded specimens of humanity. They who have been redeemed by the sacrifice of the life of Jesus, the only begotten Son of God, if they will be laborers together with God, will find a wide field open before them on every side in which to do service for God. Not one needs to be idle, and not one should be indolent and selfish now.
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 21)
If they have enriched and improved the beautiful inheritance given them of God, let them seek after the lost sheep to help the very ones that need help, seeking to raise up the fallen and bring them to a sense of the value of the talents which God has given them, which they have neglected to improve but turned them to a sinful account.
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 22)
Use the Word of God as your lever to pry them out of their degraded condition. Some you may find may, through faith in Jesus Christ, rise to the high places of service, and be entrusted with responsibilities in the work to save souls. They have the advantage of many because they have had an experience, and they know their necessities and how to help them, and what means will be best to use to recover the perishing ones. A new career is opened before them. The light of a rich, new, and varied experience is gained through the knowledge that has been communicated to them that Jesus Christ is their Saviour, that He is touched with the feelings of their infirmities, and He understands all the strength of the temptations wherewith they are beset; for He was tempted in all points like as we are, and He will save to the utmost all who will come unto Him for refuge.
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 23)
Every one of these souls added to the force of workers, provided with facilities and instructions daily given in regard to the matters [of] how to save souls to Jesus Christ, the Bible being their guide [and] the Holy Spirit being their Helper and Comforter, can enter in as co-laborers with those servants of God who have helped them to search for treasures of new light. They are filled with gratitude to God; they are quickened and their energies strengthened to lift up the unfortunate and fallen who can never rise without help.
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 24)
The piety and advanced spiritual knowledge and growth of a church is proportionate to the zeal, piety, and missionary intelligence that has been brought into it, and carried out of it, to be a blessing to the very ones who need our assistance the most. Again, I urge you to consider Isaiah fifty-eight that opens a wide and extensive vineyard to be worked upon the lines which the Lord has pointed out. When this is done there will be an increase of moral sources and the church will no more remain almost stationary. There will be the blessing and power attending their labor. The selfishness that has bound up their souls they have overcome, and now their light is being given to the world in clear bright rays, in exercising a living faith and godly example.
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 25)
The Lord has His promises for all who will do His requirements. “Blessed is he that considereth the poor, the Lord will deliver him in time of trouble.”“The Lord will preserve him and keep him alive, and he shall be blessed upon the earth, and thou wilt not deliver him unto the will of his enemies.”“The Lord will strengthen him upon a bed of languishing. Thou wilt make all his bed in his sickness.” [Psalm 41:1-3.] “Trust in the Lord and do good, so shalt thou dwell in the land, and verily thou shalt be fed.” [Psalm 37:3.] “Honor the Lord with thy substance and with the first fruits of all thy increase, so shall thy barns be filled with plenty, and thy presses shall burst out with new wine.” [Proverbs 3:9, 10.]
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 26)
“There is that scattereth and yet increaseth and there is that withholdeth more than is meet but it tendeth to poverty. The liberal soul shall be made fat and he that watereth shall be watered himself.” [Proverbs 11:24, 25.] “He that hath pity upon the poor lendeth unto the Lord, and that which he hath given him will he pay him again.” [Proverbs 19:17.] “And if thou draw out thy soul to the hungry and satisfy the afflicted soul, then shall thy light rise in obscurity, and thy darkness be as the noonday, and the Lord shall guide thee continually, and satisfy thy soul in drought, and make fat thy bones and thou shalt be like a watered garden and like a spring of water, whose waters fail not.” [Isaiah 58:10, 11.]
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 27)
The Word of God is full of precious promises as the above. If we will enter into the work and will do according to the Word of the Lord, this would reveal, if acted upon in every city in the by-ways and hedges, a similar showing as has attended the work that Dr. Kellogg has been engaged in. It is the very work the Lord has specified should be done from the light the Lord has been pleased to give me.
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 28)
The means which has been diverted from missionary lines to selfish indulgences has dishonored God. The bicycle idol has been a curse to the Battle Creek church and has had an influence unfavorable to the advancement of spiritual life and energy in the church. It has counteracted the work the Holy Spirit has graciously done for the people, more even than the ball playing and their other games. The missionary work has been neglected. The very lines of work which should have been done have been left undone, and selfishness and strife for the victory in swift riding has hurt the souls of many and has placed them in a most objectionable light. The money expended in these idols, if carefully and economically used, being invested in the interests in towns and cities to carry forward the work of God, would have been in accordance with God’s will. Many places in Michigan have never heard the third angel’s message. Right at the heart of the work where our great institutions are established there has been an influence extended, in doing those things which God has cautioned them not to do, that has greatly lowered the estimation of the character of the work in the city of Battle Creek.
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 29)
There has been a fascination upon human minds; there has been a godless enthusiasm which should make them blush with shame, [for there is] a missionary work, plenty to be done for the Master, but left untouched. The Lord has a controversy with His people who have had such great light in Battle Creek. The Lord has done great things for His people, but they have not appreciated His mercy, neither heeded His warnings. Ezekiel 20:38-44.
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 30)
The Lord will not be trifled with, for He is God; the great and terrible God. He will punish for these things. Oh, what shall I say more? What words shall I trace upon paper, what words that will arouse the dormant energies?
(12LtMs, Lt 83, 1897, 31)
Lt 83a, 1897
Kellogg, J.H. Refiled as Lt 21, 1898.
Lt 84, 1897
Kellogg, J. H. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, Australia August 29, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother:
I would say to you that my general health is good. I have considerable pain, however, in my left cheek bone and eye. Three years ago I had a fall. I was stooping over a box, selecting oranges to give to Brother McCann, when a blindness came over me. I rose with the milk pan in my hand. The land was being cleared, and there was a large pile of ragged stumps near. As I rose, knowing that I must fall directly on the jagged, pointed ends of the stumps, I darted a prayer to heaven, and fell heavily. The pan struck the stump, and bounded against my cheek bone with such force that it bent the rim almost double. It struck my cheek bone directly under my eye, so close that my eye only just escaped. My eye has been quite weak a considerable part of the time, but recently the bone pains me, and there is some swelling. Last night I suffered severe pain and slept little. But my prayer ascends to God for His restoring power to heal my affliction.
(12LtMs, Lt 84, 1897, 1)
I know not myself what all this means. I may be compelled to give up my writing, but I believe the Lord has a work for me to do still.
(12LtMs, Lt 84, 1897, 2)
I send you a copy of a letter written to Pacific Press. I wish now to make a statement. When I send for any health foods, you can charge it to my account. When Brother Semmens sends for health foods, unless I send orders, do not charge it to my account. Brother Semmens has not much practice. I have helped him until there is a debt of $128 for furnishing, and still another debt. I purchased from Brother Israel the goods which we have [been] using in his house, and this makes the sum still higher. I furnish one room, paying one dollar per week. I furnished it in rather a cheap way, but I cannot consent to make myself responsible for goods to the amount of one or two hundred dollars that I never ordered.
(12LtMs, Lt 84, 1897, 3)
I think, from the remarks made by Brother Semmens, that he regards these goods as a donation to the Health Home; and it places me in a very awkward position, either to charge him up with them, or to charge myself with them. The goods I order, you may charge to me, but unless I do order, do not send any charge to me. These strings that draw upon me in an emergency are very convenient for many, but I find them most disagreeable and inconvenient.
(12LtMs, Lt 84, 1897, 4)
When health goods are sent, state distinctly who they are for. Those to Brother Semmens, mark them thus; those to Willie, mark them for him, and those sent to me, mark them for me. Thus all the disagreeable part of the business will be avoided. I do not object to the goods coming in my name, but there should be an understanding that their price and the cost of getting them here is not to be paid by me. There must be no mixing up of matters. Do not send goods without special statements in regard to them, and then no mistake will be made.
(12LtMs, Lt 84, 1897, 5)
Lt 85, 1897
Kerr, Sister Campground, Stanmore, New South Wales, Australia October 21, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Sister:
My son arrived in Sydney October 20. Sister Haskell and several of our people left Cooranbong for Stanmore, a suburb near Sydney. A three hours’ ride brought us to Stanmore, where our camp meeting is to be held. The first meeting begins today, or this evening. A short time since, we met my son. It was with full hearts that we greeted him. We deemed it a great blessing that God had preserved him in all his journeyings, and we could meet him again in health, and that he should find his family as well as himself. We are very grateful to God that His goodness and mercy have accompanied my son Willie in his travels, and that He has given us another token of His mercy and grace in his return.
(12LtMs, Lt 85, 1897, 1)
Everyone is so busy that we have but little space to visit. The arrivals at the camp have to be attended to. Sixty tents are already pitched, and others will go up as they are needed.
(12LtMs, Lt 85, 1897, 2)
I was very much surprised by your kind remembrance of me in the token of love you sent me. I thank you, my sister. I will make good use of it, and its service will call my sister to mind. I will be pleased if in the providence of God we shall meet again before the great meeting shall take place, when all who love God shall gather in the family of heaven to see Him whom our souls love, and to meet our loved ones, never more to be parted. Thank God, we are homeward bound. However severe may be our conflicts here, we know that they will end.
(12LtMs, Lt 85, 1897, 3)
In this life the heart may be tried and tempted, and we are ever to bear in mind that the church militant is not the church triumphant. We are to be comforted and encouraged that the bruised reed will He not break and the smoking flax will He not quench until He sends forth judgment unto victory. But, my sister, the Lord must be uplifted. Friends may prove treacherous, enemies may be inspired by Satan to revile and cause sadness, but we must regard all the inconveniences of this life as our test and trial, to prove us, whether we will turn to the Stronghold in our necessity. We may find that comfort, that consolation, that tender sympathy, which exists only in the bosom of Him who has loved us with an everlasting love.
(12LtMs, Lt 85, 1897, 4)
“Let him take hold of my strength and make peace with me, and he shall make peace with me.” [Isaiah 27:5.] Our part is to take hold of His strength in our weakness and peril. He interposes between us and the difficulties that appear so formidable. The flame and flood are behind Him. Then lift Him up, the Man of Calvary, lift Him up with voice and with song, and let the melody of thanksgiving and praise ascend to heaven in your life-service to God. Keep cheerful, full of faith and courage and hope. Elijah was subject to like passions as we are, yet the Lord was His strength. He prayed most earnestly, and the Lord heard his prayer.
(12LtMs, Lt 85, 1897, 5)
Let us, under all circumstances, preserve our interest in Christ. He is to be everything to us, the first, the last, the best in everything. Then let our tongues be educated to speak forth His praise, not only when we feel gladness and joy, but at all times, because He is our Redeemer, and deserving of our praise and thanksgiving. We need to keep the heart, which is the treasure house, full of the precious promises of God, that we may bring forth from this treasure the very words that will be a comfort and a strength to others. Then we are learning the language of the heavenly family, which will, if we are faithful, be our society through eternal ages. The language that will be appropriate there we need to educate our lips to utter here, where right words and sound speech is essential for the benefit of all with whom we associate. Thus we are brought into co-partnership with the great firm above. Our cold hearts may be warmed by the contemplation of Jesus our Redeemer.
(12LtMs, Lt 85, 1897, 6)
Every day we need to be advancing in perfection of character, and this we shall certainly do if we press toward the mark of the prize of the high calling in Christ Jesus. We who are the least of all saints may be obtaining a preparedness to stand before the Son of man at His appearing. In seeking, watching, praying, for purity of heart, we shall create around our own souls an atmosphere that will be fragrant. The infirmities that compass us in humanity will not overcome us. In and through the strength of Jesus, we shall overcome our infirmities. Our hearts will be one with Christ, and His presence abiding in us will make us to express His image and glorify Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 85, 1897, 7)
Every day it is our privilege to be working in the interest of the great firm, because we are in co-partnership with Christ. The uncertainties we have here are to be overcome by faith. We are not to talk of the great power of Satan to overcome us, but of the great power of God to bind up all our interests with his own. We are to talk the language of Christ, to echo His words, nor let any impatient speech come from us. Then we will be a savor of life unto life to all who come in connection with us. And we will obtain an experience that will enable us to comprehend with all saints what is the length and depth and breadth and height, and to know the love of God that passeth knowledge.
(12LtMs, Lt 85, 1897, 8)
Bear in mind that you are God’s by creation, and you are His by redemption. The same Son of the only living God who created you has declared, “A new heart will I give you.” [Ezekiel 36:26.] If you will surrender to Him, his grace will make of you a vessel unto honor, and will carry you forward step by step in the progress of Christian perfection, until you shall see the King in His beauty. Day by day He will work great changes in you. He who hath begun a good work in you will through His grace perform it unto the day of Christ’s appearing. The honor of Christ is not less concerned in the perfection of your individual character than is your own honor. You are a member of His body, a part of Himself. He has passed through great suffering, even unto the most cruel death, that you might have probationary time in which to form a character through His sufficiency, that His glory should become your glory, that when you shall appear among the angels of heaven, the just made perfect, you may appear unto the praise and glory of His power.
(12LtMs, Lt 85, 1897, 9)
“They that be wise shall shine as the brightness of the firmament, and they that turn many to righteousness as the stars for ever and ever.” [Daniel 12:3.] If we will put on Christ, if we will receive the grace which is ours by the gift of God, by living faith, and perseveringly hold fast our advantages given in the pledged Word of God, we will grow in grace daily.
(12LtMs, Lt 85, 1897, 10)
Two powers are struggling most earnestly for the victory in your soul. Unbelief marshals all her forces to cut you away from the source of your strength. Satan is the great general of that army. Faith marshals her army. Christ is the Author of our faith, and the conflict is going forward every hour before the universe of heaven. It is a hand to hand fight, and the great question is, Which shall obtain the mastery? The issue is of tremendous consequence to us. We are fighting for a crown, an immortal inheritance, an eternal substance. There is no release from this warfare. It is to be carried on every moment.
(12LtMs, Lt 85, 1897, 11)
“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.” [Ephesians 6:12.] Will we consider then the importance of being prepared for the conflict. The apostle urges the necessity for preparedness to engage against satanic agencies. He says, “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 against the wiles of the devil.” [Verses 10, 11.] Again the warning is repeated, “Wherefore take unto you the whole armor of God, that ye may be able to withstand in the evil day, and having done all, to stand.” [Verse 13.]
(12LtMs, Lt 85, 1897, 12)
He who is mighty in counsel, and to whom is given all power in heaven and in earth will come to the help of His people if they are not faithless, but believing. Christ declares of certain places that He could not do many mighty works there because of unbelief. [Matthew 13:58.] Thus we see that it is of great importance that we have faith. Faith is that principle that waits not for the work to be done before it ventures and does the very thing that a pure, true faith would do. “Faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen. For by it the elders obtained a good report. Through faith we understand that the worlds were framed by the word of God, so that things that are seen were not made of things which do appear.
(12LtMs, Lt 85, 1897, 13)
“By faith Abel offered unto God a more excellent sacrifice than Cain, by which he obtained witness that he was righteous, God testifying of his gifts, and by it, he being dead yet speaketh. By faith Enoch was translated that he should not see death, and was not found, because God had translated him. For before his translation he had the testimony that he pleased God. But without faith it is impossible to please him: for he that cometh to God must believe that he is, and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him.” [Hebrews 11:1-6.]
(12LtMs, Lt 85, 1897, 14)
Lt 86, 1897
Lawrence, Brother Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia December 21, 1897 Previously unpublished. + Brother Lawrence:
The Lord is very merciful, of tender pity, full of compassion and loving-kindness. I have been very sick, but the Lord has spared my life. Still, I am quite weak. My soul has been very much weighed down for months, and I attribute my sickness to this more than to anything else.
(12LtMs, Lt 86, 1897, 1)
We have been moving forward here in Cooranbong in the work which the Lord has signified should be done. He has shown that we should in our preparation and building for the school be giving an education to the workers, combining physical labor with the taxation of the brain. This will give a strength and vigor to the brain that it could not other wise have.
(12LtMs, Lt 86, 1897, 2)
We considered this the place where the school should be located, and commenced work at once to the plan which God has specified. The students are to be laborers as well as learners. The land is to be cleared and cultivated, and trees planted in the grounds. I commenced building my house, and when the foundation was laid, I also had preparations made for raising fruit and vegetables. The light given me of the Lord is that the poverty that exists in this region need not be, for with industry the soil can be cultivated. Moments are not to be wasted in idleness. Our time is the Lord’s, and is as precious as gold. When it is carefully treasured and put to use, it will show important results. If properly worked, the land will yield its treasures.
(12LtMs, Lt 86, 1897, 3)
When we first came to this place with the object of securing land to put up buildings, we were made to realize the inconvenience of depending on Sydney or Newcastle for our vegetables and fruit. They came to us from the market, we paying for the fruit and also four shillings a shipment to the man who was employed to buy and ship to us. This we considered a moderate price. Then frequently when the fruit would come to us so that it would have to lie over Sabbath and in the hot weather much of it spoiled. We knew that with a large family of students we could not well work in this way. There must be trees planted and a good orchard of such fruits as peaches, apricots, oranges, lemons, apples, and other fruits. We did this at once. The trees in the school orchard and mine, were planted about the last of September, 1895. In September 1896 these trees were in blossom, and in November we ate fruit from them.
(12LtMs, Lt 86, 1897, 4)
This move we considered a wise one, and now we have thrifty orchards. For the good of the trees we stripped them of nearly all their fruit this year, leaving only specimens of each kind. These specimens were most excellent. This move we believe to be right. It cost money to clear the acres of land to put into orchard, but no more than we could expect.
(12LtMs, Lt 86, 1897, 5)
Meanwhile our fund of money was running short. Laborers among our own people who needed work were plentiful. These had families to support, and we were glad to employ them. But although they worked at moderate wages, it seemed as if our buildings could not go up until we had more means. We prayed about the matter, and, while in a dream, I was instructed that the Lord’s people, the Wessels family, had some of the Lord’s money that I should ask them to loan to us. I sent to them for one thousand pounds, and they did the very thing I believed they would do. I felt that the Holy Spirit would speak to them and move upon their hearts to let us have the use of that money we so much needed. It came, and we felt very grateful for this timely assistance.
(12LtMs, Lt 86, 1897, 6)
Those who were doing the work of responsible men know how this money came. I had ventured out by faith to hire money to carry forward the work, and it was necessary to use every dollar with greatest economy. The first school building must be built of the material that would cost the least money; workmen must be employed who would work their eight hours per day for as little wages as possible; every thing must be conducted on an economical scale. We were not situated as they are in America, where they have every facility at hand, and can build with half the amount of money that a building can be put up in this country. There, if they come to a crisis, and there is a dearth of means, there are many churches that can be called upon to help. Here we could do nothing, even if we should try our best to raise means to carry forward the work.
(12LtMs, Lt 86, 1897, 7)
The first building was put out by tender, but we acted no part in that with the exception that I had the privilege of laying the first brick, the cornerstone. The next day we were en route for Melbourne, on our way to the Adelaide camp meeting. We were absent about two months. Meanwhile we were made sad to hear of the many bitter things that Brother Shannon and his wife had carried to Melbourne against the whole work in Cooranbong.
(12LtMs, Lt 86, 1897, 8)
I had employed Brother Shannon to put up buildings which had given him work from September until April. He was then given the job of building the meetinghouse in North Fitzroy; but our hearts were pained because of the influence he exerted in his representations of Cooranbong and the management here. This was just the work Satan wanted some one to do. He knew he could exert his power far better if he could employ in this work some one who had been in Cooranbong, and had worked there, one who had watched and criticized, and had represented matters so as to destroy the faith of all to whom he talked. Those he did not see to converse with had the report through others, and these were not slow to communicate.
(12LtMs, Lt 86, 1897, 9)
Thus the leaven of evil had been absorbing to itself thoughts and feelings that are not true. False impressions have been given. These things have made me regret that I employed Brother Shannon upon these grounds at all, for he has caused us all much sorrow and shame. He has brought burdens upon those who we know are in partnership with Jesus Christ to establish buildings here in this locality.
(12LtMs, Lt 86, 1897, 10)
The Lord has set these men to work in His service, and He has never given to any man the work of creating disaffection and disloyalty among the workers. The building was put out to tender in order to find out who were the ones who would do good, honest work for the least possible wages. Those who had the management of affairs could not do otherwise. They had not money in the treasury to hand out profusely to those who should be employed. Brother Shannon had just as good opportunities as the others had, but he decided that he could not make sufficient wages. This soured him, and he looked upon his side of the question and not upon the other side. But he has not acted the part of a Christian gentleman, or a Christian brother. He has made us feel sorry that we encouraged him to come and work for us.
(12LtMs, Lt 86, 1897, 11)
Those who act unreasonably, who would hurt the work of God and injure the prospects of our school that we are laboring so hard to bring into existence, cannot expect to enjoy the blessing of God. Brother Shannon has done us much harm, more than he will care to answer for in the judgment. His work on buildings is good, but he wants to be more expensive than we can possibly afford with our limited means. We could not afford to put one shilling more than was positively necessary into the building of our school.
(12LtMs, Lt 86, 1897, 12)
We have no chapel, and about one hundred meet on Sabbath to worship in the room about the mill. In hot weather it is oppressive; in the colder weather it is not safe owing to the exposure. In view of this, how could the stewards of God do otherwise than have the building placed in the hands of those who will require the least means? The wages of those who accept the work on the school building is not much over five shillings per day; but if their wages are no more [than] this, God can make up the deficiency and give them contentment and satisfaction and His blessing, which alone are gold and silver and precious stones.
(12LtMs, Lt 86, 1897, 13)
Then why should Brother Shannon be so unkind when we are doing all we possibly can to advance God’s work? Brother Shannon had been favored with work when he could not obtain employment in Hobart. Work was given him at Sunnyside for seven or eight months at two dollars per day, working eight hours besides his board, [and] his wife’s for her cooking. They also had a furnished tent. The ones who we thought would surely be the ones to help us in the work Satan has filled with his spirit to work against the work of God. But this is God’s work, and it will go forward! And those who cling to the work, ready to do their duty in the various branches and show themselves men, God will bless and prosper.
(12LtMs, Lt 86, 1897, 14)
Brother Lawrence and his wife came from America to do missionary work. A call was made for those who were self-supporting to come to Australia. Farmers were called for who could not only teach how to work the land, but to stand as missionaries to teach the truth as well. Such families were needed here. We had hoped that Brother Lawrence was one who could do God service in his line of work if consecrated to Him. When the funds were so low, it was a question with us what we should do.
(12LtMs, Lt 86, 1897, 15)
Brother Lawrence was offered work in caring for the orchard, working eight hours a day, at four shillings, until there should be an increase of money in the treasury. But he refused to work for less than six shillings per day. He spent two or three months in idleness, while the orchard was suffering for the need of work to be done in it. He would not work for four or five shillings. This is the man who we thought would be a helper, a laborer together with God.
(12LtMs, Lt 86, 1897, 16)
The life belongs to God. He has claims upon the consecrated service of all mankind. Our life in this world is connected with God moment by moment, and we are to consider our entire dependence upon Him. Life, every hour, every moment, kept and preserved by the power of God, is a most precious talent, and brings the receiver of this great gift blessings in unselfish work for the Master.
(12LtMs, Lt 86, 1897, 17)
“Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, December 1897
(12LtMs, Lt 86, 1897, 18)
There have been matters presented to me in the night season and I cannot sleep past twelve o’clock. Several persons were present when the Spirit of the Lord came upon me, and I was constrained to speak with great plainness. I will give you the substance of that which was said:
(12LtMs, Lt 86, 1897, 19)
You asked, “Sister White, Why did you present the things you did before the men assembled?” Because the Lord bade me take persons with me and set things before you in their presence, not simply in order to warn you, and let it end there, but to reveal the evil thing by the light given; and not only to show you the evil in your practice, but to be a warning to those who were dealing with God in connection with His work, that they might know that your example could not be considered right. The sinful practices which have seduced you through a life time should be seen as bearing the rebuke of God. The course you have pursued is a course of presumption before Him, which he will not tolerate in you or any individual.
(12LtMs, Lt 86, 1897, 20)
God has commissioned me to tell you the truth not only in public but with pen. Your course of action is contemptible in the sight of God. The measurement of your interest in the work of God on the school ground is measured by your transactions in deal. Your idleness for months, while seeing and understanding the necessities of the case and the urgency of the work to be done, your transactions in buying and selling your cow and horse stand as a blot against you, which added to many transactions of like character reveal that you are unfitted to be a steward of God. Your covetous propensities have been revealed as verily as were those of Judas. You have yielded to the same temptations which beset him, and the Lord has bidden me to speak plainly.
(12LtMs, Lt 86, 1897, 21)
Now is your time to see and understand, to repent and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out. I have not one excuse to make for the plain testimony I have borne you. I have given you the word of the Lord. It remains now to be seen whether you have any spiritual conception to see and take in your guilt in using your God-given talents to abuse Him and the souls for whom He has died. If you are not capable of seeing these things, then there will be no evidence of decided change, no transformation of character. There will be no restoration, no healing from Christ. It will be said of you, “Thou art weighed in the balances, and art found wanting.” [Daniel 5:27.]
(12LtMs, Lt 86, 1897, 22)
The holy God has given safe and correct rules for the guidance of all. There must be no betraying of the truth, no yielding to any guide but One. There can be no sinless swerving from His principles. God has a law, and the men who will to do His will through the grace of Christ, will keep it. God’s law is eternal justice and equity. No man is to rob his fellow men. All are subjects of the Lord.
(12LtMs, Lt 86, 1897, 23)
But the will of God has been perverted in the qualifications He has given you for better things. The first principles of holiness are yet to be learned by the one with whom God’s will and ways are not regarded and obeyed. There is no deception so hopeless as that of living in disobedience to God.
(12LtMs, Lt 86, 1897, 24)
I have a deep interest for you, and I ask you, “Will you now listen to the tempter whom you have encouraged?” You have kept his principles before you and acted out his attributes. God declares “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.” [Psalm 111:10.] In keeping of His commandments there is great reward. All the goods and cattle in this world would not be sufficient compensation for one act in departing from the law of God. The devil has been your teacher in these principles in place of the Lord.
(12LtMs, Lt 86, 1897, 25)
It would not be wise nor profitable to accept all that the tempter offered the world’s Redeemer for the least departure from a “Thus saith the Lord.” Temptation is to be firmly resisted in whatever form it may come. Will you make a decided effort? I beg of you not to allow your wife to confuse your mind with her many words. God is not leading her. She has not an abiding Christ. She talks enough to confuse any mind often knows not many things that she has said.
(12LtMs, Lt 86, 1897, 26)
O, the tongue! What mischief it has done! What mischief it may do while the heart is not imbued with the Spirit of God. Your own character, needs to be transformed. Your excitable speeches are a dishonor to God. You must excuse me from having any further conversation with you. I would not trust you to repeat my words.
(12LtMs, Lt 86, 1897, 27)
Lt 87, 1897
Lacey, Brother and Sister [Herbert and Lillian] Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia March 19, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother and Sister Lacey:
We were thankful to our heavenly Father to receive the good news through the letter sent to Elder Haskell, of the favorable turn in the sickness of Herbert. We have presented your case, Herbert, in earnest prayer. Jesus the Restorer often sought the Lord in prayer, and have not we the assurance, “Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you”? [Matthew 7:7.]
(12LtMs, Lt 87, 1897, 1)
It is our privilege to do our best in treating the sick. All that we do is to be done in faith, relying upon the Great Healer. “I am come,” said Jesus, “that ye might have life, and that ye might have it more abundantly.” [John 10:10.] The lessons of the life of Christ are precious to us. He waited, He worked, He prayed, in behalf of man. He depended upon God, and in His life plans worked with God. He cooperated perfectly with the will of His Father. We need to copy this Pattern in all things.
(12LtMs, Lt 87, 1897, 2)
Jesus, the precious Saviour, is our very best friend. In the Father’s name, the only begotten of God has brought to you, Herbert and Lillian, the message of love and peace. If Jesus had consulted Himself only, if He had lived for Himself alone, He could not have been our Redeemer. He would have claimed less obedience in His sinless nature; He would never have become a Sin-bearer, and died with the curse of the sins of the whole world upon Him. When, in the garden of Gethsemane, He pleaded that the cup might pass from Him, He added, “Nevertheless, not my will; but thine be done.” [Luke 22:42.]
(12LtMs, Lt 87, 1897, 3)
Thus it should be in every case of sickness in the person of our dear ones. We are to pray for them earnestly and in faith, but the prayer of Christ, which submits the whole matter to the will of God, is to be our prayer. “Not my will, but thine, O God, be done.” [Verse 42.] This will in no case be charged against the petitioner as a lack of faith. Our every prayer should show our acknowledgment of our dependence upon God. The Lord, who has given to us so precious a gift as Jesus, will He not with Him also freely give us all things? He, our heavenly Father, has given us such an expression of His love that no room is left for us to question or to doubt His love. He has taken us to His heart of love.
(12LtMs, Lt 87, 1897, 4)
“Lo, I come; in the volume of the book it is written of me, I delight to do thy will, O my God.” [Psalm 40:7, 8.] The thoughts of Christ in regard to Himself were that He was the Sent of God. And this is the position that all should occupy toward Christ. They should consider themselves in the service of Christ, to do God’s will in all things as Christ has done the will of His Father. In speaking of His disciples in prayer to His Father Christ says, “Thou hast sent me into the world, so have I also sent them into the world.” [John 17:18.] Jesus was raised up as the servant of God His Father, to bring a message of peace and reconciliation from God to man, and to turn many from their iniquity to Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 87, 1897, 5)
The Lord wanted us, else He would not have sent His Son on such an expensive errand—an errand that involved His death, in order that He might give life unto all who would receive Him by faith. The Lord has a use for us. We are to cooperate with Him in saving our own souls by complying with the conditions of obedience to do the will of God as Christ in His humanity fulfilled the will of His Father in all things. This obedience to God confirms our confidence and trust in Him. He wants us to be His messengers to work in Christ’s lines.
(12LtMs, Lt 87, 1897, 6)
My brother, the Lord’s love is toward you. We believe the Lord has a special work for you to do in representing Jesus to the world. His desire is that you shall be the sent of Jesus Christ. Be of good courage; be at rest and peace in Christ, and grow strong in His strength. We shall do all in our power to have the school commence as it should.
(12LtMs, Lt 87, 1897, 7)
In much love.
(12LtMs, Lt 87, 1897, 8)
Lt 88, 1897
Lacey, Brother and Sister [Herbert and Lillian] Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia March 18, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Herbert and Lillian Lacey:
Our hearts are drawn out for you, Herbert. We pray for you that the Lord will raise you up to health again. We believe that you have a work to do in the service of the Master for which you have been fitting yourself.
(12LtMs, Lt 88, 1897, 1)
The enemy is the destroyer; Christ is the Restorer. Neither life nor death, height nor depth, nor any other creature shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is Christ Jesus—not because we hold Him so firmly, but because He holds us so fast. If our salvation depended on us, we could not be saved, but it depends upon the One who is back of all the promises, the great persevering Love, the grasp of Omnipotence. You are in His hands. Your grasp upon Him may seem to be feeble, but His love is that of an Elder Brother. The assurance is doubly sure. Through our relationship to Christ we have eternal life, and none shall be able to pluck you, or me, out of His hand.
(12LtMs, Lt 88, 1897, 2)
I am often comforted with the imagery of the Shepherd and the sheep. The members of the Lord’s family are represented in a beautiful pastoral picture in order that our humanity may take it in. The presentation is rich in eloquence. “What are these which are arrayed in white robes? And whence came they? And I said unto him, Sir, thou knowest. And he said to me, These are they which came out of great tribulation, and have washed their robes, and made them white in the blood of the Lamb. Therefore are they before the throne of God, and serve him day and night in his temple: and he that sitteth on the throne shall dwell among them. They shall hunger no more, neither thirst any more; neither shall the sun light on them, nor any heat. For the Lamb which is in the midst of the throne shall feed them, and shall lead them unto living fountains of waters: and God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes.” [Revelation 7:13-17.]
(12LtMs, Lt 88, 1897, 3)
What a Saviour we have in Jesus! He says, I am the light of the world. [John 8:12.] Yes, He ascended the firmament of truth, He shone amid the moral darkness of the world, and He was conscious that were He to withdraw His beams the world would be immersed in eternal night. As many as would accept His light for their individual selves and would walk in that light would He draw to Himself, away from the moral darkness into the clear light of the Sun of Righteousness. He could stand forth and challenge the attention of the world with the full assurance that He was not only the benefactor, but that in Him were combined all the qualities of perfection that the world would ever find.
(12LtMs, Lt 88, 1897, 4)
He came as our Saviour, pouring out the resources of heaven in our behalf, a sure antidote for every phase of misery which mankind must know. He is our able Advocate in the heavenly courts. For no other purpose of God, He assumed our nature in the fullest sense for the human family whom He represents. He died for humanity that He might encircle them with His long human arm, while with His divine power He lays hold of the throne of God. He purposes in His heart to do more, abundantly more, than He has ever said, for He has within Him a fountain of compassion, clear and abundant, from which all may draw in time of need. You need it now. He will refresh your soul. Only trust Him, and rest in His love. I pray that the peace of Christ may rest upon you.
(12LtMs, Lt 88, 1897, 5)
Lt 89, 1897
Lacey, Brother and Sister [Herbert and Lillian] Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia June 30, 1897 Previously unpublished. + Dear Brother and Sister Herbert Lacey:
I now come more closely to yourselves. Had your education been an all-round education, mental and physical combined, it would have been much better for yourself, and for your future usefulness as a teacher. The caution and warning has been given that you are not now fitted to lead, that while you may do a certain work in educating, you should still be learners. You are not as prepared as a teacher should be. You feel competent to undertake the work of managing the school interests but should you do this, you would prove a failure. You have not the qualifications gained by an all-round experience in the essential, matured, sound principles of education. You are not qualified for a leader or for a manager of the work in its varied lines.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 1)
You lack experience, which should be combined with all true education. You yourself must have a different mold of character before you can give a proper mold to the minds of others. If you had a genuine sense of your own weakness and your own human inefficiency, you would go to the One who is able to supply all your lack. You would humble your heart low before God. He is merciful, and would do for you more abundantly than you can ask or think. If you will learn your lessons in the school of Christ, I am sure the Lord will hear our prayers, which are ascending to Him day and night in your behalf.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 2)
“Without me,” said Christ, “ye can do nothing.” [John 15:5.] He is stronger than the strongest human agencies. The weaker you know yourself to be, the more you will realize the necessity of unlearning wrong lessons and learning anew of the great Teacher, and the stronger you will become in His strength. In thy weakness He will perfect His own strength. Sanctify the Lord of hosts, and let Him be your fear, and let Him be your dread. Only trust in Him, and although weak, He will strengthen thee, though faint, He will revive thee, though wounded, He will heal thee, and give you the opportunity you so much need to perfect a Christian character. He will give you another chance to make God your only dependence.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 3)
When you become strong, I have something to say to you. But you cannot have any of this matter presented to you now. You need far greater reverence for God and holy things. You have excellent endowments, but they can become enfeebled by self-sufficiency and the supposition that you are qualified to manage the great responsibility of establishing and conducting the school wisely. You cannot do this; you need to be a learner before you can be a wise educator.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 4)
My brother, we hope that this sickness will be for your present and eternal good. The Lord will raise you up and give you another trial. If you will patiently continue to be a learner, gathering every ray of light that flashes from His Word, and from the Lord by His messengers, sent to His people with messages of reproof, of encouragement, of correction in righteousness, God will give you a true sense of what is truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 5)
I have a deep interest in you. It is natural for you to have quite a masterful way. You will feel that you can be first, and carry things efficiently. But the Lord loves you too much, my dear brother in Christ, to permit you to do this. Self must die. Jesus Christ must appear as the all and in all. This can never be until you are teachable, and ambitious in the way of the Lord. The hereditary, breezy ways of Herbert Lacey can only do harm to yourself and others in more ways than you suppose. The Lord will give you another trial. He will prove and test you.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 6)
I have had no opportunity to become well acquainted with you. But light has been given me that you need to see many things in a different light from that in which you now see them. You move impulsively, without due consideration, and as thoughts come into your mind, you desire them to be acted upon, and to prevail at once. But while you do this, you cannot be a safe guide to lead out in our school.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 7)
In His providence the Lord has directed the course of Brother Haskell from Africa to this country, because his experience is of great value to those who do not know by experience of my mission [which] the Lord has given me, or my past connection with the work. Here he can be a great help to the cause of God in Australia. The Lord, I was told, has the shaping of His work, and He will not trust His heritage of children in the hands of unskilled agencies, who have a different kind of knowledge to gain from that brought from Healdsburg or Battle Creek. Saith the Lord, Brother Haskell is My servant, appointed to work under My directions, which he will obey, to teach the truth for this time, and I will be with his mouth, and I will give him My Word, and he shall be your helper, to carry out My instructions.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 8)
Many have thought their own endowments competent to carry through any enterprise. Thus Moses thought when he slew the Egyptian, and then had to flee for his life to the mountains. Here he kept sheep for forty years, until he learned to be a shepherd of flocks. He learned his lesson so perfectly that though the Lord revealed Himself to Moses, and spoke to him face to face, as man speaketh to a friend, yet he did not become lifted up, and think that he could teach the Lord to work in behalf of His people. Moses knew that he was [a] mighty general of armies, while he was in service in the Egyptian courts. But when he began to plan ways and means for the work of God, he found that he was not following God’s plan, but his own human inventions.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 9)
Men gain nothing by rushing on before the Lord. “Follow me,” said Jesus. Do not run ahead of Me. Follow where My footsteps lead the way. Then you will not have the armies of Satan to meet alone. Let Me go before you, and then you will not be overcome by the enemy’s planning for you, when you think it to be the Lord.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 10)
When first called to follow the Lord, impetuous Peter knew not to what heights and depths Christ’s feet would lead the way. After his denial of Christ, he sincerely repented, and was converted.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 11)
The miracle of the draught of fishes was wrought in obedience to the One who had risen from the dead. “Cast thy net on the right side of the ship, and ye shall find,” Christ said. [John 21:6.] They had toiled all night, and had caught nothing. Now they cast the net out on the right side—the side of faith—and they could not draw it in, but had to call for their brethren in the other boat to help them.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 12)
Peter was so elated and so glad that in his eagerness, he cast himself into the water, to go to his Lord. He had known Christ after the flesh, as many know Him now, but he was no more to be thus limited. He knew Him no more after the same manner that he had known Him in his association with Him in humanity. He had loved Him as a man, as a divine Teacher; he now loved Him as a God. He had been learning the lesson that Christ was all and in all to him. Then the Lord tested him. “The Lord said unto Peter, Lovest thou me more than these (the other disciples)?” Three times Peter had denied his Lord; three times was the assurance to be given: “O Lord, thou knowest all things; thou knowest that I love thee.” Then came the command, “Feed my sheep;”“feed my lambs.” [Verses 15-17.] Many can put the crib high, and give food to the sheep, but it is a more difficult matter to put the crib low, and feed the lambs. This is a lesson many need to learn.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 13)
The Lord has said that His representative men must be respected and regarded for their works’ sake. They have held the beginning of their confidence firm, and will do so unto the end if they will trust in the Lord. They have not tried to make of none account the light which God has given. “Those that honor me,” God says, “I will honor.” [1 Samuel 2:30.]
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 14)
There are many who need to learn the very lessons that they can and should learn from old, experienced men, whom the Lord has permitted to live in these perilous times. He has a message for them to bear. As His witnesses, they are to be respected and appreciated. They will give the trumpet a certain sound, to prepare men for battle for the great day of the Lord. Many who are young and vigorous will think that they themselves are all-sufficient. But the Lord has His picked men, men who will voice His words, and catch the first sound of command, who will obey His directions.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 15)
They have learned His voice, and will not mingle their natural temperaments with the Word of the Lord. They will not make confusion, and give orders that will counteract the Lord’s orders, or assimilate or interpret their orders with their own individual ideas or preferences.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 16)
O, it is a great thing to understand the voice of the great Shepherd, to be taught by God, and led by God, and work in God! The Lord will lead those who follow Him, in safe paths. Where is our strength? It is in having a knowledge of the weakness of human nature, and turning to One who is mighty to save to the uttermost all who come unto Him. The young must know how to be strong in God’s strength. They are to understand that the age and experience of years is to be honored, that the agents whom God has loved and educated and communed with, are to be respected, and do their appointed work under the directions of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 17)
In your scholastic life, you have been placed where you have cultivated an appetite for skeptical inquisitiveness. You need to be educated in the clear light of saving truth, that you may make truth your own by personal experience. My brother and sister, you both need a practical experience in wearing the yoke Christ has worn in your behalf. You are not to quote or study the sayings or practices of great authors; your study is to go deeper than this. Your life-study has scarcely begun. You are still to study that which you both most need, that your lives may be made one with the life of Christ. You need this, for you are almost strangers to Christ’s life of self-denial and self-sacrifice.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 18)
There are so many who need an experimental knowledge of the truth as it is in Jesus. You are but a boy in knowledge; and great ships cannot be trusted to inexperienced hands, even of sailors. You need a personal knowledge of proper education. Make the truth your own by personal experiment. Assimilate the truth with your life, just as the food that you eat and digest is converted into blood. In your student-life you imbibed some things which it will not be wise to diffuse. It is a question which your own life will answer whether your education has been to you a benefit or a hindrance in receiving the gospel truth in all its mysterious working.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 19)
A great responsibility rests upon you to closely examine yourself, that you may see whether you have a genuine experience in things of eternal interest. You have head knowledge; but have you heart knowledge? Head knowledge alone is not to be trusted. The truth may be voiced by men, women, and youth, yet its warm converting rays may not have changed the soul, melting and subduing the whole being. Many who explain the plan of salvation to others have not felt the power of the transforming grace of Christ in life and character.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 20)
Look unto Jesus as the sin-pardoning Saviour. He is the only Center. By entire self-surrender, you can fasten to Him, and then you are prepared to preach Christ and Him crucified. You then have a knowledge of the preciousness of truth; for you have felt its mercy and grace in your own soul. The standard Christ holds out before you is completeness in your Redeemer. The more pure and sanctified your knowledge is, the higher will be your ideal.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 21)
Be sure, my brother, that the testimonies of reproof that the Lord has given to Battle Creek are to be carefully considered. Avoid everything that in the past has made such reproofs necessary. Healdsburg College need not now have been loaded with debt if the expenses had been carefully considered, and the outlay made proportionate to the income. It will not answer to incur debt during the very first term of school. This warning was given to Battle Creek, but it was not heeded. Debts were piled up which should never have been incurred. Term after term the same mistake has been made, yet they continue to follow former arrangements. This is not wise management.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 22)
Much more careful pioneering must be done here than was done at Healdsburg or at Battle Creek. It is an easy thing to place the expense of the students very low, but it is not so easy to make the out-go meet the income. Haphazard work cannot be done in this school. We have not the funds to draw that the schools in America have, and there is need for the greatest economy. Those who are travelling, in the place of favoring themselves with a meal at an expensive hotel, should buy some bread and fruit, and thus save a shilling.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 23)
The Lord’s messenger placed His hand upon your shoulder, and said with deep earnestness, Herbert, you are a young man. You have many things to learn. Your Saviour has given His life for you, and His heart yearns over you. But you must feel yourself to be a learner. Your education has not been altogether what it should have been. You have not the depth of spiritual experience that would make you a safe teacher. Your educational advantages have not brought you to that place where you feel a soul-hunger for the bread of life. You have not a proper sense of your accountability and responsibility. You are ever to wear Christ’s yoke. The great duty that you have not yet realized is that you are to improve your God-given talents. These entrusted gifts are to be appreciated. Your speech is a talent given you by God, not for your amusement but for God’s service, to be used for the advancement of His glory by being rightly employed.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 24)
You need to learn of Him who was the Majesty of heaven, but who clothed His divinity with humanity, and from childhood to manhood He was diligent in employing His moments, not in amusement and self-gratification but in God’s service. Throughout His lifetime, He did His duty, working with His hands to help others. This is more honorable than any selfish pleasure. Christ learned the trade of a carpenter, and contributed to the support of the family. He took His share of the burden.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 25)
This is where your ideas have been perverted. Your ideas are defective. You have not been taught to believe that a diligent use of the muscles, combined with mental labor, is the most useful education that can be obtained for practical life. You have not thought it beneath you to learn from books, but you have thought it degrading to engage in the homely, every day duties that someone must do, someone whose soul is just as precious as your own in God’s sight. Taking this view of things, and passing through your school life without being self-supporting, has left you with one of the most essential parts of education unlearned.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 26)
Had you entered your school life with a determination to wrest your way through, to be as far as possible, and as far as consistent with circumstances, a self-made man, how much better prepared you would now be to say to the students, “I have had a struggle; I have had to make my requests known to the Lord. I have had to plan and devise to make ends meet, but I have solved the problem.” Had you done this, you would have gained a valuable experience, of a different order from what you now have.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 27)
None of us are born only to eat and to drink and to study books. The hours of your life belong to God. No time is to be squandered, for your life is valuable beyond price. Hours spent in amusement create a morbid appetite for amusement. This appetite strengthens by indulgence, and leads one to regard the use of the muscles, in doing necessary physical labor, which someone must do, as detracting from gentility. Hundreds of hours are spent in doing nothing.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 28)
Diligence in study, sinking the shaft deep into the mines of truth for the precious ore, is to be balanced wholesomely by earnest physical labor. But the man or youth who is content to waste hours in doing nothing is not a well-regulated, well-balanced man. Herbert, you need not have accumulated debts. As a young and healthy man, you could and should have aspired to be one of the world’s self-made working men. The view that you have taken in regard to manual labor has kept you from obtaining a wholesome, practical education.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 29)
Idleness is always demoralizing. Few men sink into degrading habits who regard it as not lowering in any respect to mingle physical labor with mental. God would have all work, that they may be kept from the love of amusement merely for selfish enjoyment.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 30)
The Lord has given every man his work. He has not given to any brain, bone, or muscle to be kept in inactivity. Christ speaks. Hear His words: “Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me, and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.” [Matthew 11:28-30.] This is Christ’s recognition of duty. He speaks of wearing His yoke, and lifting His burden. What is the yoke? That which restrains. What is the burden? That which is to be carried. Here obedience and service are combined.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 31)
Those who thus recognize their duty will employ every God-given talent to the glory of God. Read Luke 10:25-27. Notice especially verse 27. “Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy strength, and with all thy mind; and thy neighbor as thyself.” To this the Master said, “Thou has answered right; this do, and thou shalt live.” [Verse 28.] This takes in the whole man. The physical strength is to be brought under contribution to God. Mind, heart, soul, and strength are to be employed in God’s service. He who does this has a complete, all-round, symmetrical character.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 32)
Christ conformed to the law of obedience and service, and the same principle that made Him so useful everywhere, He requires His followers to obey. In this way every man must be educated before he can love God supremely and his neighbor as himself.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 33)
Many take views of life that are entirely opposite to the teachings of Christ. A life of freedom and idleness is looked upon as the happiest existence. But Christ acknowledges no such principle. He put His neck under the yoke of obedience, and He says, “Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me how to obey and how to serve. In this you will find rest.” [See Matthew 11:29.]
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 34)
In these words Christ presents a higher conception of education than has ever been presented in school-life. The noblest men, those who stand highest in the estimation of the heavenly universe are the wrestlers, those who co-operate with Christ by using every faculty of mind and body to do God’s service by blessing their fellowmen. He who thus recognizes his responsibilities in this life, acting his part as a toiler, who strives to imitate the perfect pattern Christ has given him, will be recognized by God.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 35)
What is law? It is an expression of the divine will, and expression of the character of God. What is service? It is the work that human agents are to do for Christ. By wearing His yoke of obedience, we may be laborers together with God. Through perfect obedience and service Enoch walked with God, wearing Christ’s yoke. The life in which the mind, soul, heart, and strength are given to God is mingled with the example of Christ, and forms a part of the divine plan.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 36)
Who can describe the life of Christ? He was the Majesty of heaven, but in our behalf He came to this earth, and His life was far from being one of ease or pleasure. Painful toil was a part of each day’s experience. Weary, hungry, sorrowful, carrying heavy burdens, misrepresented and opposed by His brethren, misunderstood by His family, with a soul acquainted with grief, He did indeed bear the yoke in His youth. No other human being was ever weighted with such responsibilities. He had a mission to perform, and continually the words were on His lips: “I will not fail, nor be discouraged.” [See Isaiah 42:4.] Will all remember these words? It was the spirit of uncomplaining submission in which our Saviour did His duty that made His yoke easy and His burden light.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 37)
All this the Majesty of heaven bore that His grace might lighten the heavy load we would have to carry. He looked steadfastly to His Father for strength, that He might live a perfect life, working out a complete, symmetrical character, and that He might say to every struggling soul, “Fear not; for I have overcome the world. I will give you the aid of My Spirit.” [See John 16:33.]
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 38)
The Lord is soon coming. He has given to each of His children the work of preparing for His appearing. We are to do this by using and improving every entrusted talent. The Lord will not accept any slothful, indifferent work. We are exhorted to be “not slothful in business, fervent in spirit, serving the Lord.” [Romans 12:11.]
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 39)
The voice is a talent. Our speech is to be carefully guarded, that we may honor the Lord by our communication one with another. There are many slang phrases and rough words used. Our speech must be polished by a study of the life of Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 40)
The Lord has entrusted His goods to human agents to be traded upon during His absence. His stewards are not to copy the world’s habits or practices. They must have the grace of Christ in the heart, and then they will have a heavenly treasure house of precious things from which to draw. Every gift is to be purified from dross. It is to be refined and elevated, that it may do service for the Master.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 41)
The children of God, who cherish the blessed hope of uniting with the redeemed when Christ shall come, must have only one aim in life—to be laborers together with God, and thus be complete in Christ. “We all, with open face, beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord, are changed into the same image, from glory to glory, (from character to character), even as by the Spirit of the Lord.” [2 Corinthians 3:18.] “Behold, I come as a thief. Blessed is he that watcheth and keepeth his garments (the righteousness of Christ’s character), lest he walk naked, and they see his shame.” [Revelation 16:15.]
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 42)
“And a voice came out of the throne, saying, Praise our God, all ye his servants, and ye that fear him, both small and great. And I heard as it were the voice of a great multitude, and as the voice of many waters, and as the voice of thunderings, saying, Alleluia; for the Lord God Omnipotent reigneth; let us be glad and rejoice, and give honor to him; for the marriage of the Lamb hath come, and his wife hath made herself ready. And to her was granted that she should be arrayed in fine linen, clean and white; for the white linen is the righteousness of the saints. And he saith unto me, Write, Blessed are they which are called unto the marriage supper of the Lamb. And he saith unto me, These are the true sayings of God.” [Revelation 19:5-9.]
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 43)
My brother, the words I have written are important to you. Take heed to them. Many treat life as if it were a great holiday. They joke and trifle away the precious golden opportunities, given them that they may obtain a fitness for the future life. You can educate them not to thus grieve the Holy Spirit. God has given us faculties, and we are to use every one of them for Him. Those who jest at everything, who turn every circumstance into foolishness and nonsense, who are content to live in an atmosphere of hilarity and glee, gradually lose the use of the faculty of speech, so that they cannot speak good, wholesome words. Remember the temptation of others in this line, and in the fear of God educate them to turn away from these things. God help you to help those who need your help, is my prayer.
(12LtMs, Lt 89, 1897, 44)
Lt 89a, 1897
Lacey, Brother and Sister [Herbert and Lillian] Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia March 16, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother Herbert and Sister Lillian Lacey:
We thank the Lord that He is your Restorer. Satan is the destroyer; but Christ is your Restorer. You are not to worry now; but rest peacefully in God, who is your heavenly Father. The Lord is good; He loves you in your weakness and helplessness.
(12LtMs, Lt 89a, 1897, 1)
We feel of good courage. One building is completed, and it is very pleasant and nice. The second building is growing. The frame is up, and the basement is nicely bricked in, that the fruit and vegetables might be kept cool. Brother and Sister Haskell are to take right hold at the commencement of the school. He is to be Bible teacher. You need not worry one bit. Sister Haskell has been a school teacher for ten years, and carries her diploma from the State of California. You shall have a season to get fully well.
(12LtMs, Lt 89a, 1897, 2)
I am sorry I have not told you before that I had made arrangements to take your debt in America off your hands. I certainly shall not accept one penny of that [which] you owe me, and you will not have any part of this debt to worry over. So all you must do is just to get well.
(12LtMs, Lt 89a, 1897, 3)
Tomorrow Sister Haskell, with good, strong helpers, goes into the loft, to see that all the furniture is put in good order. All will be fitted up. You know I took upon myself the responsibility of raising the dining room and kitchen another storey.
(12LtMs, Lt 89a, 1897, 4)
This will give sleeping room for the students, and allow us to use part of the second storey for a hall in which we can assemble to worship God. This is a right investment, and although the building is not finished, it is enclosed, and will be ready for use at the appointed time.
(12LtMs, Lt 89a, 1897, 5)
We want now the peace of perfect trust in God, the peace of God, “that passeth understanding.” [Philippians 4:7.] The heavenly intelligences will be our assistants in the school, for the teachers will be laborers together with God. If every worker will trust in Jesus as his efficiency, he will feel the soothing influence of the words, “The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want. He maketh me to lie down in green pastures; he leadeth me beside the still waters.” [Psalm 23:1, 2.] The Lord Jesus saith unto you, “My peace I give unto you; not as the world giveth give I unto you.” [John 14:27.]
(12LtMs, Lt 89a, 1897, 6)
Let the knowledge of the love of Christ for you make you peaceful and happy. We shall not be guilty of allowing you to work so hard again. You worked too much here in Cooranbong, but we shall watch you after this. Jesus, your Elder Brother, loves you; He understands your every weakness. He needs you as His human co-laborer. You are not alone in your room for one moment, for you have the guardianship of heavenly angels. The knowledge of the tender sympathy of One who knows just how to apply the healing balm, must give you a sense of security.
(12LtMs, Lt 89a, 1897, 7)
When this weakness shall have passed away, and your health is restored, we shall be so thankful for His tender, pitiful love. I know that the knowledge of His pardon gladdens your heart. You have given your heart to Jesus, and made a covenant with Him by the surrender and sacrifice of all you have and are; and the Lord Jesus has come in to you. He looks lovingly upon you. You have an earnest longing to please your Divine Friend. You are a member of the Lord’s family, in which He has the deepest interest; and what a joy it has been to you, and will be, to help the cause that Christ is helping—He the Divine, you, the human agent. Every day you can find something to do for the Master. Even now you are doing His will in just resting in His dear arms. It will be time enough for you to work for Him in whose service you delight in laboring for the people for whom Christ has died, when the Holy Spirit shall imbue you with His strength. He will comfort you in His love.
(12LtMs, Lt 89a, 1897, 8)
We are all to try to do our duty where we are. If in sickness, we must not repine, for we are in the Lord’s hands. He is working for our good, even in suffering and weakness. God desires you to look unto Jesus. He is your spiritual efficiency, and His grace is working within you to perfect His image in you both. The Lord is developing His own Spirit in you, and His heavenly grace will increase your capacity to work with Jesus. You can both say, I have trusted Him. “Thou hast set my feet in a large place.” [Psalm 31:8.]
(12LtMs, Lt 89a, 1897, 9)
When we walk in the freedom of heavenly light, there will be a wide space for all our renewed energies to do service unto God. What sweet relief when tired and weary and heavy laden to hear the melody of the voice of Him who gave His life for us, saying, “Come unto me.”“Come unto me, all ye that labor, and are heavy laden; and I will give you rest.” [Matthew 11:28.] “I am the light of the world. He that followeth me shall not walk in darkness, but shall have the light of life.” [John 8:12.] “I am the bread of life: he that cometh to me shall never hunger, and he that believeth on me shall never thirst.” [John 6:35.]
(12LtMs, Lt 89a, 1897, 10)
We may see Jesus presented in the gospel, and our faith may lay hold of Him as our personal Saviour, the object of our Lord and our imitation. What a welcome He has for us all. We need only to touch the hem of His garment, and His virtue gushes forth in response, “Who touched me? I can see that virtue hath gone out of me.” [Luke 8:45, 46.] You, Herbert, may clasp His hand. Thank God, a refuge is provided for you, into which you may run and be safe. In personal trust in Jesus Christ, in laying all your burdens at His feet, you will have peace with God, and be one with Christ. Thank God that Jesus is so precious, the One altogether lovely, the chiefest among ten thousand, the Sun of Righteousness, who will arise “with healing in his wings.” [Malachi 4:2.]
(12LtMs, Lt 89a, 1897, 11)
In love and faith.
(12LtMs, Lt 89a, 1897, 12)
Lt 89b, 1897
Lacey, Brother and Sister [Herbert and Lillian] Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia March 22, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 2MR 31-32. Dear Herbert and Lillian:
We were highly gratified to receive encouraging letters from you today. My heart is full of thanksgiving to God that He has been so merciful to you. Truly He is touched with the feelings of our infirmities.
(12LtMs, Lt 89b, 1897, 1)
“The Spirit itself helpeth our infirmities.” [Romans 8:26.] “The Lord is good, and greatly to be praised.” [Psalm 96:4.] I have faith that the Lord will carry on the work in your behalf unto the victory. He wants you to put away all anxiety, all worriment, from your mind; and as you commit the keeping of your souls to Him, His peace will flow into your mind and heart.
(12LtMs, Lt 89b, 1897, 2)
Elder Haskell, his wife, and myself, are planning matters in regard to the school. We have sent a most urgent request to Brother Skinner to come to Cooranbong, not as a cook, but as an educator, to teach classes [in] how to cook. We need his help, and I believe that he will come. But now we leave everything in the hands of God. He can see all our necessities, and He will be our Supreme Helper. This work has not been undertaken to acquire money, or to please and glorify ourselves. It is to save the souls that are ready to perish.
(12LtMs, Lt 89b, 1897, 3)
The work is the Lord’s and we will trust in Him, and He will bring it to pass. Our feet shall be placed in a large place. At present we seem to be cramped and hedged in, but the Lord will give room for His own purposes to be accomplished. The words spoken to Christ’s disciples come to us through their words. The Comforter is ours as well as theirs, at all times and in all places, in all sorrows and in all affliction, when the present outlook seems dark, and the future perplexing, and souls feel helpless and alone. These are the times when the Comforter will be sent in answer to the prayer of faith. There is no more encouraging promise than this: “Whatsoever ye shall ask in my name, that will I do, that the Father may be glorified in the Son. If ye shall ask anything in my name, I will do it.” [John 14:13, 14.]
(12LtMs, Lt 89b, 1897, 4)
Earthly comforters may do their best, they speak to the ear, but there is no comfort like Christ’s, so tender and so true. He is touched with the feelings of our infirmities. His Spirit speaks to the heart. Circumstances may separate friends; the wide, broad sea may roll its restless waters between us and them. Their words and sincere wishes may still exist, and yet they be unable to demonstrate them, and do for us that which would be pleasantly and gratefully received, but no distance, no circumstances can separate us from “the Comforter.” [Verse 26.] Wherever we are, wherever we may go, He is there, always a presence, a person connected with heaven, One given us in Christ’s place, to act in His stead. He is always at our right hand, to speak to us soothing, gentle words, to support, sustain, uphold, and cheer.
(12LtMs, Lt 89b, 1897, 5)
We are often in perplexity. We desire to keep the way of the Lord. We will to do justice and judgment. The unseen is close at hand, the Comforter. He is our appointed teacher. Said Christ, “He shall teach you all things.” [Verse 26.] The blessed Son of God in person taught His disciples while He was with them. But He was soon to leave them, and He told them, “If ye love me, keep my commandments.” [Verse 15.] These are the conditions He places on all His followers.
(12LtMs, Lt 89b, 1897, 6)
While they reveal their love for their Saviour by their obedience, through inconvenience, trial, and loss of earthly things, He assures them, “I will pray the Father, and he shall give you another Comforter, that he may abide with you forever; even the Spirit of truth; whom the world cannot receive, because it seeth him not, neither knoweth him; but ye know him; for he dwelleth with you, and shall be in you. I will not leave you comfortless. I will come to you. Yet a little while, and the world seeth me no more; but ye (who do my will, and keep my commandments) see me: because I live, ye shall live also. At that day ye shall know that I am in my Father, and ye in me, and I in you. He that hath my commandments, and keepeth them, he it is that loveth me: and he that loveth me shall be loved of my Father, and I will love him, and will manifest myself to him.” [Verses 16-21.]
(12LtMs, Lt 89b, 1897, 7)
Precious assurances. We will evidence that we appreciate them. We must cling to the promise so graciously and abundantly expressed. As we read these words, it seems that there is no vestige of reason for entertaining doubt. We are to comply with the conditions. To every promise given there are conditions, and where heart and soul comply with the conditions, we shall obey all the commandments of God. We are to take the words of Christ, in all that He has promised, as verity and truth. We are to rest in the promise, knowing that He who is back of the promise, is our very best and truest Friend. He has given us so many tokens of His love that they cannot be reckoned and estimated by figures. When we contemplate the cross of Calvary, we are lost in wonder and amazement at the great love wherewith He hath loved us. With reverential awe we exclaim, “Behold the Lamb of God, that taketh away the sin of the world.” [John 1:29.]
(12LtMs, Lt 89b, 1897, 8)
We can honor our Lord best when we rest with quietude in Him. He has spoken words that we can appropriate to ourselves, and trust. He left words with His disciples which, if received as they come to us, will be our hope and assurance forever. Then let us rejoice in faith and hope, and thus make manifest that we believe in Jesus. Then we shall trust in Him as our sufficiency, our all and in all.
(12LtMs, Lt 89b, 1897, 9)
Dear children of the Lord Jesus, God has a tender affectionate interest and loving care for you. He careth for us all. I am very thankful for the interest and care and love given you by the dear friends where you are. The Lord has used them as His instruments in co-operating with Him for your recovery; for we expect you to be restored to soundness and health. We do not want you to be in any way in a hurry to take hold of responsibilities again. “Be still, and know that I am God.” [Psalm 46:10.] Take good care of the Lord’s property.
(12LtMs, Lt 89b, 1897, 10)
Your personality and self are safe only as [they] are lost in God, surrendering all to Him. Your whole being is His. He has purchased you with His own blood. You are not your own; you have been bought with a price. The conditions your Saviour has made are nothing less than to love God supremely, and your neighbor as yourself. Identified as one with Christ, means to be in full love and willing obedience to the Father. It may be a severe cross to you to wait long enough to get strong, but the peace that Christ gives will come to you. Wait patiently for Him, and He will give thee the desire of thine heart. You will need to recover your lost strength. The Restorer will give you rest and quietude in Him. We pray for you every day.
(12LtMs, Lt 89b, 1897, 11)
In love.
(12LtMs, Lt 89b, 1897, 12)
Lt 89c, 1897
Lacey, Brother and Sister [Herbert and Lillian] Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia March 23, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 7BC 967-968. Dear Children, Herbert and Lillian:
We received and read your welcome communication to us of Herbert’s improvement. We will praise the Lord. His name shall be exalted. we have presented Herbert’s case in prayer, and have had the most satisfactory assurance in every season of prayer, just as though audible words were uttered, “Satan is the destroyer; I am your Redeemer, your Restorer.” When the case was seemingly the most discouraging, a clear representation of Christ, the great Physician, was standing by Herbert’s side, lifting up His own standard against the enemy, which was the bright beams of the Sun of Righteousness. Beyond this, Satan could not possibly pass. He could not pass this shield of holy light.
(12LtMs, Lt 89c, 1897, 1)
O, that we had increased faith in God, as One whose ear is not heavy that He cannot hear, whose arm is not shortened that He cannot save. O that all could behold our precious Saviour as He is, a Saviour. Let His hand draw aside the veil which conceals His glory from our eyes. It shows Him in His high and holy place. What do we see? Our Saviour, not in a position of silence and inactivity. He is surrounded with heavenly intelligences, cherubim and seraphim, ten thousand times ten thousand of angels. All these heavenly beings have one object above all others, in which they are intensely interested—His church in a world of corruption.
(12LtMs, Lt 89c, 1897, 2)
All these armies are in the service of the Prince of heaven, exalting the Lamb of God, who taketh away the sins of the world. They are working for Christ under His commission, to save to the uttermost all who look to Him and believe in Him. These heavenly intelligences are speeding on their mission, doing for Christ that which Herod and Pilate did against Him. They confederate together to uphold the honor and the glory of God. They are united in a holy alliance, in a grand and sublime unity of purpose, to show forth the power and compassion and love and glory of the crucified and risen Saviour.
(12LtMs, Lt 89c, 1897, 3)
In their service, these armies of heaven illustrate what the church of God should be. Christ is working in their behalf in the heavenly courts, sending out His messengers to all parts of the globe, to the assistance of every suffering one who looks to Him for relief, for spiritual life and knowledge. The church of Christ on earth is amid the moral darkness of a disloyal world which is trampling upon the law of Jehovah. But their Redeemer, who has purchased their ransom with the price of His own precious blood, has made every provision that His church shall be a transformed body, illumined with the Light of the world, possessing the glory of Emmanuel. The bright beams of the Sun of Righteousness, shining through His church, will gather into His fold every lost, straying sheep, who will come unto Him and find refuge in Him. They will find peace and light and joy in Him who is peace and righteousness for ever and ever.
(12LtMs, Lt 89c, 1897, 4)
In much love.
(12LtMs, Lt 89c, 1897, 5)
Lt 90, 1897
Lindsay, Brother and Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia August 18, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 1MCP 327; 12MR 218-221; 4Bio 316-317. Dear Brother and Sister Lindsay:
We received your welcome letter, with the draft enclosed. We thank you, my Brother and Sister Lindsay, and your mother, for this donation to our meetinghouse. In the past I have been handicapped in regard to the means wherewith to arise and build. But if we had moved out by faith, I have not a doubt but that the means would have been furnished. The Lord had been stirring my mind on this subject. In the night season I was addressing the people, saying “Arise and build.” [Nehemiah 2:20.] “This people say, The time is not come, the time that the Lord’s house should be built. Then came the word of the Lord by Haggai the prophet, saying, Is it time for ye, O ye, to dwell in your ceiled houses, and this house lie waste? Now therefore, Thus saith the Lord of hosts, Consider your ways.... Go up to the mountain, and bring wood, and build the house: and I will take pleasure in it, and I will be glorified, saith the Lord.” [Haggai 1:2-5, 8.]
(12LtMs, Lt 90, 1897, 1)
Some time ago I talked with Elder Haskell, and we thought that I could hire from Sister James of Ballarat, money enough to make a beginning, and then the Spirit of the Lord would move upon our people to donate to the work we were doing, not going to do. But although the matter was understood, and everything, I thought, settled, when I wrote to Sister James regarding our purpose to have a church built at once, she wrote me that she could not let me have the money; for her son had been unfortunate in business, and was deeply in debt, and they felt that they must help him out of his misfortunes. So that hope was gone.
(12LtMs, Lt 90, 1897, 2)
We then arranged to occupy a room in the upper story of the school building, and we were very glad of this chance during the winter. But the attendance at the school is much larger than we dared to hope, and now they need the room. There are now above eighty students at the school, and more are expected in a day or two.
(12LtMs, Lt 90, 1897, 3)
Last Sabbath Brethren Daniells and Baker were here. They came up to decide in regard to camp meetings, when and where they should be held, and to counsel in regard to putting up the church building and the main school building. We had a very excellent opportunity of counselling together!
(12LtMs, Lt 90, 1897, 4)
On Sabbath Elder Daniells gave an excellent discourse. The meeting room was crowded full of interested hearers. Our brethren decided with us that we must arise and build, and that we would see if it were not possible to furnish means sufficient to enclose the meetinghouse, making it quite small, the seating capacity being only enough for two hundred. We were glad that so many were in favor of having a church built. I wanted our brethren to see the great need of a church, and I desired to carry the people with us in every decision, for this would be much more pleasant than to have divided sentiments. They now realize the situation, and see that there is need of a church, not fitted up with chairs, but with convenient, stationary seats. In the room which we now occupy, the chairs and school desks are so arranged that the people cannot kneel in worship.
(12LtMs, Lt 90, 1897, 5)
Friday Brethren Baker, Daniells, and I met in counsel. We took matters up quite fully, and decided that a meetinghouse must be built. We decided to start the work at once, and then in a few weeks we would have a place of worship. I saw that the faith of the brethren was limited. They wanted the building small, to hold only two hundred. I was glad to carry these brethren with us in this, and in regard to building, additional light would be given. I had been building a humble cottage for Willie, but I would not allow the house of worship to be narrow and contracted. It should be large enough to accommodate three hundred.
(12LtMs, Lt 90, 1897, 6)
Friday afternoon, when our mail was brought, your letter with the draft came. You can see how it found us, but with a very small sum of money, only £100, that we were sure we could use. When your draft came, we felt to praise the Lord, who had put it into your hearts to give of your means to help in building a house for the Lord, that His people might worship Him decently and in order. We had been praying most earnestly that the Lord would supply us with sufficient means to purchase the material. We had decided to make a beginning with the £100, knowing that the Lord would not leave us without means to complete the house. Your timely donation was certainly an answer to the most earnest prayer to our heavenly Father. Now we shall arise and build.
(12LtMs, Lt 90, 1897, 7)
This manifest blessing, coming to us after we had decided that we must build, filled our hearts with the deepest gratitude to God, and to you, His servants, whose hearts the Holy Spirit moved to do this. Please read the ninth chapter of second Corinthians. I have been enabled to understand this Scripture again and again, and when I opened your letter, and saw the draft, I realized the truth of the words, “For if there be first a willing mind, it is accepted according to what a man hath, and not according to that he hath not. For I mean not that other men be eased, and ye burdened: but by an equality, that now at this time your abundance may be a supply for their want, that their abundance also may be a supply for your want; that there may be equality: as it is written, He that had gathered much had nothing over, and he that had gathered little, had no lack.” [2 Corinthians 8:12-15.]
(12LtMs, Lt 90, 1897, 8)
Sunday after breakfast I was called to attend a board meeting at the school. I had not been able to sleep after half past one that morning. We talked over matters until noon, and were thankful to be able to harmonize in regard to the camp meetings, when and where the first meetings should be, and in regard to many vexed questions. That night our brethren left for Sydney.
(12LtMs, Lt 90, 1897, 9)
On Monday I was requested to meet our brethren and sisters to plan where our meetinghouse should be erected. There is a beautiful spot of land, forming a gentle rise, at a little distance from the main road. I remembered distinctly seeing this spot of land when we first visited this place in 1894 with ideas of purchasing it. We remarked upon this spot, and admired it. It is not thickly timbered, and there is no under brush. There are only a few large monarchs of the forest to be taken out, and the land will be prepared for building.
(12LtMs, Lt 90, 1897, 10)
We were impressed that this was the place on which to erect the church. We saw no valid reason why this building should not be on the very best location that the land afforded, but we thought that we might wait till Willie White came home, which will be in two or three months. I supposed that we would do this, and rush nothing hastily. I returned home to Sunnyside, and having risen at half past one that morning to write my American mail, I retired early. In the night season I was considerably exercised, and I rose early, and write the enclosed letter. I felt greatly stirred in spirit.
(12LtMs, Lt 90, 1897, 11)
We will now get our own people together, and see what we can do toward raising means for the church building. All here are poor. One man from Morisset, who has recently embraced the truth, has some property in land and houses, which he rents. He will probably do something. There are also those who will give labor. If we could secure £100 in labor, we would be very much pleased. We shall do our very best to raise what means we can. The building will go up if we do our best; for the Lord will honor our faith.
(12LtMs, Lt 90, 1897, 12)
Earnest movements have been made here in the Parliaments to have God acknowledged in the government of this nation. Earnest efforts have been made to prevent this, knowing that it meant nothing less than religious bigotry and oppression. When religion is mixed with civil government, it means much to Seventh-day Adventists. A union of church and state means a recognition of a spurious sabbath, and a failure to respect the conscientious observance of the Sabbath of the fourth commandment.
(12LtMs, Lt 90, 1897, 13)
This movement, demanding that all observe as sacred an idol sabbath, resembles the act of Nebuchadnezzar in making a golden image, and setting it up for all to worship. In the interpretation of the king’s dream, Daniel had told him, “Thou art this head of gold.” [Daniel 2:38.] The dream was given the king to show him that earthly kingdoms were not enduring, but would pass away and be followed by the kingdom of the Prince of heaven, which should fill the whole earth. But Nebuchadnezzar determined to make an image like that which he had seen, only it was to be made all of gold. This idol of gold was to be a most imposing spectacle, and was to take the place of God, and be worshiped as God.
(12LtMs, Lt 90, 1897, 14)
The Sunday idol is set up as was this image. Human laws demand that it be worshiped as sacred and holy, thus putting it where God’s holy Sabbath should be. Men speak great swelling words, and exalt their power, placing themselves where God should be. Sitting in the temple of God, they strive to make themselves as God, showing themselves to be God. When Pilate said of Christ, “I find no fault in him,” the priests and elders declared, “We have a law, and by our law he ought to die.” [John 19:6, 7.] As the advisers of Nebuchadnezzar hit upon the scheme of ensnaring the Hebrew captives, and causing them to bow to the idol by leading the king to proclaim that every knee should bow to the image, so men will strive today to turn God’s people from their allegiance. But the men who sought to destroy Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, were themselves destroyed. Those who make cruel enactments, seeking to destroy, are destroyed by the recoil of their actions.
(12LtMs, Lt 90, 1897, 15)
When the power invested in kings is allied to goodness, it is because the one in responsibility is under the divine dictation. When power is allied with wickedness, it is allied to satanic agencies, and it will work to destroy those who are the Lord’s property. The Protestant world have set up an idol sabbath in the place where God’s Sabbath should be, and they are treading in the footsteps of the Papacy. For this reason, I see the necessity of the people of God moving out of the cities into retired country [places], where they may cultivate the land, and raise their own produce. Thus they may bring their children up with simple, healthful habits. I see the necessity of making haste to get all things ready for the crisis.
(12LtMs, Lt 90, 1897, 16)
Petitions signed by thousands have been sent in, asking that the civil and religious interest be not blended. Those present in some of the large assemblies state that they witnessed the most disgraceful uproar and disorder. Clergymen professing to be in the service of God, uttered blasphemies. They care no more for the Bible and its holy teachings than do infidels. When men will lay aside a plain “Thus saith the Lord,” and accept human enactments, you may be sure that they are revealing the attributes of the great apostate.
(12LtMs, Lt 90, 1897, 17)
All false religions run counter to the commandments of God. Those who accept these religions have no inward purity and beauty. They depend on their position of authority to compel those who acknowledge God as their Creator and their Sovereign to bow to human enactments without a question. They depend upon outward display, upon outward beauty, trusting to its subtle influence upon the senses. When a church depends on parade, ceremonies, and display, be sure that inward holiness is wanting. To make up for the absence of the Spirit of God, to conceal spiritual poverty and apostasy, the outside is made attractive. Thus the Protestant churches are following the footsteps of Rome, depending not on Christ, the divine Teacher, but upon their ornaments and shrines. Embroidered altars and magnificent architecture attract and hold the senses. Thus men become entrapped by the enemy. So the great golden image, impressive and attractive, with beautiful music to charm the senses, did honor to the prince of darkness.
(12LtMs, Lt 90, 1897, 18)
The great men of Babylon are filled with envy, jealousy, and hatred because the three Hebrew captives had been exalted above the heathen servants of the king. This led them to long for revenge. When these three Hebrews, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, refused to fall down and worship the golden image that had been set up, the report was brought to the king that the Hebrews had affronted him by their disregard for his command. The king sent for them, and with apparent surprise asked them if they had ventured to disregard his command by refusing to worship the image. He seemed to be ignorant of the fact that men could have a conscience stronger even than a king’s command. He did not think that they could refuse to obey when the alternative was so dreadful, and when to obey would bring them honor. But the Hebrew children calmly but decidedly refused to obey, declaring that they could not worship the image. They would not violate their conscience, even to obey the word of a great king.
(12LtMs, Lt 90, 1897, 19)
Conscience in regard to the things of God, is a sacred treasure, which no human beings, whatever be their position, have a right to meddle with. Nebuchadnezzar offered the Hebrews another chance, and when they refused it, he was exceedingly angry, and commanded the burning fiery furnace to be heated seven times hotter than it was wont to be heated. He told the captives that he would cast them into this furnace. Full of faith and trust the answer came, Our God whom we serve is able to deliver us; if he does not, well: we commit ourselves to a faithful God. [Daniel 3:15-18.]
(12LtMs, Lt 90, 1897, 20)
At this the king was exceedingly angry, and his actions were violent and furious. He ordered Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego to be cast bound into the burning fiery furnace. But thank the Lord, He forgets not His own. As the faithful men were cast into the furnace, the Lord revealed Himself in person. Christ stood by their side, and all four walked in the furnace. The flames recognized the presence of Him who is mighty in power and efficiency. The Lord of heat and cold required obedience from nature, and the flames lost their power to consume. In Hebrews we read of those who by their faith quenched the violence of fire. [Hebrews 11:34.]
(12LtMs, Lt 90, 1897, 21)
The fury of the king was changed as he saw that the men who had cast Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego into the furnace were themselves consumed, while the three Hebrew children were unhurt. The Hebrew youth had faith in God. The memory of the promises given by God through Isaiah about one hundred years before was revived in their minds: “When thou passest through the waters, I will be with thee, and through the rivers, they shall not overflow thee; when thou walkest through the fire, thou shalt not be burned, neither shall the flame kindle upon thee.” [Isaiah 43:2.]
(12LtMs, Lt 90, 1897, 22)
The nobles saw the king’s countenance grow pale as he looked toward the furnace with an intense gaze. He was astonished, “and rose up in haste, and spake, and said unto his counsellors, Did not we cast three men bound into the midst of the fire? They answered and said unto the king, True, O king. He answered and said, Lo, I see four men loose, walking in the midst of the fire, and they have no hurt, and the form of the fourth is like the Son of God. Then Nebuchadnezzar came near to the mouth of the burning fiery furnace, and spake and said, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, ye servants of the most high God, come forth and come hither.
(12LtMs, Lt 90, 1897, 23)
“Then Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego came forth out of the midst of the fire. And the princes, governors, and captains, and the king’s counsellors, being gathered together, saw these men, upon whose bodies the fire had no power, nor was an hair of their head singed, neither were their coats changed, nor the smell of fire had passed on them.
(12LtMs, Lt 90, 1897, 24)
“Then Nebuchadnezzar spake and said, Blessed be the God of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, who hath sent his angel, and delivered his servants that trusted in him, and have changed the king’s word, and yielded their bodies, that they might not serve nor worship any god, except their own.” [Daniel 3:24-28.]
(12LtMs, Lt 90, 1897, 25)
I have been interrupted in my writing. A young half-caste Maori sister, Miss Nicholas, who has embraced the truth, and a young man, the son of a Tahitian prince, who looks just like a Maori, have just come from Auckland on the boat that brought Brother Bond and his family, and Brother and Sister Brandstater, to Sydney. This Sister Nicholas has come to school to learn all she can. She wants to translate Steps to Christ and some of our works. We dare not for one moment turn her aside. They came only yesterday. We think that this son of a prince is thinking of remaining through the school term. He has been travelling all over the world. He has enough money to pay his own way. What will come of this remains to be seen.
(12LtMs, Lt 90, 1897, 26)
Sister Nicholas has embraced the truth. What we will do with her, we do not yet know. She dresses somewhat after the Maori fashion. She comes highly recommended by Brother Steed. She has no property, having given it all to her mother before she embraced the truth, and now her mother has disowned her, and will not let her have back a penny of the money she gave her. We must do everything free for her.
(12LtMs, Lt 90, 1897, 27)
Lt 91, 1897
Lindsay, Brother and Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia November 29, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother and Sister Lindsay:
Sara McEnterfer has just informed me that the African mail leaves tomorrow. It is now nearly five p.m. We are just having a very great interest in Stanmore, a suburb near Sydney. From the very first our camp meeting was excellent. Thursday, October 14, it commenced. The interest continued from the commencement to the close, and then the large tent had to leave for the Melbourne camp meeting. The forty foot tent was spliced in the center, and thus much enlarged, and, in this, meetings have continued Sabbaths and Sundays and each day in the week, with the exception of Monday evening. Brother and Sister Haskell stand as the head of the mission. Brother and Sister Starr unite with them as they are visiting, giving Bible lessons through the day, and have quite a number of workers in the mission. They have a hired house for this special purpose. Papers are being sold, and also tracts and pamphlets, to make the mission self-supporting.
(12LtMs, Lt 91, 1897, 1)
Word came by letter that Brother Baker should prepare the ground in Stanmore, and should have Brethren Michaels and Palmer, drilled canvassers, scatter publications and sell our papers and tracts, thus working the field preparatory to the tents going up. The notice of the meeting was to be widespread. Brother Baker came to Cooranbong to consult with the brethren here. The night he tarried at the school, I think it was, light came to me in the night season. I was shown that this was not the best method.
(12LtMs, Lt 91, 1897, 2)
When armies prepare for a battle, they are careful to conceal their plans from their enemies; and at this time it would be best to be reticent, to keep our plans for the meeting to ourselves, to work silently and rapidly when the tents were being put up, and let the city of tents surprise the people. Then they would not have time to transport ministers, and to begin their opposition inspired by satanic agencies. Then after the camp broke up, let the money and labor that would be required for the work they proposed, to be done before the camp meeting opened be all brought in after the camp meeting closed. Let the tent remain, and call the people to the tent. Let there be much visiting done from house to house, as the way would open, and let the workers then get in their papers and tracts, treating on the important subjects of present truth, in the same line of labor that had gone forward during the camp meeting.
(12LtMs, Lt 91, 1897, 3)
This plan was followed, and we feel deeply grateful to our heavenly Father for His counsel and direction. The interest is not abating. The tent is filled every night. One week ago last Sabbath I spoke to a good congregation. Next Sabbath and Sunday I speak again.
(12LtMs, Lt 91, 1897, 4)
Brother and Sister Haskell are in every way fitted for the place. Outside parties are held spellbound as they hear the Word of God presented in Christlike simplicity and with fervor and demonstration of the Spirit and power of God. There are now thirty-five new Sabbathkeepers, and there are many more who believe. The question comes before them, I shall lose my situation, and how shall I support my family. Several are in the Government’s employ, and they know not what they will meet as soon as their faith is made known in observing the Sabbath. O that the Lord may give them moral courage to walk in the light and obey the commandments of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 91, 1897, 5)
There is now necessity for a new meetinghouse. This has been the first question asked, Will you build a meetinghouse? We must do this. We see that all are poor, yet we must go forward by faith. I am believing that you will help us in this good work. The land will be the most expensive part, but those newly come to the faith will do all they can. They are full of zeal and love, and are delighted with the truth. We dare not hesitate, we dare not delay.
(12LtMs, Lt 91, 1897, 6)
Your timely donation and that of Sister Mother Wessels came in just at the right time. Sister Annie, what will you donate as a gift to our dear Saviour. I have something in gifts and offerings in every house of worship that has been built in Australia, except one very small building erected when I was in New Zealand. We are so grateful to our heavenly Father for your timely offering. We had our house of worship built just in time. I wish you could see it, neat, tasty, and yet without any extra adornments.
(12LtMs, Lt 91, 1897, 7)
If your brothers will receive an invitation from me just at this time, and help us just now, we will be grateful to the Lord, who makes your hearts willing in the day of His power, for it certainly is the day of His working by the Holy Spirit on the hearts of those who were in the darkness of error. Sister Annie, will you be my helper and the Lord’s helper in this good work? If we can begin the chapel at once, it will give assurance and confidence to the hesitating ones who have the cross to lift, accepting the truth, [and] walking by faith.
(12LtMs, Lt 91, 1897, 8)
This church will accommodate the church in Sydney, as well as the suburbs in and around Stanmore. Stanmore is a very nice suburb, and we want to place the standard of truth there. The Lord has wrought in our midst. He is working still. Brother and Sister Wilson have joined the working force, and all have to work constantly and actively to fill the calls that are made for Bible readings at their homes. One becomes interested, and then they hear things that are so wonderful to them, the new themes out of God’s word, that they desire to have their neighbors and special friends hear it. They collect a little group, and the people are becoming more and more deeply interested.
(12LtMs, Lt 91, 1897, 9)
Some way I feel impressed, Annie, to ask you to be my helper in this matter. Please invite others to donate something. The Lord will bless you and all who help us. I wish you could see our two nice school buildings. Another is going up for the next term of school. The meetinghouse, our little tabernacle is appreciated very highly. We know that the angels of God were with the workers. When anything came up that was perplexing to the workmen Elder Haskell was on hand to encourage them. We would say, Let us have a season of prayer; and the presence and blessing of God came upon them. Their hearts were subdued and softened with the dew of heaven’s grace. I never saw a building where we had greater evidence that the Lord managed the matter as in this.
(12LtMs, Lt 91, 1897, 10)
The weather is exceedingly hot this season, and what could we do without this tabernacle that has just been built? We see just as much necessity for erecting a building in Stanmore. I have something to invest, but not a large amount, for the school, the Health Home, the Australian Conference have tied up about all the money that I have. When The Life of Christ shall get into circulation, I hope to have more means than I have had for this destitute field. I will send you a copy of Elder Haskell’s letter, which I send him today. If we can only make a start, we will show what we mean to do. There will be a great interest if we can judge from the present appearance, and as was manifested by our brethren in Cooranbong in building the church in this place.
(12LtMs, Lt 91, 1897, 11)
You may say that Sister White is a great beggar. Yes, I am, in behalf of the cause and work of the Lord. I am a strong beggar, pleading with the Lord to open the way for His people who are now lifting the cross. They must leave the churches. They know this, and it is a trial to them. But if they see that we have a house of God, dedicated to Him, where Bible truth is being preached, it will be to them a help and blessing. The Lord will bless the donations and offerings given for His name’s sake. Every blessing thus bestowed will be laid up beside the throne of God, a treasure in the heavens that faileth not.
(12LtMs, Lt 91, 1897, 12)
I praise the Lord that He gives me strength to still labor in His cause. I am now seventy years old, and my mind is clear and my courage good. I have my heart filled with grateful thanksgiving to my heavenly Father. The Health Home is doing good work. We hope Brother John Wessels will be on hand as soon as possible. We have only one year more to hold the present place. We want Brother John to look around to find a suitable location. We are sure that the medical missionary work will be a wonderful success in reaching many souls. A sanitarium will bring many souls to the knowledge of the truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 91, 1897, 13)
May White and her family are quite well. The twins will be two years old the 6th of next April. They are full of life, and we think they are quite a treasure. W. C. White is in Melbourne attending the camp meeting. He writes that the camp meeting is extended another week because of the increasing interest. I must now say good bye. Give my love to dear Mother Wessels.
(12LtMs, Lt 91, 1897, 14)
Lt 92, 1897
Lindsay, Brother and Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia January 31, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 8MR 368-369; 4Bio 290. Dear Brother and Sister Lindsay:
I would be much pleased could you see the advancement that has been made in Cooranbong. One year ago last July we entered this place with our horses and platform wagon without road or path. About the last of that month we brought our tents, and cleared a spot for two of them. In September my family tent was pitched and also my dining tent, and the men were set to work clearing. First we had a space cleared for buildings, then for our orchard. We had bullock teams come in and break up the sod in furrows, leaving the unbroken for a more convenient opportunity when money should be more plentiful. This lasted until the last of September, and in October trees were set in the place that had been well prepared for them. But we had no rain from September until December. Everything depended for water upon the water hole which lies near the orchard, near where water could be obtained for the trees. And last February and March we had the bullock teams complete the work of ploughing.
(12LtMs, Lt 92, 1897, 1)
Contrary to anything that I had expected, most of our peach trees were full of blossoms. In September, when we came home from camp meeting, we learned that the trees had been full of peaches, but that it had been thought wisdom to pick nearly all, leaving a few for samples. On November 25 I came home very sick from the conference in Ashfield, Sydney. A few of these early peaches had been saved for me, and they were very gratefully received. We have been picking the later peaches in January. These are the most beautiful in appearance that I have ever seen, being delicately and highly colored. And they are just as choice in taste as they are in appearance. I think I have never seen larger. Two of them weighed one pound. These same peaches are selling in Sydney at threepence each. If the Lord favors us next year, we will have at this time, beginning with December and lasting until the last of January, all the early peaches, nectarines, and apricots that we can eat and can.
(12LtMs, Lt 92, 1897, 2)
Our apples will not bear for a year or two. The trees were very small when set out. We have been living off our vegetables this year. Last year we had but few tomatoes; but this year we have enough for ourselves and a good supply for our neighbors also. So we testify that the school land will yield abundantly this coming year if the Lord’s blessing shall attend our labors. We are now eating sweet corn that this land has produced, and we enjoy it much. I wish I could pass around to Mother Wessels and your family the products of our experiments in farming this first year in the bush. The Lord has prospered us indeed.
(12LtMs, Lt 92, 1897, 3)
I take the twins these large peaches, and when the skin is taken off they enjoy them very much. They will be ten months old on the sixth of February.
(12LtMs, Lt 92, 1897, 4)
I thought I ought to write of these things, because I am sure that impressions have gone to South Africa that are not correct. This seems too bad when we are struggling so hard to make a beginning. We are seeing the exact fulfillment of the light the Lord has given me, that if the land is worked thoroughly it will yield its treasures. I was never in a more healthful place than this. There seems to be health in the very air we breathe. I do not think I should have had that severe sickness had I remained here. I had my greatest suffering between twelve and four o’clock. It was agony; but thank the Lord it is now past.
(12LtMs, Lt 92, 1897, 5)
I would be so much pleased to have you make us a visit now. I am sure if we were near, or you near us, you would do so, and I would visit you also.
(12LtMs, Lt 92, 1897, 6)
Much has been said in regard to expending money in order to clear land and cut ditches to drain the swamp; but this is the very thing that must be done for the healthfulness of the location. Of course it cost money to clear land and cut ditches; but it is much better that this should be done before several lose their lives from the damp arising from the swamp. And although it will take time for the swamp land to produce, yet, if worked, it will make the most profitable land of all.
(12LtMs, Lt 92, 1897, 7)
The orchard and vegetable garden are doing splendidly. They had some fruit and a large yield of vegetables from the orchard and garden both last year and this. At first everything had to be transported from Sydney or Newcastle, and thus our fruit would spoil before it could reach us, and vegetables also would wilt and spoil. This will not occur again, but at that time we had no money to work the school grounds and raise crops, so we took up only a portion of the land. We felt bad to have to let it lie, but it will be worked this year.
(12LtMs, Lt 92, 1897, 8)
We have studied hard in regard to our buildings that all the work should be done as cheaply as possible. A few things have been put in my building, such as transoms and fixings over the doors, but this is all I can see that we might have done without. We have not one room that we could have dropped out, not one, and everything is as plain as it can be. And yet the expense of the building is much larger than we supposed it would be. And as we are not in Battle Creek, where we can call upon the churches to help the treasury of means, we have to bind about in every possible way, so that the means we have may extend as far as possible.
(12LtMs, Lt 92, 1897, 9)
There were brethren [who were] offered four and five shillings per day, but refused to accept it. Unless they could have six shillings they would not work. Brother Shannon is a very capable man as a carpenter, and in the past has received high wages for his work. But we could not pay him that which he could get in other places; the treasury would not allow of this. When the building was put out to tender, he became almost frenzied because the responsible men on the school ground could not give as high wages as he thought he should have. I wondered how long it would take for the little fund in the treasury to become exhausted if the demands of such were supplied. Those who cannot come to this place and show unselfish interest when we are struggling so hard to make things move are not the men who are wanted on this ground.
(12LtMs, Lt 92, 1897, 10)
It was thought by some that we could find a location that would be more favorable than this land for raising oranges, lemons, peaches and all kinds of fruit. So we visited Fairmount and other places where it was thought a nice location might be found.
(12LtMs, Lt 92, 1897, 11)
In one instance we travelled with our horse and wagons for about eight miles after we left the station, up hill and down. There was no road by which to get to the farm. For two or three miles we were obliged to go through private property in order to get to the place. There we found orchards of oranges and lemons and a few fruit trees. But the cottage that was set low in the ground did not at all meet our ideas in its construction. For the buildings we would need for different purposes and the two thousand acres of land we would have to pay out the sum of thirty thousand dollars, and this money we could not raise. Then everything would have to be transported over a hilly road by private conveyance a distance of about eight miles; and for water privilege we would have to go to the river the same distance away.
(12LtMs, Lt 92, 1897, 12)
At another place we visited [there] was an immense house, richly adorned with mirrors made into the walls. But the window frames were honey-combed with white ants, and the building was altogether in a terrible state of decay. This place, consisting of twelve hundred acres, was valued at twenty-five thousand dollars. It had no water supply, and there was nothing but broken tanks to depend on, and the distance five miles from the station. Our party, Brethren Rousseau, McKenzie, and W. C. White, returned home, and this was the last search they undertook. For after these places had been examined and tested, they were not found to be any better than the land in Cooranbong. After all this examination, the decision was made to locate here on this ground.
(12LtMs, Lt 92, 1897, 13)
Now, as we have followed what we know to be the counsel of God, and are striving to do everything in every way possible to save means to make a beginning, we feel deeply over the men who, instead of standing bravely beside us, have turned around to discourage the people in regard to matters here. All that we regret is that, because so great stress has been felt that we must save and economize, some losses have been incurred that might have been avoided had we had the money to expend in the first place. Every lawyer will grasp all he can obtain. We were expecting aid from businessmen to take the entire charge of the business; but these men from America, after being promised, never came, for the men refused to come. Thus holding back for them complicated matters, and thus losses have been incurred, which might have been avoided if everything had been carried out after the plans devised.
(12LtMs, Lt 92, 1897, 14)
There are those who take advantage of this matter, which their aftersight has revealed might have been done in such a way as to save the paying out of means if we had only known the outcome. Any one who has seen the outcome of things can readily explain how certain mistakes might have been avoided. But the foresight of these persons was not so keen as their aftersight, and when things did not go to suit their own ideas, they represented matters just as they pleased. They were told that every dollar of the money in the treasury was Sister White’s, hired from Sister Wessels to carry on the work. The only thing, they were told, that could be done was to limit expenses wherever it was possible.
(12LtMs, Lt 92, 1897, 15)
I have been studying how we could get two rooms finished off for May White and the four children before Willie returns from America. We propose to add two rooms with a piazza to a building we had erected for a woodshed and washhouse. We had to convert this into a house for our workmen to sleep in, and after that to seal up one room to make it comfortable for May White to sleep in. It was here that her twin boys were born, now beautiful almost ten month old babies. But we must arrange something for them for winter. And as it has to be done, we have been figuring how we could put up two rooms close by the building where they now live. We were arranging that it should be detached, so that it could be moved when they wanted to build.
(12LtMs, Lt 92, 1897, 16)
We found that these two rooms would cost four hundred and fifty dollars. We could have done this, but Brother Semmens has just secured a building to carry on his treatment of the sick, and he had nothing with which to furnish the house, and as I had promised him thirty-five pounds, this, and other demands for means, made me give that plan up. When I can feel clear to commence to build, I will commence a four-roomed cottage and lean-to kitchen, and put two rooms in comfortable condition for the mother and children. There is no safety in their remaining where they are any longer than is necessary.
(12LtMs, Lt 92, 1897, 17)
Now you can see our situation. I have used up my surplus means, and have now but very little to use for outgoing expenses. When these brethren, who had every chance to know (I had told them), tried to hurt the reputation of the brethren here and disparage Cooranbong, it hurt my soul. Could they not possibly take in the situation?
(12LtMs, Lt 92, 1897, 18)
We must have a meetinghouse; we must have school buildings; and it is not here as in Battle Creek, the place where facilities are abundant, where we can rally our brethren who have means to come to our help and sustain us. One brother in Hastings, New Zealand writes me: “Sister White, you have helped in building the church in Ormondville; you have donated pounds to the Napier church; you have helped to pay the debt on the Gisborne church; and will you not now donate something to the church in Hastings, New Zealand?” I want to do this; for there is not a building they can obtain in Hastings where they can be accommodated in any proper way. We must help the poor, or they will suffer. But I cannot help them in New Zealand. I must now put in every dollar here in Cooranbong. I hate to let the money go to establish a Health Home in Sydney. But we need this, for it will give character to the work.
(12LtMs, Lt 92, 1897, 19)
In all New South Wales we have but one minister. We have no money to pay for ministers. What does this mean? Fields are opening all around us, but there is no one to fill the places. For miles around they are sending for ministers to come to baptisms. People are accepting the truth through reading Great Controversy. One, writing, says, “I wish to be baptized. My father, two daughters, one son, and my neighbors are interested. Will you send a minister? Some of my neighbors have received the truth, and wish to be baptized.” Here about one hundred and fifty miles from Sydney we hear the Macedonian cry, “Come over and help us.” [Acts 16:9.] But what can we do?
(12LtMs, Lt 92, 1897, 20)
May the Lord teach us His will and open the way by sending means that we can pay a minister to go into the highways and byways. Things are often perplexing to the mind, and many times we cannot discern the why and wherefore of them. All we can do is to trust and wait for the Lord to take hold and straighten out the problems that appear dark and unexplainable.
(12LtMs, Lt 92, 1897, 21)
Lt 92a, 1897
Loughborough, J. N. Stanmore, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia December 19, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother Loughborough:
We see the work here progressing. Not less than forty souls have taken their position to obey the truth—some of the most intelligent and worthy people. A great effort has been made, and the work is going forward intelligently. Elder Haskell is a reservoir of treasures from the Word of God. All the young men, whatever their capabilities, cannot supply his place. His testimony is of the greatest value. Those not of our faith who come out to hear sit and listen, and are fed and blessed in hearing.
(12LtMs, Lt 92a, 1897, 1)
We must have a meetinghouse here in Stanmore, but the lots are high, from four to five hundred pounds each. We hope to get a lot at some reduction but cannot yet tell. I was troubled as to how I would help as I wished to, and it came to me as a flash of lightning, there is the one thousand dollars you invested in the Bible Mission in Chicago, walk by faith, invest that money and call for the amount. I carried that one thousand dollar debt all of six years at seven per cent interest. I hired the money from Brother Smouse.
(12LtMs, Lt 92a, 1897, 2)
The Bible Mission in Chicago had the use of that money (one thousand dollars) and the interest I paid on the money to help in an emergency. Now I feel at liberty, in this missionary field, to call for that money to invest here, and I have learned that you are the man whom I must address. I suppose that when that mission ceased to be a Bible Mission someone would see by the book the gift I had made, and ask me what I would have done with that one thousand dollars. As no one has consulted me in reference to this investment, I will now put the matter before you, and on the strength of the fact that you will understand that that money was for a special work, I feel at liberty to ask you what was done with it. When I donated the money, the very fact [is] that my donating it brought into the Bible Mission several thousand dollars.
(12LtMs, Lt 92a, 1897, 3)
We are now in great need of a meetinghouse in this place, and I shall pledge one thousand dollars on the strength of receiving the one thousand dollars I put in to the Bible Mission in Chicago from whatever source that one thousand dollars was appropriated to. All I can say is “The Lord has need of it here.” [See Matthew 21:3.] Two hundred pounds I wish to invest in the meeting[house] here. I have already pledged twenty-five pounds here for the meetinghouse, but the Lord will help us. Will you, Elder Loughborough, look into the matter for me? We need money so much as the work opens in every new field. A church is raised up, and we must have means to build a humble house of worship.
(12LtMs, Lt 92a, 1897, 4)
In Newcastle, about twenty miles, from Cooranbong, much canvassing has been done, but no one has opened the gospel to the people there. They have never heard the living preacher. There are but few Sabbathkeepers there. One of our sisters is canvassing there. Then about the same distance from us in another direction is Maitland; as yet no effort has been made there to get the truth before the people. These places must be opened up and we need workers; we need men. May the Lord help us is my prayer.
(12LtMs, Lt 92a, 1897, 5)
I must now prepare to go to the meeting, but I will write more when I return in relation to the work.
(12LtMs, Lt 92a, 1897, 6)
I have just returned from speaking to the people. We had a very interested congregation out to hear us, and they listened attentively. The Lord gave me strength to speak to the people. Oh, that all may see the necessity of obeying the truth, men, women and children.
(12LtMs, Lt 92a, 1897, 7)
This forenoon Brother and Sister Haskell visited a family that have been very much interested. They are an intelligent family [and] are now prepared to take their position for the truth. They will keep next Sabbath. This man occupies a position as solicitor for a wholesale grocery. He receives two pounds per week and has two children. They have a home of their own, and still another home partly paid for. On the Sabbath he has only about three hours work to do, and they have no special need of him even for that time, but if his employer wants to be mean he can be, and discharge him, but he thinks that he will excuse him from labor for those few hours.
(12LtMs, Lt 92a, 1897, 8)
This man is very much interested in the building of the meetinghouse. He asked them the other day how they were coming on and when they told him he put his hand in his pocket and took out four pounds, and gave it to them. He also told them that his children had agreed to save all their money and put it into the meetinghouse instead of spending it for dolls and sweetmeats for Christmas. They already have nearly a pound. His wife was going to have a new dress for Christmas, but she decided that she would not purchase the dress but add that amount to the collection. This family uses neither tea, coffee, meat or tobacco. They are health reformers. He is a Latin scholar. They are a nice family.
(12LtMs, Lt 92a, 1897, 9)
Last night another man decided to keep the Sabbath. They are taking sides now, and almost every day there are some who are deciding to obey the commandments of God. If we can only get a house of worship free from debt, what a victory it would be here, so near to Sydney.
(12LtMs, Lt 92a, 1897, 10)
On account of the wind at times it is rather trying in the tent, as it comes in between the top and sides, and makes it quite disagreeable. When it rains, as it did a week ago, and still is, the ground is wet and many take cold. Courage will be put into many souls when they see the meetinghouse going up. We have been working here ever since the camp meeting closed. I think it has been six weeks. They have meetings every evening except Monday. At one time they gave up their Saturday night meetings to have opportunity to visit interested families, but by request they have continued them again. Brother and Sister Haskell, Brother and Sister Starr, and Brother and Sister Wilson are doing all they can, and if they had ten or fifteen more workers, they would have all they could do. They are teaching a class of Bible Workers every day, and have seasons of prayer and lessons of instruction, that occupies their time so that they hardly get time to rest. The visiting is constantly using up their vitality, and it needs the constant grace and love of God in the soul to revive and refresh.
(12LtMs, Lt 92a, 1897, 11)
We must have a meetinghouse here. We have only three meetinghouses built with the exception of two small, cheap buildings. This is great work, and it must be carried forward to completion.
(12LtMs, Lt 92a, 1897, 12)
I have now set the matter before you as it is. The interest here in Stanmore is the greatest interest we have witnessed since 1842, 1843 and 1844, and we must have a house for worship. The weather is so changeable that tent labor is very disagreeable, and when the church is built, it will give character to the work.
(12LtMs, Lt 92a, 1897, 13)
I wish I could see you, and have a long visit with you and Sister Loughborough. I must now say goodnight. The Lord bless you and keep you spotless till His appearing, is my prayer.
(12LtMs, Lt 92a, 1897, 14)
Lt 93, 1897
Miller, Walter “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia September 1, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother in Christ Jesus:
I am very much grieved because of your present affliction. If I were not so far away, I would come to you. But as this cannot be, I will bear this trial with you as far as possible. Do not, I beg of you, lose your faith. Come to the Lord with your wife. Now that the cloud has gathered about her, you must believe for her. Let her mind be as free as possible; but you must draw nigh to God. Your faith must take hold of a “Thus saith the Lord.” You must “look and live.” [Numbers 21:8.] The Lord will hear your petitions. Pray to Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 93, 1897, 1)
This is a trial of your faith, but if you learn the lesson that God designs you to learn from this distressing development, your experience will be of great value to you. Closely examine your own heart, and cut away everything that would interpose between your soul and God. Have faith that will pierce through the hellish shadow of Satan. Let nothing be retained that will hinder your prayers.
(12LtMs, Lt 93, 1897, 2)
You are to feel that this affliction is for the glory of God, to test you, to prove you. Cherish the idea that you are in the presence of God. Constantly bear this in mind. Charge your mind with this: Soul, thou art in the presence of God, thy King and thy Redeemer.
(12LtMs, Lt 93, 1897, 3)
One thing that we all need much is seasons for private prayer, that the mind may be enabled to remember the mercy and goodness of God, and to thank Him with heart and soul and voice for every favor.
(12LtMs, Lt 93, 1897, 4)
All our blessings come from Him who is too wise to err, and too good to do us harm. Harm comes to us because our moral power is too weak to perceive and repel the suggestions of the enemy. If, by recounting God’s goodness and lovingkindness, His mercy and love, we trained our minds to realize our duty and our obligations to Him, we should daily have a fresh, bright experience that would show no dryness or withering blight and decay.
(12LtMs, Lt 93, 1897, 5)
Shall we not cherish the habit of thinking often of the Word of the Lord to us, so full of rich promises and assurances? We have business to attend to in this life. But in our necessary business we need the help of the Lord as much as in our religious service, that we may perform it in accordance with His will. If you will seek to keep the Lord ever before you, allowing your heart to go out in praise and thanksgiving to Him, you will have a continual freshness in your religious life. Your prayers will take the form of a conversation with God, as a person would talk to a friend. Often there will come to you a sweet, joyful sense of the presence of Jesus. You will feel as if you were telling Him your wants face to face. Thus it was that Enoch walked with God. Will you not try to obtain this experience? Then your highest joy will be to feel yourself in the presence of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 93, 1897, 6)
This experience we all may have. We shall then be insensible to the rebuffs and trials that come to every human being. O, if we could only realize the privilege that is ours, the privilege of resting in Jesus as a child rests in its mother’s arms. We can drink in the spirit and freshness of the life of God. “Taste and see that the Lord is good.” [Psalm 34:8.] We have yet to learn always to consult the will of God, and put His will before our own. When we keep Christ ever before us, when we set our hearts on being like our friend Jesus Christ, who has chosen us, and called us friends, His friends, when we contemplate His character, we shall so love Him that we shall place ourselves where we can be ruled and taught by Him who is wisdom Himself. He is our sanctification and our righteousness. But O, so many put our Christ so far away from their thoughts. He does not appear to them as their best friend.
(12LtMs, Lt 93, 1897, 7)
The more we contemplate Christ, the more we realize what He is to us by what He has done for us, the more we shall love Him. We will give up everything to Him who has given Himself to us without reservation. He gave us all He could give—His own life. What have we given Him? “Ye are not your own; for ye are bought with a price; therefore glorify God in your body and in your spirit, which are God’s.” [1 Corinthians 6:19, 20.] This will not be an easy matter at first, but pray, and believe that the Lord hears your prayer. Then practice your prayers, giving to Him, who has bought you with such a price, your undivided affections. Thus all the difficulties may be overcome.
(12LtMs, Lt 93, 1897, 8)
The trouble with many is that they do not know the true and living God and Jesus Christ whom He has sent. When we know God as it is our privilege to know Him, we will keep nothing back from Him. Our life will be a life of continual obedience, in things small as well as great. The language of the men and women who give themselves to God without reserve is, “Thy will, not mine be done.” [See Luke 22:42.]
(12LtMs, Lt 93, 1897, 9)
It is profitable to cherish the thought that Jesus gave His life to redeem us from sin, to save us fully and entirely to Himself as beings that belong to God, soul, body, and spirit. Thus we carry with us a sense that we are not our own, but God’s. We say, I will think no thoughts, I will speak no words, I will perform no actions that I would not do in the conscious presence of God. My ear shall be opened to listen to a “Thus saith the Lord.” He has shown me how I may evidence my love for Him. “If ye love me, keep my commandments. And whatsoever ye shall ask in my name, that will I do, that the Father may be glorified in the Son.” [John 14:15, 13.]
(12LtMs, Lt 93, 1897, 10)
For our own good, and for the good of those connected with us, let us make diligent work for time. Then we shall be making the best work for eternity. In your affliction, search your heart carefully, and see if anything is retained that should be cut away. My brother, call for your brethren, and present your case before them. Ask their prayers, and unite with them. The Lord has pledged His Word that He will hear and answer.
(12LtMs, Lt 93, 1897, 11)
In love.
(12LtMs, Lt 93, 1897, 12)
Lt 94, 1897
Miller, Sister Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia September 1, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Sister Miller:
I cannot sleep. I am awakened at half past twelve o’clock. I arise and dress, and after a season of prayer on your behalf I commence this letter to you, my sister in the Lord. Do not be anxious or troubled in regard to your spiritual state. You and I should be thankful every moment because we have a living Saviour, an Advocate in the courts of heaven. He liveth to make intercession for His needy, dependent creatures. You are His child. Even though you have erred, yet Christ is your Saviour, willing to pardon and restore you. You are His workmanship.
(12LtMs, Lt 94, 1897, 1)
My sister, the Lord would have you realize that He loves you. He would have you take your eyes off your imperfections and mistakes. His voice is heard, “Look and live.” [Numbers 21:8.] “Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you,and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart; and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.” [Matthew 11:28-30.] Rely upon Christ by faith. Take hold of His Word, and apply it to your own case. Come to Him in confidence; come to Him in faith. He is your friend and helper. He says, “Whosoever cometh to me, I will in no wise cast out.” [John 6:37.] “For God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.” [John 3:16.]
(12LtMs, Lt 94, 1897, 2)
It is your privilege at this very moment to believe in Jesus Christ as your personal Saviour. “He that believeth on him is not condemned, but he that believeth not is condemned already, because he hath not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God.” [Verse 18.] You see, my sister, the Lord wants you to look to Him, that you may be helped and blessed and saved.
(12LtMs, Lt 94, 1897, 3)
We cannot bless ourselves. We cannot restore ourselves. But Jesus lives and reigns. He loves His children. He is your Redeemer. You are a daughter of God, and Christ is your Saviour. He is your Sin-bearer. If you have committed sin in any way, you may go to Him asking forgiveness, and He will pardon you. He will bless you. The love of Christ is a golden chain that binds the finite human beings who believe in Him to the infinite God. The love that God has for the creatures He has made passes knowledge. He wills not that they shall be desponding and gloomy. He wants them to be cheerful in the assurance that He loves them more than it is possible for an earthly father to love his children. His love is greater than that of a mother for her dependent, suffering child. This love He has expressed by giving us Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 94, 1897, 4)
God wants you to be saved. He loves you. His love is toward you. No science can explain or define this love. Human wisdom cannot fathom it. Those who have a sense of this love will be meek and lowly in heart. They will be trustful and believing, holding fast to the hand that is strong to save.
(12LtMs, Lt 94, 1897, 5)
Lt 95, 1897
Miller, Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia August 31, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Sister Miller:
I write to you, my sister, as one of the Lord’s children. If you have spoken any words unfavorable to me, or even against me, it is not the unpardonable sin. The Lord is merciful and just. He will pardon all our transgressions and sins. He says, “I came not to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance.” [Mark 2:17.] I freely forgive any words you have spoken against me, and I know the Lord is more tender and compassionate toward you than it is possible for me to be. My heart is drawn up in pitying love for you, and my prayers shall ascend to God in your behalf. Your Redeemer has given His life upon the cross of shame, in order to save all who will receive Him. Come to Jesus just as you are, and believe that He does love you. You must feast in the love of Jesus.
(12LtMs, Lt 95, 1897, 1)
Our Saviour sought to educate and complete our love for God by teaching the members of His family to address Him by a new name—a name which, spoken to Him and of Him, would be a sign of our affection and love and entire trust in Him, and a pledge to us of His tender regard and His relationship to us. The name entwined with the dearest associations of the human heart, spoken when asking His favor and blessing, is as music to His ears. The Lord has given to all the privilege of calling Him by the endearing name of Father. And, that we might not feel it presumption in us, He has continued to repeat it again and again. He would have us become familiar with the appellation.
(12LtMs, Lt 95, 1897, 2)
This is how He regards you, as His child. He has redeemed you out of the careless world, and has chosen you to become a member of the royal family, a child of the heavenly king. He invites you to have confidence in Him, as a child has confidence in its earthly father.
(12LtMs, Lt 95, 1897, 3)
Our Saviour addresses the parents, and says, “Ask, and ye shall receive.” [John 16:24.] “If ye being evil, know how to give good gifts unto your children, how much more shall your heavenly Father give his Holy Spirit to them that ask him.” [Luke 11:13.] O what love, what matchless love, has God our Father shown to us His children! In full assurance of faith we may call Him Father. He would have us believe that He has a special care for us, for has not the rich fountain been flowing down to us in richest currents of love and pity and tenderest compassion? His love is immeasurable. Parents may love their children, but the love of God is larger, broader, deeper than human love possibly can be. The Father hath an inexhaustible fountain of love. He loves you, dear sister. He loves your husband. He loves your children. He loves your parents. The Lord Jesus is your Redeemer, your Restorer. Only have faith. Trust Him just now.
(12LtMs, Lt 95, 1897, 4)
Dear sister, I write to you as a child of God. If you have spoken any word against me, I freely forgive you. Jesus has given His life for you, and He will not give you up because of a word spoken unadvisedly. God has not forsaken nor forgotten you. He says to you, “Be still, and know that I am God.” [Psalm 46:10.] Place yourself as a little child before your heavenly Father. The Lord loves you. If you have spoken any words against me, it was not wilful sin. You must look upon your heavenly Father as one who will give peace.
(12LtMs, Lt 95, 1897, 5)
“For we have not an high priest which cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities; but was in all points tempted like as we are, yet without sin. Let us therefore come boldly to the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy, and find grace to help in every time of need.” [Hebrews 4:15, 16.]
(12LtMs, Lt 95, 1897, 6)
I am sure that the Lord loves you, and my heart goes out after you. I am praying for you. You think your husband loves you; your mother, your brothers and sisters love you; but you are much more beloved by God, whose you are by creation and by redemption.
(12LtMs, Lt 95, 1897, 7)
Lt 96, 1897
Miller, Walter “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia August 1897 Previously unpublished. Walter Miller
88 Gipps Street
East Melbourne A Telegram
You are dear to the heart of God. He loves you and will not leave you to perish. I know His everlasting arms are beneath thee. Am writing letter for you. John 14:1, 27, 18; Hebrews 2:17, 18; Ephesians 2:4-6; 1 John 1:9.
(12LtMs, Lt 96, 1897, 1)
Lt 97, 1897
Martin, Mr. and Mrs. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia January 16, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Mr. and Mrs. Martin:
We have learned through Mrs. Taylor that you were both sick, and needed Chrissie. We would not keep her away from you. I asked Mr. Martin if she could remain with us for a few weeks, and told him that we would be pleased to have her remain while we were in the busy season of fruit-canning. He said he thought she could. She has been very much appreciated by us. If at any time you should conclude to spare her, we would be pleased to have her with us again, and would pay her what you might think proper for her wages. We see that she understands what to do without being told. She has eyes to see what needs to be done. She was intending to go home in about two weeks from now. Our housekeeper, Miss Lucas, has been with us over a year, and she wanted to visit her mother, and spend two weeks, and Chrissie thought she must return to help her mother, but said she would stay till Miss Lucas came back. I would not keep her from her mother, and yet would be so pleased if she could remain with me until Miss Lucas returns.
(12LtMs, Lt 97, 1897, 1)
In April we think our school will open, and I wish Chrissie could attend. I will board her for helping me nights and mornings.
(12LtMs, Lt 97, 1897, 2)
Brother Semmens was anxious that Chrissie should work in the Health Home at Summer Hill, could she be spared from home. I could not answer his question; I think if she could attend the school, it would be the best thing for her. Would you consent to let her come to me, I would try to act a mother’s part in caring for her.
(12LtMs, Lt 97, 1897, 3)
I make these statements to you that you may understand my wishes in regard to her. I would like to have her learn typewriting, and I think she would be one who, if she had the advantages of school, could learn typewriting. Sara McEnterfer would teach her. I lay all these things before you, and ask you to act as you think best. If she works for me, I will pay her 10/-a week, or if she wishes to attend school, I will board her, for her labor nights and mornings, and have a watchcare over her as I would over my own daughter. I leave this question for you to settle.
(12LtMs, Lt 97, 1897, 4)
I am much interested in Chrissie, and would be very much pleased to have her as a member of my family, and either attend school, and board, as previously stated, or work for wages. I want above everything else that she should form a character after the divine similitude, following in the footsteps of Jesus, and become a member of the family in heaven and possess eternal riches. Chrissie is now of that age that she needs wise counsel, that she may aim high and endeavor to reach the highest standard. This we should all endeavor to do, that we may be complete in Jesus Christ. Temptations will come, and this child needs to hold fast to the hand of Jesus, and He will lead her in safe paths. If she makes the most of the talents God has given her, she will grow in capability, and will receive the grace of Christ to walk humbly before Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 97, 1897, 5)
May the Lord help you both. What will we amount to if we lose heaven at last, that precious heaven of rest? I am very desirous that Mrs. Martin shall have the sweet peace of Christ day by day. I love her soul, but Jesus loves her better than it is possible for me to do. Heaven, eternal life in the kingdom of God, is worth a lifelong, persevering, untiring effort. To hear from the lips of Jesus, “Well done, thou good and faithful servant, enter thou into the joy of thy Lord,” will be the sweetest music that ever fell on mortal ears. [Matthew 25:21.]
(12LtMs, Lt 97, 1897, 6)
With love.
(12LtMs, Lt 97, 1897, 7)
Lt 98, 1897
Martin, Mr. and Mrs. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia March 31, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Friends:
We are now coming close to the school opening, and we wish to enquire, will Chrissie be able to attend the school? We will do all we can to help her in this. We will see that she has employment so that she can partly pay for her tuition. We ask you to consider this question. We will do all in our power to help Chrissie to advance in her studies; but we cannot tell definitely at this point where she can be of the greatest service. She can board with me, if you choose, and by helping in her spare time, her board will cost nothing. If she prefers otherwise, to take a part in the school work, she can do this, and thus partly pay her expenses for tuition.
(12LtMs, Lt 98, 1897, 1)
Please let us know in reference to this matter. If you could spare her to come now and help Sister Haskell to arrange and fit up the school rooms for the opening of he school, I will pay her ten shillings per week until the school opens. We do not know how you are situated, but I promised to write again and speak of the matters I have already placed before you. Please respond.
(12LtMs, Lt 98, 1897, 2)
Lt 98a, 1897
McCullagh, S. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia April 8, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 3SM 348-349; 7MR 174; 10MR 166-172. +
Brother McCullagh:
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 1)
What can I do for you? Can I do anything to relieve your mind? Can I make any explanation of the matters that trouble you? A man that throws away his religious experience without obtaining a reality must indeed be under a deception, and this I know you to be under. Esau sold his birthright for a mess of pottage. He was foolish; for he could not buy it back again, though he sought it carefully and with tears. I do hope that this is not your case. It is a serious matter to sell the soul for any price.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 2)
I have not slept since twelve o’clock this night. It is now two o’clock a.m. I am praying for you, and I believe that God will hear prayer. Jesus our Redeemer prayed for Peter that his faith fail not. Peter denied his Lord thrice. He declared, “I know not the man,” and tried to emphasize his denial by cursing and swearing. [Matthew 26:74.] What have you been done to the Lord’s delegated messenger? Think it all over and consider. What reason have you had for taking the position you have against me? What I have said or done in thought, word, or deed lies open before God, and I am not ashamed to meet it in the judgment.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 3)
You have no reason now, any more than you had years ago, to turn away from the Christian unity which should exist between those who know the truth. Do you not know that you are fighting against the pricks? I have given you no occasion in my words, my deportment, or in anything whatever, to act as you have done. Who then has turned you from the faith once delivered to the saints? If you thought me in error, did you at the same time conclude me to be a hypocrite? Is this why you made no effort to sit down by my side, and for my soul’s sake show me my dangerous error? I do not speak now in reference to myself personally, but in reference to the mission, the work God has given me to do in His name. And I pray for the grace of Christ that I may be a faithful steward of His grace.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 4)
Will you, my dear brother, write out every point in my case that troubles you. I will try to answer you candidly, and if it is possible, relieve your mind. But have you not spoken words of me that you know are not just and true? You do not, you cannot, believe the statements you have made against me, when you stop to consider them. They are not true. I have laid the truth plainly before you, as the Lord has presented it to me. Am I therefore become your enemy because I tell you the truth?
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 5)
I plead before God most earnestly, “Save him, for thy mercy’s sake, save him. Let him not become an apostate from the faith. Restore him, and pardon his transgression.” I cannot let you go. I remember Peter, and I do not consider your case hopeless.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 6)
I enquire, Who hath bewitched you, that you should not believe the truth? You have made reports in reference to me being rich. How did you know I was? For about ten years I have been working on borrowed property. Should I sell all that I have in my possession, I would not have sufficient to pay my outstanding debts.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 7)
Where have I invested this money? You well know where. I have been the bank from which to draw to carry forward the work in this country. Coming to this country has put me to a loss of five thousand dollars worth of property. But this does not worry me, because I put my trust in the Lord. The Lord knows all about this loan. It came through no mismanagement of mine; it was the result of living in this country. My business in America has to be carried on without me being there to see to it.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 8)
I have borrowed money to do the work which must be done. Not one shilling of the donations sent me, from the least sum to larger amounts, has been used for myself. Our good Sister Wessels made me a present of a silk dress, and made me promise I would not sell it. But I thought that had she placed in my hands the amount the dress was worth, it would have been used in the cause of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 9)
I see debts on our meetinghouses and it hurts my soul. I cannot but feel distress over the matter. I have invested money in the Parramatta church, in the Prospect church, in the Napier church, in the Ormondville church, in the Gisborne church, and in the education of students. I have sent persons to America that they might be fitted to return and do work in this country. If this is the way to become rich, I think it would be well for others to try it.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 10)
All the royalty on my foreign books sold in America is sacredly dedicated to God for the education of students, that they may be fitted for the ministry. Thousands of dollars have been thus expended. Is this the way to accumulate money? The old story that Canright and others have circulated, that I was worth thirty thousand dollars, is all fiction. It has increased to thirty thousand pounds, by report, since I came to Australia.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 11)
I do not know where it is. I am using up my means, just as fast as it comes in, to carry forward the work in this country. If I had thirty thousand pounds, I would not have sent to Africa for the loan of one thousand pounds on which I am paying interest. If I could, I would get a loan of another thousand pounds, so that we might be able to put up the main school building.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 12)
I have not thirty thousand pounds. I only wish I had a million dollars. I would do as I did in Sydney. I would put men in the field to labor, defraying their expenses from my own funds. We need one hundred men where we now have one in the field. But the treasury is nearly empty, and I have not money to spare for the publication of books and for the many calls that demand means.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 13)
I am making a true statement to you. Why did you venture to make statements concerning this matter when you did not know the facts in the case? I have not a surplus of means. I wish I had. I am praying for it to my heavenly Father. I believe that His stewards have means, if they would invest them in His work. When Elder Haskell came from Africa, Brother Wessels sent me fifty pounds. Other friends sent donations. This I have invested in different lines of the cause.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 14)
I believe the truth with all my heart. I have not a shadow of doubt. I know what I have seen and what is being fulfilled. I have not only seen, but read the Scriptures, and I have read them with a glad, prayerful heart, for they have explained many things which the Lord has been pleased to reveal to me. I can never express my gratitude for the treasures found in the Word of God, which have enabled me to understand that which I have been shown by God. I know by experience that the entrance of God’s Word giveth light; it giveth understanding unto the simple. I see marvelous light in the Word of God. It shines into my mind, and my soul temple kindles with its beams, which I try to flash in their radiant spiritual beauty upon the path way of others.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 15)
In regard to the building of my cottage, I had not the slightest idea that it would cost so much to build a plain, unadorned building. I could not be here. I left the work in the hands of Brother Shannon when I went to the camp meetings in Armadale and Hobart. Had we been on the ground, we might have lessened the expense considerably. But it costs twice as much to build a house here as it does in America.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 16)
I now ask you again, What have I done that has changed your attitude toward me? I have always spoken freely to you of my financial situation. I keep nothing secret. That you should feel it your privilege to make the assertions that you have made is not the inspiration of the Spirit of God. His Spirit is truth, all truth; it never falsifies, never betrays sacred trusts.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 17)
I have ever borne a straightforward testimony, because I feel the deepest interest in souls. I want you to be saved. I know that if you had heeded the testimonies of warning and encouragement sent you, you would not be where you are today. But with these testimonies before you, you have gone on and on, doing the very things that you were warned not to do.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 18)
I feel a deep longing that you should break the spell that is upon you and return to the Lord with your whole heart. He will receive you. I have a very high sense of the value of the human soul. O if we could all know, as did our Lord Jesus Christ, the preciousness of the souls he came to our world and died to redeem! Why then should any one be careless of his soul? That soul has the privilege of gaining immortality, for immortality is God’s free gift to all who receive and believe in Christ. O, if we could only see how God regards our souls, we would not treat our eternal interests in such a careless, indifferent manner.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 19)
The Lord Jesus, who made an infinite sacrifice to save His people from their sins, knows all about the higher life to which He is trying to raise them. He is the only one who can understandingly say, “What shall it profit a man if he shall gain the whole world and lose his own soul?” [Mark 8:36.] To Him let us commit our souls as unto a faithful Creator, who is able to save to the uttermost all who come unto Him. Souls, my brother, are precious.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 20)
By looking constantly to Jesus, from morn till eve, with the eye of faith, we shall be strengthened. God will make the most precious revelations to His hungering, thirsting people. They will find that Christ is a personal Saviour. They feed upon His Word; for it is spirit and life. This Word kills the natural, earthly nature, and a new life in Christ Jesus is created. The Holy Spirit comes as a Comforter to them. Love takes the place of hatred, and the heart receives the mold of the divine similitude. The image of Christ is reproduced in the human agent, and by the transforming efficacy of the grace of Christ he becomes a new creature. “As many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name, which were born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God.” [John 1:12, 13.] This is the new birth.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 21)
“And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us, (and we beheld his glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father,) full of grace and truth.... And of his fulness have all we received, and grace for grace.” [Verses 14, 16.] The yearning after entire conformity to the will of God, after His holiness and peace, opens the eyes of the understanding to see the doctrines of the Word. Thus God’s children are strengthened and established; they are “steadfast, immovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord.” [1 Corinthians 15:58.]
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 22)
The Lord is soon to appear in the clouds of heaven with power and great glory, to take those who have received Him to the mansions He has gone to prepare for them. We are anxiously awaiting His coming. We need to keep the armor on. We need to be all that the name Christian signifies. We need to live in habitual communion with God our Saviour, abiding in Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 23)
Christ has given us no assurance that to attain perfection of character is an easy matter. It is a conflict, a battle, a march, day after day. All who reach the standard must learn the lesson that it is through much tribulation that we enter the kingdom of heaven. If we sit with Christ on His throne, we must be partakers with Him of His suffering. Individually we will experience that which was spoken of Christ, “It became him ... in bringing many souls unto glory to make the captain of their salvation perfect through suffering.” [Hebrews 2:10.]
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 24)
“Though he were a son, yet learned he obedience by the things which he suffered.” [Hebrews 5:8.] Shall we then be timid and cowardly because of the trials we meet as we advance? Shall we not meet them without repining and complaints? “Remember the word that I said unto you, The servant is not greater than his lord. If they have persecuted me, they will also persecute you. If they have kept my saying, they will keep yours also.” [John 15:20.] “In this world ye shall have tribulation;” but the Lord Jesus will give us all that we ask and believe that He will bestow. [John 16:33.]
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 25)
The Lord would not have His servants unjustly charged by their fellow laborers with the guilt of many sins. Those who do this do much harm by creating a sentiment which will cut off the influence of those against whom they speak. False impressions will be made. Every effort should be made to present the facts as they exist. It is essential for the one who has borne false witness to see that he [has] been guilty of a great wrong in causing dissension in the church and in creating false sympathy, thus leading others into the same error and endangering their souls.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 26)
The great apostle to the Gentiles was testified against falsely. At Philippi, unsustained by law and justice, he showed his enemies that they had treated him and his brethren shamefully. “They have beaten us openly and uncondemned, being Romans; and now do they thrust us out privily? Nay verily, but let them come themselves and fetch us.” [Acts 16:37.] And yet this same man writes, “This is a faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am chief.” [1 Timothy 1:15.]
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 27)
This is the attitude every man should take toward God. He has no plea to make, no legal right or legal claim to urge, in the presence of God, regarding the gifts of God as something due to himself.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 28)
When man assails his fellow men, and presents in a ridiculous light those whom God has appointed to do work for Him, we would not be doing justice to the accusers, or to those who are misled by their accusations, should we keep silent, leaving the people to think that their brethren and sisters, in whom they have had confidence, are no longer worthy of their love and fellowship. This work, arising in our very midst, and resembling the work of Korah, Dathan, and Abiram, is an offense to God, and should be met. And on every point the accusers should be called upon to bring their proof. Every charge should be carefully investigated; it should not be left in any uncertain way. The people should not be left to think that it may be or it may not be. The accusers should do all in their power to lift every sign of reproach that cannot be substantiated.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 29)
This should be done in the case of every church. And when there is a servant of God whom He has appointed to do a certain work, and who for half a century has been an accepted worker, laboring for the people of our faith and before God’s workers, as one whom the Lord has appointed; when for some reason one of the brethren falls under temptation, and because of the messages of warning given him becomes offended, as did the disciples of Christ, and walks no more with Christ; when he begins to work against the truth and make his disaffection public, declaring things untrue which are true, these things must be met. The people must not be left to believe a lie. They must be undeceived. The filthy garments with which the servant of God has been clothed must be removed.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 30)
If those who have done this work take shelter in the statement that they are led by the Holy Spirit, it is as Satan clothing himself with the heavenly garments of purity, while still working out his own attributes.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 31)
I feel deeply over the spirit which is being manifest, because it works like evil leaven. Those who are led by it do not first go to the one they witness against and lay every charge before them. They do not give them an opportunity to clear themselves. But Christ declares, “I say unto you, that whosoever is angry with his brother without a cause shall be in danger of the judgment; and whosoever shall say unto his brother, Raca, shall be in danger of the council; but whosoever shall say, Thou fool, shall be in danger of hell fire. Therefore if thou bring thy gift to the altar, and there rememberest that thy brother hath ought against thee, leave there the gift before the altar, and go thy way; first be reconciled to thy brother, and then come and offer thy gift.” [Matthew 5:22-24.]
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 32)
Every effort should be made to clear the guiltless from evil surmisings, evil-speaking, and false accusations. Every true child of God should be willing to view the case of his brother or sister correctly, and look at all the facts as they are, for the Lord would have unity jealously preserved. Christ prayed that His disciples might be one with Him, as He was one with the Father. [John 17:22.]
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 33)
When any man or woman listens to a charge against a brother or sister, this sin is defined as backbiting. “Lord, who shall abide in thy tabernacle, who shall dwell in thy holy hill? He that walketh uprightly, and worketh righteousness, and speaketh the truth in his heart. He that backbiteth not with his tongue, nor doeth evil with his neighbor, nor taketh up a reproach against his neighbor, in whose eyes a vile person is condemned; but he honored them that fear the Lord. He that sweareth to his own hurt, and changeth not. He that putteth not out his money to usury, nor taketh a reward against the innocent. He that doeth these things shall never be moved.” [Psalm 15:1-5.]
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 34)
Here, not only is one who bears the false witness condemned, but also the one who listens to the report. When charges are borne against God’s servants, they are borne against Christ in the person of his saints. Those who hear and accept these reports, who act as though the reports were true, create dissatisfaction. They are traitors, because they did not bring the charge to the one against whom it was made. By thus tattling about things, men evidence that they know little of Christ. They show that the food upon which their minds feed is scandal.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 35)
The Lord gave me my appointment in my youth. It was a mystery to me. After a severe struggle, I accepted the work, and in my experience I have proved that the Lord had unmistakable, far-reaching, wonderful plans in it all. Out of my weakness I was made strong. Many a time in the ever-recurring necessities, I was made strong in his strength. I was helpless, and ready to die, but he renewed me, and lifted me up, and I abide unto this time.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 36)
Nothing has been made more distinct and plain than that the Lord has chosen me to do His work, His great work. I was taken from among the young, in the deepest affliction, and the conflict and experience has been growing from year to year until I no more doubt that this frail thread of humanity has helped to compose the web that God is weaving in the loom of heaven.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 37)
I have learned to trust in God and not to expect any one but Him to understand the work He has given me to do. Others, with the knowledge of the way God has led me, may be unappreciative and unsympathetic; they may have no more idea of the work given me than a child. I have had experience after experience with my supposed-to-be unchangeable friends, whom I have found to be as trustworthy as a reed shaken by the wind, unable to read and understand my life struggle. They have given themselves up to evil surmisings, to watching for evil, to duplicity and falsehood.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 38)
I have met with this ignorance of spiritual things until I have learned to say with Paul, “None of these things move me.” [Acts 20:24.] They may say, “She hath a devil,” or “She doeth these things by the power of the devil.” They may say anything their hearts lead them to say. I know myself of the hardships, the disappointments, the anguish of spirit, that I have been compelled to know, when I have realized that I am alone. I stand in God, with heart and mind open to the heaven-revealed truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 39)
I stand against men of low degree and against men of high degree, conscious that the truth revealed to me nearly fifty three years ago was from God. No human being has been able to wrest it from me. At times I have had to face nearly the whole church in defense and vindication of the heaven-sent light. Yet God has upheld me, and these many years an unchangeable testimony has been borne. Looking over more than half a century of experience, I can say with confidence, “O God, thou hast taught me from my youth up. Hitherto have I declared thy wondrous works, and will declare them.” [Psalm 71:17.] The puny arm of man has been powerless to hinder.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 40)
Though my heart is pained when I see how little the work given me by God is comprehended, yet I am neither discouraged nor disposed to yield up the work God has given me. I know that God has laid this work upon me. Any course that my brethren may take will not alter my mission or my work. Again and again I have been obliged to stand against those who cry, “Lo, here is Christ,” and “Lo, there is Christ. Lo, this is new truth.” [Matthew 24:23.] The crusade against the work of God has been firm and determined, yet those engaged in it have not accomplished their purpose.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 41)
Had I not known that God was my teacher and my stronghold, I must have been discouraged when so many started up, and cut themselves loose from the work God had given them to do, bringing in new theories, new impressions, and new principles. But the word has come, Heed them not; go straightforward. I am thy Teacher; I am at thy right hand, and will uphold thee. I know that the Lord will help me work my vein of gold and silver, and bring out my precious ore after many think that no more is to be had.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 42)
With every departure of our institutions from straight lines, with every new departure from right principles, strange methods and principles are brought in. But abuses come with them, and follow one after another in endless succession.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 43)
Those who will keep the way of the Lord to do justice and judgment, will see an abundance of work to do in every field. But souls can be saved only by those who have themselves drank deeply of the water of life. As their work increases in importance, and souls are won from the world, they are not to look upon this as an evidence that there is less to do. It should reveal a new portion of God’s moral vineyard to be worked.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 44)
When men after enjoying the truth and accepting the messages sent from God yield to temptation in a crisis, and become offended, when they turn their thoughts in other channels and advocate that which is entirely opposite to their work in the third angel’s message, they show that unless they are thoroughly converted, they will follow in the footsteps of Canright.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 45)
God is calling for volunteers, for men who will not turn away from the truth they have strenuously advocated for years to advocate erroneous doctrines. Because some have not been diligent students, because they do not understand the true reasons of the genuine faith, there will be no less power or fewer laborers. Others will take the places in the ranks made vacant, who will be receptive and who will appreciate the sacred character of truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 46)
At the eleventh hour, when the work grows harder and the people are more hardened, there will be a variety of talent brought in. These workers will prove faithful and receive their penny. Sacrificing men will step into the places made vacant by those who would not be fitted for a place in the heavenly temple. These resources will continue to come in. The Lord will provide openings and facilities. He will call upon the youth to fill up the places made vacant by deaths and apostasies. He will give young men and women, as well as those who are older, the co-operation of the heavenly intelligences. They will have converted characters, converted minds, converted hands, converted feet, and converted tongues. Their lips will be touched with a living coal from the divine altar. If they will learn the lesson of walking humbly before God, if they will not seek to invent new plans, but will do that which the Lord has appointed them to do, they will be enabled to carry God’s plan onward and upward without narrowing it.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 47)
The school is being opened, that young men and women may have opportunity to become better acquainted with the reasons of the truth. Many of these reasons have past into history, but they must also be presented as living truth, which must be exalted and magnified till the close of time.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 48)
All who join the ranks of Sabbathkeepers should become diligent Bible students, that they may know the pillars and ground work of the truth. They should study prophetic history, which has brought us down point by point to where we are at the present time. This is God’s plan for our school. Young men should attend who desire to become educated for any line of work, who have capabilities and see the necessity of learning more and still more where we stand today in prophetic history, uniting link after link in the prophetic chain, even from Genesis to Revelation. Christ is the Alpha, the first link, and the Omega, the last link, of the gospel chain, which is welded in Revelation. These young men will not have fixed habits of wrong, or defects in disposition and character that will make them inflexible.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 49)
With what care should every one come to the study of the Scriptures! With what a determination to know all that it is possible for him to know of the reasons of every point of the faith; especially the Sanctuary question, and the first, second, and third angels’ messages, should he study.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 50)
Men who have become established in the truth will not be soon moved away from it to plunge into an abyss of uncertainty. The Lord would have all those who take their position on the truth know that they do know where their feet stand, whether it is on slipping sand or the unmovable rock. How attentive should they be to every sermon, to every Bible study. How carefully should they listen to the voice of the Holy Spirit that leads into all truth. Those who proclaim the truth to others should open their hearts to receive every principle that the truth embraces, and then they should bring these principles into their practical life. Doing this, they eat the flesh and drink the blood of the Son of God. The Holy Spirit witnesses to the message coming to the people coming from the messenger who is holding forth the Word of life. How attentive should they be to suggestions and thoughts, to the divine impressions that the Spirit of God writes in the memory and stamps upon the soul.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 51)
Every one who lives for God should pray most earnestly and take heed how they hear. God will speak to them with the still, small voice. He will not shout in their ears, but will speak to the soul. In the name of the Lord we must call and prepare the young for the battle. They must understand God’s plan for work in every stage of their upward march. They need to know for themselves the reasons of our faith, and make it their experience. David cannot put on Saul’s armor; it is too large for him. But every piece of God’s prepared armor must come from heaven’s armory. The youth must obtain their teaching through their work. The divine Word must be eaten and brought into the current that circulates through mind, heart, and soul.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 52)
Let the youth obtain a knowledge of the Bible in our schools. Then let them work on that which they are persuaded is the truth. Those who come to our schools will also be taught that God will hold them responsible for their reason, and the way they use it; for their time, and how they spend it; for their speech, and how they employ it. These are God’s precious talents.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 53)
The youth should keep advancing in knowledge during the school term. Then they should make use of the knowledge they have obtained, for the benefit of others. They are to pray to God constantly, when they are by themselves; and at the family altar and when they walk in the streets, they are to uplift their hearts to God, praying to be kept from temptation. God will give such youth more than natural judgment and intuition. If they will give themselves to him, he will give them skill and adaptability. They will have mistakes to correct and victories to gain, and gradually they will grow into stronger, wiser men and women in Christ Jesus.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 54)
Success will come when the youth are educated in this way. It will not come from natural ability, but from the molding of the heart by Christ. By beholding Christ, they become changed from glory to glory, from character to character. Righteousness and truth are in the inward parts, work outward in the expressions, and from the tenor of the character. Students must constantly be taught from the word of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 55)
All are to work for unity and harmony of purpose. Everything that is done in connection with the work of God must be divinely done. Truth is something that must be passed on to others. There are souls to be saved, souls who must have the truth for this time from the word of God, to prepare them for that which is opening before us.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 56)
Satan is moving with intensity from beneath, and is bringing all his forces to bear to unsettle those who have once been established in the truth. These are the very ones who by yielding up the truth which they have once advocated, can do the greatest harm to the cause of God. Quite a large number will enter this path, because the truth they once believed had not been brought into their life-practice. But those who depart from the faith and refuse to give the last message of warning to the world will walk in paths in which the Lord does not lead. Satan goes before them, clothed as an angel of light. They will follow on in false paths until they shall discern what is comprehended in the wrath of the Lamb.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 57)
“Not by might, nor by power, but by my Spirit, saith the Lord of hosts.... And I answered again, and said unto him, What be these two olive branches which through the two golden pipes empty the golden oil out of themselves. And he answered me, and said, Knowest thou not what these be. And I said, No, my lord. Then said, he, These are the two anointed ones, which stand by the Lord of the whole earth.” [Zechariah 4:6, 12-14.]
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 58)
This oil the wise virgins had in their vessels with their lamps. This oil is the Holy Spirit, which the foolish virgins did not have. Character is not transferable. When as in the case of the foolish virgins, they find their lamps going or gone out, faith and love and knowledge of God and the truth have left them, as water leaves a leaky vessel. We may have this holy oil; we must have it. It must be emptied from the holy olive trees, the two anointed ones, that are commissioned to empty the oil from themselves, and communicate it to the churches. But those who choose to follow the impulses of their own natural temperament, will find themselves without the holy oil.
(12LtMs, Lt 98a, 1897, 59)
Lt 99, 1897
Olsen, Brother and Sister Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia August 19, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 3MR 274; 6MR 265; 4Bio 294. + Dear Brother and Sister Olsen:
I can write you only a few lines. I had purposed to wrote more than this, but I have been interrupted by several council meetings and some visitors that I was compelled to see. This morning I rise at a quarter past three to do this writing. We have received your letter and were glad to hear from you. Last Monday the American mail left here. I have not been able to write much. My head and my heart need rest and freedom from the strain of anxiety, but how to obtain the desired rest remains a problem that I am not able to solve.
(12LtMs, Lt 99, 1897, 1)
W. C. White will not, I fear, be able to return to Australia before school closes. We greatly hope that he will come, for it would be unfortunate if he was not here. But we must leave all this in the hands of God. W. C. White’s house is now finished within and without. We now have a comfortable, little one-story cottage for him to enjoy when he returns home. He will have for matters to take his mind from the outside, and occupy his thoughts.
(12LtMs, Lt 99, 1897, 2)
We see more and more the wisdom of our locating away from the cities. The other day we paid the fare of Brother Robb from Ashfield to Cooranbong, that he might see if he could not obtain a place where he could raise his own produce and do some kind of work that will give him a living. He is in the cab business; but he cannot support his family at this.
(12LtMs, Lt 99, 1897, 3)
We shall try to help our poor brethren to help themselves. Their children need the advantages of the school. We hope that the way will open for Brother Robb.
(12LtMs, Lt 99, 1897, 4)
Brother James, my farmer, has a large family of children. They are excellent little ones, but he says that the primary school that we have started has made a great change in them for the better.
(12LtMs, Lt 99, 1897, 5)
Our school now numbers eighty, and there is no room to accommodate one more student. We must now move out of the upper room in the school building, where we have been assembling on the Sabbath, and finish off the upper story as lodging rooms. We must arise and build a church, plain, but no shame. All that we build is to be such as will recommend itself and correspond with the faith and truth we profess to love.
(12LtMs, Lt 99, 1897, 6)
We have had a hard strain upon us in instructing the students that they must be restrained. Two students, especially, have made us some trouble. They have never known what it means to be restrained. Upright principles, conscientious sentiments, have not been brought into their life experience. We knew that these young men, who have never had high and noble thoughts, but who have followed impulse, whose course of action has been an offense to God, would demoralize the school unless they turned square about and made a change answering to the words addressed to Nicodemus, “Ye must be born again.” [John 3:7.] We knew that unless they did this, they would receive no help, but harm only.
(12LtMs, Lt 99, 1897, 7)
I have had much to do morning after morning in setting matters before students and teachers in regard to the claims the Lord has upon them. In Brother and Sister Haskell, the Lord has sent us the right help. Both are a perfect fit in doing the work. Both are giving Bible lessons, and they work very hard. Their influence tells. Both have a treasure house of knowledge from which to draw. There seems to be a mutual adaptation to the work. I think I should not have been able to hold them in Cooranbong had I not insisted that they should not leave me. When I had gone as far as I possibly could in carrying the responsibilities, and was presenting our situation day and night before God, the light came even before the marriage of Brother and Sister Haskell, “I have provided help in my servant (Brother Haskell). I will be with his mouth, and he shall speak My Word, and it shall prosper.”
(12LtMs, Lt 99, 1897, 8)
Thus you see we have reason to hold Elder Haskell to do the very work God has given him to do. The Lord revealed that he had in Sister Hurd provided a matron and teacher. As she united her interests with Brother Haskell, they would be the help we needed here; and thus it has been. Most earnest calls have been made for them, and if the Lord had not shown me that He had provided this help for me, I would not have said, “You cannot have them.” I am grateful to my heavenly Father for the provision made, and for the clear light given, for I can now say, No, and not feel condemned for selfishness in retaining them. Brother Haskell’s perceptive powers are good. He presents truth in a clear, simple, earnest manner that carries its own evidence with it to the hearts of those that hear it. As matron and teacher, Sister Haskell could not be excelled. She is firm as a rock to principle, and she has no special favorites. She loves all, and helps all.
(12LtMs, Lt 99, 1897, 9)
The burden resting upon Brother Hughes has been great. With Brother and Sister Haskell and myself, he has felt that we must be wise as serpents and harmless as doves, that every teacher must be worked by the Holy Spirit else they will only do harm. The Lord alone can keep them full of the kindliness of Christ, enabling them to hold fast holy, lofty aspirations in all their methods, and to cultivate a storehouse of heaven-born persuasion and eloquence in order to secure success in the inculcation of sentiments and ideas that will transform the natural character, and constitute the students sons and daughters of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 99, 1897, 10)
These lines of work cost taxing labor. Every teacher must first reverence the pure and holy sentiments and lessons of Christ as the highest and most essential point of education. In their inmost soul the teachers must themselves cultivate and honor that which is pure, holy, elevated, and ennobling. No cheap words must be uttered; no vacillating purpose followed in practicing true restraint over themselves. Without this, all the learning of years of scholastic life, all the skill of logic, is useless. A creative imagination cannot supply the lack of a proper, high, pure, all-round symmetrical character. All immorality, all loose, cheap, unchaste ideas, all impurity of any kind, not only impairs the Christian experience, but destroys the inward spiritual adornment.
(12LtMs, Lt 99, 1897, 11)
The vices in which young men indulge impart their nature to the soul. Low, cheap food given to the mind means a low, cheap character. Selfish gratifications become woven into the texture of the life. The moral appetite is perverted. Vulgar thoughts, cheap reading, are demoralizing. If this is the fountain from which they choose to drink, the taste soon becomes as coarse and vile as the books and the associates chosen. Guilt and dishonor are in this path; but this is not the worst feature of such offenses. A stain is made upon the imagination. The soul is defiled. Habits are formed for wrong, and a disability comes over the human being that seems to defy all restoration. A noble power is lost, which some will never be successful in recovering. Quick as a flash, ideas of a degrading, defiling character take possession of the mind. The persons may repent, and the Lord will pardon their transgression, but the mind is marred, and its scars tell the painful story.
(12LtMs, Lt 99, 1897, 12)
Students of hopeful intellect, possessing qualifications that are desirable, are plagued and hampered in their religious experience and in the development of Christian character, because their association with persons of low conceptions and cheap habits places them on Satan’s battleground with a sense of incompetence to retain and hold a fragrant influence. The whole life is neutralized in its effort to be a polished instrument in the hands of God, to do His work and glorify His name. The hours of relaxation are not a blessing, because the wearied mind takes a downward tendency and the poison of past experience is constantly seeking to obtain the victory.
(12LtMs, Lt 99, 1897, 13)
I present the only remedy, Christ Jesus the Restorer. This is the reason I urge for the necessity of primary schools being established in every place where there is a church. Let the education of the youth be guarded from the earliest years. Keep the truth ever before them in a most attractive form. The Word of God is full of beautiful lessons, and the primary grade prepares pupils for the higher grade.
(12LtMs, Lt 99, 1897, 14)
The youth should be sober-minded. No foolish jesting or joking should be allowed in their school associations or in their lodging rooms. As the result, they will not be gloomy but cheerful. The mind will take an upward, heavenward tendency, and they are not called upon to uproot from the mind and character the influence of words or actions of a low, cheap order. The Lord Jesus will, if they ask Him, give them, as He gave to Daniel, the resource of a moral and intellectual power that will make them highly useful, and prepared for any crisis, any duty, that may arise.
(12LtMs, Lt 99, 1897, 15)
I therefore have a high sense of what the schools among Seventh-day Adventists should be and what the teachers should be, in order to give the youth culture in every line. All, whatever their habits may have been, if they will accept the yoke of restraint, if they will receive the lessons given by the greatest teacher the world ever knew, are bound to become men and women whom the Lord will not be ashamed to call brethren, for He has prepared for them a city, and all who enter into that city are pure and undefiled. Revelation 19:8, 9.
(12LtMs, Lt 99, 1897, 16)
Lt 100, 1897
Pallant, J. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia December 9, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother Pallant:
Your letter was received yesterday. I could not sleep this morning after a quarter before one o’clock. I have interest in the cause and work of God. I have a sincere desire that every soul that lives may be saved. It is a terrible thing to be deceived in regard to our spiritual condition before God. I can only say of you, If you seek the Lord with all the heart, he will be found of you. A most painful picture has been presented before me—the low standard that is reached by those who are educating others in Bible doctrines. The self-exaltation manifested is painful for me to witness. This was your danger when connected with other fellow laborers in Sydney.
(12LtMs, Lt 100, 1897, 1)
When self is hid in God, when self is not lifted up, then the Lord can work. The failure of, the [lack] of success of, the work in Sydney was not due to any one thing, but to all things combined. The principle cause of failure was that too much of self and too little of Christ was shown. Here is your danger now. You would choose to be a preacher. But you do not choose to minister in any line where you could introduce the truth to those who are ignorant of it. There is too little prayer, too little faith in God, too much talking, too little consideration, too little faith.
(12LtMs, Lt 100, 1897, 2)
As laborers together with God, we all need to wear the yoke of Christ, to be meek and lowly in heart. When the workers in Sydney were engaged in the work there, they did not show love and confidence in one another. Each wanted to be regarded as a perfect whole in himself. Such elements connected in the work there should first have come under the yoke of Christ. “Take my yoke upon you,” He says, “and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart, and ye shall find rest unto your souls.” [Matthew 11:29.] Rest is not found in seeking for the highest place. Christ, the world’s Redeemer, assures you that your rest is found in wearing His yoke, in learning His meekness, His lowliness.
(12LtMs, Lt 100, 1897, 3)
The work that should have been done in Sydney was not done because the education Christ has given was not heeded. Men felt sufficient and capable in themselves. Binding up with Christ and with one another as a necessity, seeking to help one another, always putting self out of sight, and exalting Jesus Christ, was not done. Self was the highest object, but they did not know this. The love of Christ was not brought into the life and education.
(12LtMs, Lt 100, 1897, 4)
Paul’s counsel to Timothy was, “Take heed to thyself and to the doctrine.” [1 Timothy 4:16.] Self must be subdued. Self must be yoked up with Christ. He was a perfect Pattern of what humanity should be. His workers need the divine touch, and when they catch the Spirit of the Master, they will work out what Christ works in. When they present the truth as it is in Jesus, it bears the divine credentials. When all has been done for the enlightenment and saving of souls that can be done, when the workers watch for souls as they that must give an account, there will be felt a great burden for souls. The value of souls will be increasingly understood. Earnest, agonizing cries and supplications will go up to heaven, Give us souls as sheaves to bring to the Master. Then when self has been hid in Jesus, when all has been done that it is in human power to do to scatter the darkness that envelops the soul in unbelief, then we may quietly leave the issue with God. But there needs to be far more of Christ and far less of self.
(12LtMs, Lt 100, 1897, 5)
A great and good work ought to have been done in Sydney. The failure was the result of the lack of unity. The churches did not act as if they felt under obligation to heed the Bible on this point, to cherish love and respect for one another. “A new commandment I give unto you,” said Christ, “that ye love one another; as I have loved you, that ye also love one another. By this shall all men know that ye are my disciples if ye have love one to another.” [John 13:34, 35.]
(12LtMs, Lt 100, 1897, 6)
This is the sign that we are Christ’s disciples. Love and unity distinguish the true believers from the world. If this unity does not exist, we need not count ourselves as Christ’s disciples, for the love we cherish for one another is the sign to the world that we are Christ’s disciples. The disposition to draw apart from one another, to please and bless one’s self, in no way glorifies God. Want of love and confidence in one another have a leavening influence for evil upon the mind and character. We cannot afford that our course of action shall testify to the world that we are a sham, a pretense, not disciples in deed and in truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 100, 1897, 7)
The Lord was displeased with the spirit in which the work was done in Sydney. Expense and time and labor were put forth for others, but the spirit woven into the work was an offense to God. I speak decidedly on this point. The standard must be elevated by those who open the Scriptures to others. There must be a cleanness of principle. We should closely investigate the principles that govern our course of action. We need to lie low, cherishing the meekness and lowliness of Christ if we would realize His rest.
(12LtMs, Lt 100, 1897, 8)
All who labor for the Master need the bravery of true godliness in order to be a spectacle to the world, to angels, and to men. The world is opposed to the truth we have accepted. The forces of evil are marshalled against us, stirred into unwonted activity by a power from beneath. And shall those of the same faith weaken the hearts and hands of one another? We may safely cherish tenderness, courtesy, Christian politeness, and yet avoid all fulsome flattery. We are required to labor earnestly for the best interests of each other to be “not easily provoked,” to think no evil. [1 Corinthians 13:5.] In every way we are to reveal the attributes of the Lord Jesus Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 100, 1897, 9)
When closely united with Christ, we are represented as one with the world’s Redeemer. We are not called upon to link up with one man because he voices all our works and ways and plans and methods. But we cannot link our souls too closely with Christ. The Lord would have those who take the name of Christian stand under His colors. They are the ones who represent His character. We have the most solemn work to do, and this is to hide self in Christ, and let Christ appear as the One altogether lovely and the Chiefest among ten thousand. Talk of the only hope of the world, and bring Jesus into every assembly. Love Him with the entire affections; serve Him with an undivided heart.
(12LtMs, Lt 100, 1897, 10)
All I can say to you, my brother, is, Walk humbly with God. You may distrust yourself, but do not distrust your great Helper. He is not only the Author but the Finisher of our faith. He demands all our heart’s service. We need to look and live. We bear His name, and we should give to Him our undivided allegiance. Endowed with heavenly wisdom, we shall walk circumspectly. We shall bear in [mind] that we have a heavenly Guest by our side to consult. We may walk with the Lord as did Enoch, pressing close to Jesus.
(12LtMs, Lt 100, 1897, 11)
We are now to do all in our power for Christ, humbling ourselves and exalting the Lord Jesus, who is the Truth, the Light, and the Way.
(12LtMs, Lt 100, 1897, 12)
The history of ancient Israel is for us to study. This history abounds in things that we must shun, for they brought the reproof of God on the people. But it should also be an encouragement; we can move forward; step by step, the Lord manifested Himself to them, and ordered all their travels. This history is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness.
(12LtMs, Lt 100, 1897, 13)
We need to learn more and still more of the truth. We need to eat the flesh and drink the blood of the Son of God. In this you will find an unfailing source of power that is not dependent on human wisdom. We may expect the Lord to co-operate with our efforts.
(12LtMs, Lt 100, 1897, 14)
Now, my brother, I have tried to write to you the things that you need; and I say, have courage in the Lord. Look not at your weakness, but at Christ’s power and sufficiency.
(12LtMs, Lt 100, 1897, 15)
Lt 101, 1897
Rogers, Sanford “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia November 8, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 4Bio 322. Dear Brother Sanford Rogers:
I received the packet of Jenny’s clothing. These things came to us only yesterday. I left the campground sick, and have been unable to write scarcely anything for this American mail. But this morning I have risen at three o’clock, and will write you a few lines. I read your very short letter. I wanted to hear how you were healthwise, but I have yet to see W. C. White, and learn of him.
(12LtMs, Lt 101, 1897, 1)
I hope you do not really mean that you are friendless. I felt very sad when I read your note. Jennie is at rest. Thank the Lord that there is no more sorrow and pain and suffering for the poor, afflicted body. “Write, Blessed are the dead that die in the Lord.”“For they rest from their labors, and their works do follow them.” [Revelation 14:13.] Were we near you, or you near us, we would do all we possibly could to care for you; but eight thousand miles of the broad Pacific separates us. I will be glad when the time comes when “there shall be no more sea.” [Revelation 21:1.]
(12LtMs, Lt 101, 1897, 2)
We have just closed our first camp meeting for this season. The second will be held in Melbourne. But I question whether I shall be able to attend it. The camp meeting just closed has been the most interesting we have had the pleasure of attending. The meeting was very precious to us all. The people flocked to the tent at the commencement of the meeting and continued to attend till its close.
(12LtMs, Lt 101, 1897, 3)
As a result of the school in Cooranbong, twenty were baptized before its close. We had the best school in every respect that we have ever seen, outside our people, or among Seventh-day Adventists. It seems that the Lord had it in charge from the very beginning. The Lord has used Elder Haskell and his wife in a special manner. Sister Haskell was matron of the school and also teacher of Bible lessons. Both herself and her husband have been a treasure house of most precious scriptural truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 101, 1897, 4)
The study of the Bible was made the foundation of all the studies. It was indeed like eating the flesh and drinking the blood of the Son of God. “My flesh,” said Christ “is meat indeed, and my blood is drink indeed.”“Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that believeth on me hath everlasting life.”“This is the bread which cometh down from heaven, that a man may eat thereof, and not die. I am the living bread which came down from heaven. If any man eat of this bread, he shall live forever; and the bread that I will give him is my flesh, which I will give for the life of the world.”“Except ye eat the flesh of the Son of man, and drink his blood, ye have no life in you. Whoso eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood hath eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last day.” [John 6:55, 47, 50, 51, 53, 54.]
(12LtMs, Lt 101, 1897, 5)
We have given the words of Christ to the students of our school as no school that has been established has done, except the school of the prophets. Not one of the students left the school unconverted. There were eighty-five students.
(12LtMs, Lt 101, 1897, 6)
Our camp meeting exceeded in interest, from the commencement to the close, any that has ever been held. Several have been baptized since the first meeting commenced, and quite a number kept last Sabbath as their first Sabbath. I spoke on the ground six times to the crowds of hearers that assembled, and five times in special meetings to our people. We will now have to build a meetinghouse in Stanmore or in a suburb adjoining it. Thus it has been in this missionary field. Churches have been raised up and houses of worship built. It has often seemed that we knew not from whence the money was coming, for the people are nearly all poor. But as we have advanced by faith, the Lord has accepted our willing hearts and minds, and we have been enabled to “arise and build.” [Nehemiah 2:20.]
(12LtMs, Lt 101, 1897, 7)
The question has been asked me by outside parties, Do you propose to build a chapel here, as you have done in Ashfield? We said, If numbers are obedient to the faith, there is no other thing for us to do than to arise and build. O that the work may advance! The truth in its beauty is captivating souls. Let the good work go forward in the Lord’s fields, which are opening all around us. There are many more calls than we have men and means to supply. We must have increased faith. This last camp meeting has encouraged the hearts of our people as it ought to do. The expressions of the people have been, “I never heard such preaching in my life. It is just wonderful. O I wish I had come at the very first meeting. The Lord is with this people. I feel His presence on the ground.”
(12LtMs, Lt 101, 1897, 8)
Well, the good work is going forward. Yet we must open new fields. The important city of Sydney itself has never yet been worked. Want of money and lack of workers have held the work. A few of the suburbs of Sydney have been entered, but now the interest manifested forces the issue upon us. We must work Sydney. May the Lord give us light and His wisdom that we may move forward.
(12LtMs, Lt 101, 1897, 9)
“Now about the midst of the feast, Jesus went up into the temple, and taught. And the Jews marvelled, saying, How knoweth this man letters, having never learned? Jesus answered them, and said, My doctrine is not mine, but his that sent me. If any man will do his will, he shall know of the doctrine, whether it be of God, or whether I speak of myself.” [John 7:14-17.] I could not but think that at our camp meeting Jesus was in our midst, speaking through His servants, and all men marvelled at the clear, precious truth, presented as it is in Jesus. The seed has been sown, the gospel trumpet has given no uncertain sound. We know whereof we speak, and as the truth is presented, the Holy Spirit makes the impression. A Paul may plant, an Apollos water; but God giveth the increase. Therefore we do not depend merely upon what the minister shall say, but upon what the Lord shall do in impressing the hearers.
(12LtMs, Lt 101, 1897, 10)
The warning message must be given to the world to prepare the way of the Lord. A great work is to be done in this country. But the human agent is only God’s instrument. We must be converted day by day, a vessel emptied for the Lord to fill, that we may empty the oil of truth into other prepared vessels. The Lord is our efficiency, He is our strength. We will hold Him fast, as Jacob held the angel. We must not fail nor be discouraged. The Lord God has revealed Himself and will still reveal Himself if we will only trust in Him who is righteousness, grace, and truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 101, 1897, 11)
But I must close this letter, for this morning the mail leaves here for Sydney. My dear brother, be of good courage in the Lord. Do not faint, neither be discouraged. Look up to the Source of your strength. Give my love to your people whom you will see in Cooperville and Wright. Tell them I have not forgotten them. We shall not meet again in this world—thus it seems to me—but if we and they shall hold fast the faith, we shall meet where we shall see the King in His beauty. “Therefore are they before the throne of God, and serve him day and night in his temple: and he that sitteth on the throne shall dwell among them. They shall hunger no more, neither thirst any more, neither shall the sun light on them, nor any heat. For the Lamb which is in the midst of them shall feed them, and shall lead them unto living fountains of waters. And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes.” [Revelation 7:15-17.]
(12LtMs, Lt 101, 1897, 12)
Praise the Lord, Sanford; praise our God! We are almost home! Look away from self to Jesus. He is touched with the feelings of our infirmities.
(12LtMs, Lt 101, 1897, 13)
In much love and sympathy.
(12LtMs, Lt 101, 1897, 14)
Lt 102, 1897
Robinson, A. T. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia March 5, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in TSA 72-74. + Dear Brother Robinson:
Last night I received a letter from Peter Wessels. He feels very much grieved that I should send to you a copy of the letter I sent him. He says that you read it to his mother, and he feels that I have done him a wrong in sending the letter to you, and you also, in reading it to his mother.
(12LtMs, Lt 102, 1897, 1)
I feel sorry that you have done this, because you place me where Peter will not place confidence in me as his friend. He feels that you have no love in your heart toward him; and from the light which the Lord has been pleased to give me, I see that you have not cultivated that tenderness, that Christlike sympathy, that will win hearts. There are men seriously and severely tempted. They have not had the advantage of associations that are the most favorable for the development of a pure, holy, spotless life. Things that are regarded as very grievous sins in America are not so regarded in Africa. In many places, as India, the people have before them constantly the naked bodies of male and female. This exposure of the form is not looked upon as anything indecent.
(12LtMs, Lt 102, 1897, 2)
I speak the things that have been presented to me. That of which Peter Wessels has been guilty is a crime [that] equal to adultery; but with many it is a common matter to make free with the bodies of women. You know what course was pursued in the Southern states of America with the masters and the slaves. All these things have been practiced in Africa, and it is next to impossible to make the people comprehend the mischief of these associations and the wickedness of such practices. Therefore, we cannot deal with these people as we with those in countries where the distinction between right and wrong is more clearly defined.
(12LtMs, Lt 102, 1897, 3)
One thing is positive. You must either mingle more of the oil of love, of tender compassion, with your work—your stiffness and coldness must be melted away, or you will not win your way in such a country as Africa. This country needs men who are as firm as a rock to principle, and who have also the simplicity and love of Christ. These can adapt themselves to the situation; they will not leave upon other minds an impression of sternness, and coldness, and harshness. You need the cheerful sunshine of the righteousness of Jesus Christ, and far less of the—what shall I call it?—the desire to carry out your own opinions, when it would be better for you to believe that your opinions can and should be modified.
(12LtMs, Lt 102, 1897, 4)
“Therefore being justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ; by whom also we have access by faith into this grace wherein we stand, and rejoice in hope of the glory of God. And not only so, but we glory in tribulations also; knowing that tribulation worketh patience; and patience, experience; and experience, hope; and hope maketh not ashamed; because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us.” [Romans 5:1-5.]
(12LtMs, Lt 102, 1897, 5)
You need to have that love of Christ in your heart, and then you will win your way; but when any wrong exists among your brethren, you handle it in such a way that it creates in the one whom you think wrong a spirit of resistance and defiance. You have not woven into your work the love, the compassion, and the tenderness of Christ. Had you done this, had you encircled Peter Wessels with your love, had you bound him to your heart with the tender bonds of affection, you would have saved him. But you let him drift away, inwardly glad that you would have no more perplexity over his case.
(12LtMs, Lt 102, 1897, 6)
I am not writing this to condemn you, but to warn you. Let your tongue be dipped in the oil of the love and grace of Christ. If this love is an abiding principle in your heart, you will know better how to associate with your brethren at all times. You will not stand off so stiffly, and hold so firmly to your own ideas, irrespective of the consequences.
(12LtMs, Lt 102, 1897, 7)
A correct theory of the truth is excellent and essential; but the love of God, which should baptize all theories, has a power to reach all hearts. This love is what you need. You need the moisture of the dew of heaven, the melting, softening, subduing influence of the Spirit, upon your heart. If you had lived in this atmosphere while you have been in Africa, you would have worked, as a co-laborer with Jesus Christ, as a restorer.
(12LtMs, Lt 102, 1897, 8)
I tell you that which I have not spoken of or written to any other human being. A change must come to you through the moving, melting love of God, a change that will enable you to carry the credentials that you are one who loves souls. I think I have spoken so plainly that you will seek to learn of Christ His ways and methods, and seek to bring more of the sunshine and joy of the truth, the brightness of the Sun of righteousness, into your own individual experience. Let your own heart break; let the routine and precision be broken down. Look unto Jesus, and not to men, to be told what to do. Catch the divine light from the Light of the world, and flash it upon the pathway of others in shaping and molding the work in Africa.
(12LtMs, Lt 102, 1897, 9)
The simplicity of Christ, the melting love of Jesus, will speak to hearts when the mere reiteration of the truth will accomplish nothing. Self must not be brought in as a specialty; it must be hid with Christ in God. A different element must be brought into your work; this I have been shown by the Lord. I wrote it in my diary seven years ago. Why I have not felt a burden to present it to you, I cannot tell.
(12LtMs, Lt 102, 1897, 10)
Nothing has passed between Brother Haskell and me on this matter. I must speak now, for I fear that unless there is a change, some souls that might be saved for Christ will be lost. You have worked out opinions and come to conclusions that have done harm to souls that were under the severe temptations of Satan. You will just as surely balance them in the wrong direction, by your natural temperament, unless your own spirit is softened and subdued, unless your heart is filled with the abiding love of Christ. This has been where you have failed. This is where you need to make changes. May the Lord help you to see this matter as it is.
(12LtMs, Lt 102, 1897, 11)
In the case of Peter Wessels, be kind and courteous, and do not make the least attempt to have him make a public confession. You could not do the cause of God greater harm than insisting on this. Keep the matter to those only who now know it, and if fewer knew of this matter, it would be better. Let the Wessels feel that you are their friend. I am sorry you read the letter to the mother, for this action will tend to produce the very results which you thought to hinder or prevent by reading the letter.
(12LtMs, Lt 102, 1897, 12)
It is a very delicate thing to deal with human minds. You may stand up stiffly and never, never soften their hearts, or you may come close to the afflicted soul and, with a heart full of love, lead him away from the enemy’s battleground, not drive him there, and leave him there to become the sport of Satan’s temptations.
(12LtMs, Lt 102, 1897, 13)
I will pray for you, but for Christ’s sake seek the meekness, the simplicity, and the love of Jesus. Let His love break down every barrier. Come close to your brethren. You need not countenance wrongdoing in a single instance, but you can impress hearts that you long to co-operate with Christ in saving the souls for whom He has died. I entreat you to seek God. I urge you to open the door of your heart and let the love and tender compassion of Christ in, and then let it out in tender words and offices of love. May the Lord give you wisdom is my prayer.
(12LtMs, Lt 102, 1897, 14)
P.S. My brethren, we must all work wisely and intelligently. Ceremonies and forms should not become so essential as to mark out a course whereby the Lord should do His work. The world and all society are looked upon as in disorder. Ideas and methods and skillful inventions are instituted to remodel it, but the system is almost altogether human. The change [that is] essential is conversion from error to truth. The temple lies in ruins, and an attempt to build it with the same old material is useless. Only the power of God can transform the character of man, conforming him to the image of Christ in heart and mind, for even the thoughts are to be brought into captivity to Jesus Christ. Only think of the work to be done. God takes fallen man, a worm of the dust, and transforms him, fitting him to be a member of the heavenly family, a companion, through eternal ages, of the angels and of Jesus Christ. He who submits to this process will see God’s face and hold communion with Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 102, 1897, 15)
All the rounds of ceremony can never fit the human family for membership in the family of heaven. We must submit to the molding, fashioning hand of God. The lethargy of Satan is as a funeral pall upon the people. Insensibility has first to be met and dealt with. The torpor of death must be penetrated. People are dead in trespasses and sins, and they need awakening by the power of God. We must preach Christ and His love to fallen man in that He took human nature and suffered the ill treatment of men professing godliness. His life was a life of constant self-sacrifice. He was hated, despised, and crucified upon the cross. It was the Commander of heaven that thus suffered. But “God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.” [John 3:16.] If God gave His Son to atone for sin, sin must be a tremendous evil, grievous in the sight of God and ruinous to man.
(12LtMs, Lt 102, 1897, 16)
We who preach the truth to others must have the love of Jesus burning in our own souls. Our lips must be touched with a live coal from off the altar. Then they will be cleansed; naught but sanctified words that will melt and subdue the soul will pass from them.
(12LtMs, Lt 102, 1897, 17)
In much love.
(12LtMs, Lt 102, 1897, 18)
March 28: I have written this without hearing a word, by pen or voice in regard to it, from Brother or Sister Haskell. We have just seen Sister Haskell. She came to Cooranbong last evening.
(12LtMs, Lt 102, 1897, 19)
Lt 102a, 1897
Robinson, Brother and Sister [A. T.] Stanmore, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia December 22, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in Ev 439; Te 58, 239. Dear Brother and Sister Robinson:
I received your letter yesterday, and was much pleased to hear that some souls are taking their stand on the platform of eternal truth. This is the important time in the work. The soldiers in the army of the Lord are to be wide awake, diligent, watching for souls as they that must give an account. I am sorry that at the time when workers are most needed, you do not have them. It is at this time that those who anticipate entering the service of the Lord should feel a responsibility to lift every ounce they possibly can to be diligent workers. There is no release in this warfare.
(12LtMs, Lt 102a, 1897, 1)
But while the workers who carry responsibilities should labor with all the energy they can command, there is danger of those in your position overworking. You must rally every individual possible to do his best. Avoid long, taxing committee meetings. There are more of these than there should be. They are held at too late hours. Avoid lengthy sermons. The people cannot retain one half of the discourses which they hear. Give short talks and more Bible readings. This is the time to make every point as plain as mileposts. Prayer to God for counsel, faith that He will work, are of more, far more, consequence than long, wearisome, trying committee meetings.
(12LtMs, Lt 102a, 1897, 2)
For years the Lord has been sending His cautions. Depend less on the wisdom of finite men, and far more on the wisdom of God. Educate the workers to pray with that faith that will not be denied. Come to your heavenly Father as a child comes to a parent. Lay hold of the arm of infinite power. Hold fast, do not let go. The Lord is our Strength; the Lord is our Fortress; the Lord is our Righteousness to go before us; the glory of the Lord is to be our rereward. How much more, then, do we need to place our dependence upon God than upon the wisdom of finite men. God help us to learn this lesson. “Without me,” says Christ, “ye can do nothing.” [John 15:5.] A Paul may plant, and Apollos water, but God giveth the increase.
(12LtMs, Lt 102a, 1897, 3)
I do not favor the arrangements made for our camp meetings. For weeks time and labor should not be spared to plough in the truth. There should be efficient workers, and they must not be left lame-handed. This is a great error, and yet it has been committed again and again. If our people would only heed the instruction that God has given, our camp meetings would be of far greater value and would show far greater results. The Lord will move upon the minds of our workers if they will lean upon His omnipotent power. There is a divine science in prayer, and the many prayers ascending in faith to God come up as the fragrance of holy incense before Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 102a, 1897, 4)
The Lord will honor and respect the living faith that comes from humble and contrite souls. We may have a weak working force, but the Lord has powerful efficiency. Human forces are but finite, the heavenly are invincible. The heavenly intelligences will do that which man cannot do.
(12LtMs, Lt 102a, 1897, 5)
Each one engaged in the service of God has an experience to gain in a better knowledge of God. The prayer of Christ to the Father in behalf of the disciples was an educational prayer. “And this is life eternal,” He said, “that they might know thee, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent.” [John 17:3.] There are sharp, bright, brilliant men in our world, but they do not yet know God nor Jesus Christ whom He has sent. They flash up like a meteor, and go out as quickly. But when the gospel enters into the mind and heart, it makes a decided change in the life’s habits and practices. When this knowledge is obtained by every follower of Christ, there will be a sense of individual accountability that few of the workers at present have any real sense of.
(12LtMs, Lt 102a, 1897, 6)
When Jesus began to open the future to His disciples, and showed that He must bear suffering, endure scoffing, mocking, [and] the crown of thorns; that He must be scourged and crucified, the picture was unpleasant to Peter. He rebuked his Lord for holding up such a picture. “Be it far from thee, Lord,” he said. [Matthew 16:22.] Wesley translates this, “Favor thyself, Lord.” Our Saviour’s words to Peter seem to be very severe. “Get thee behind me, Satan,” He said, “thou art an offence unto me.” [Verse 23.] These words were not directed, as is supposed, to Peter, but to Satan, who was implanting his insinuations in the mind of Peter. The words were understood by the wily foe: “Get thee behind Me, Satan. Why interpose yourself between My servant and Me? Let Me come to Peter with My words, not your suggestions.”“Thou savorest,” said Christ to tempted Peter: “not the things that be of God, but the things that be of men.” [Mark 8:33.]
(12LtMs, Lt 102a, 1897, 7)
Christ continued the lesson: “If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. For whosoever shall save his life shall lose it: and whosoever shall lose his life for my sake, shall find it. For what is a man profited, if he gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? For the Son of man shall come in the glory of his Father with the angels: and then he shall reward every man according to his works.” [Matthew 16:24-27.]
(12LtMs, Lt 102a, 1897, 8)
The lessons given to His disciples Christ intended for all the world. “As many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name.” [John 1:12.] Christ taught all who would be His followers that instead of listening to the suggestions of the flesh and the world, instead of sparing themselves, they must begin with self-denial and self-sacrifice as He had given them an example. He taught them that they must not shun the cross, but lift it, and bear it after Jesus, walking in His footsteps. He assured them that to save one’s temporal life by shunning the cross of reproach would mean eternal loss—loss of the soul, of heaven, of the life that measures with the life of God. They lose everything and gain nothing. The Son of man, when He comes in the glory of His Father, will reward every man. He will gather every obedient child into His kingdom, to possess the eternal inheritance.
(12LtMs, Lt 102a, 1897, 9)
Who can give a proper impression of these things to those who claim to be Christians? Many do not understand what the term signifies. The gospel is diffuse and aggressive. It is represented by the saving salt, the transforming leaven, the bright, shining light which shines amid the moral darkness. This light does not become darkness by association with it. It penetrates and dispels the darkness. As soon as one is converted, the old customs and habits and practices are seen in their true bearing. Every soul who is converted kindles his taper at the divine altar. He does not make an effort to shine; he simply shines. He tells some other one with whom he comes in contact, and thus he draws souls. How can he do other than draw them? He has an earnest soul-hunger to see souls saved.
(12LtMs, Lt 102a, 1897, 10)
This is an age of apostasy, and it calls for reformatory action. “And after these things I saw another angel come down from heaven having great power, and the earth was lightened with his glory. And he cried mightily with a loud voice saying, Babylon, the great, is fallen, is fallen, and is become the habitation of devils, and the hold of every foul spirit, and the cage of every unclean and hateful bird. For all nations have drunk of the wine of the wrath of her fornication, and the kings of the earth have committed fornication with her, and the merchants of the earth have waxed rich through the abundance of her delicacies. And I heard another voice from heaven saying, Come out of her, my people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that ye receive not of her plagues. For her sins have reached unto heaven, and God hath remembered her iniquities.” [Revelation 18:1-5.]
(12LtMs, Lt 102a, 1897, 11)
This is a decided message, and the light and glory of God attends it. The clear light of truth that lightens the earth with its glory does not, like the flash of lightning, leave only darkness in its track. It continues to shine. The very earnestness and power of the message bears its own credentials—that it is a voice from the throne of God. It is given with a distinctness in proportion with its importance. The world is to see the light that has been shining in ages past through the Lord’s messengers who have made their protest, which has distinguished us as Protestants. And Protestants will continue to be Protestants in the first, second, and third angels’ messages.
(12LtMs, Lt 102a, 1897, 12)
There is to be no daubing with untempered mortar now. The co-workers with God of the past have born a decided testimony, and have labored to secure reformations in the religious churches, to uplift the standard of Christianity which had been left to trail in the dust. There is need of reforms everywhere, in every town, in every city; and no half-and-half testimonies as witnesses for the downtrodden law will be saving in their influence. The suffering and the oppressed are the special objects of the care of God. All who are followers of Christ will participate with Him in the work of reform, and they will need the spirit which was in Christ Jesus in fulfilling their mission as co-workers with God.
(12LtMs, Lt 102a, 1897, 13)
Intemperance of every kind is holding human beings as in a vise. Tobacco inebriates are multiplying. What shall we say of this evil? It is unclean; it is a narcotic; it stupefies the senses; it chains the will; it holds its victims in the slavery of habits difficult to overcome; it has Satan for its advocate. It destroys the clear perceptions of the mind that sin and corruption may not be distinguished from truth and holiness. This appetite for tobacco is self-destructive. It leads to a craving for something stronger—fermented wines and liquors, all of which are intoxicating.
(12LtMs, Lt 102a, 1897, 14)
If all could trace the lives of those who have acquired this appetite, what scenes would be revealed of its desolating curse. Unholy appetites destroy. They increase until indulgence becomes habit. Satanic inspiration has full power upon the human mind that is overcome by appetite. The conflict against this evil, which is destroying the image of God in man, must be vigorously maintained. The warfare is before us. No tame message will have influence now. God looks upon our world as revolted and corrupted, but He will send His holy angels to aid those who will engage to destroy the worship of these idols.
(12LtMs, Lt 102a, 1897, 15)
Work diligently we must. “The time is at hand.” [Revelation 1:3.] “Ye are laborers together with God,” says the apostle. [1 Corinthians 3:9.] This is no time to follow out your own ideas, your former education and training. These are defective. You need to be born again. The new birth is something that many church members and church workers have never experienced. They have thought that self must come largely into the new life, and therefore there is a little of Christ and very much more of self.
(12LtMs, Lt 102a, 1897, 16)
Brother, brother, be sure and do all that you possibly can to secure to Jesus Christ those who will not bring with them all their inherited and cultivated attributes, for this unfits them for the service of God. They have to battle with an unchanged, unsanctified disposition, and the work of God is marred. Let the plowshare of truth go deep. Then those connected with these souls will not follow their habits and practices. The standard of truth will not be dragged down to meet their defective characters.
(12LtMs, Lt 102a, 1897, 17)
There are men and women, ready to be very active, who are in need of being converted. There is a very lax state of things coming into the ranks of Seventh-day Adventists. There will be no excuse for any who cannot stand the test of the judgment. They make excuses why their characters are so defective, but none will pass in that great day.
(12LtMs, Lt 102a, 1897, 18)
I call most earnestly upon the churches in Melbourne to be converted. By your sluggish indifference you are misrepresenting Christ and the truth. Souls are perishing close at your side for the lack of that soul-stirring message—even the third angel’s message. There is most earnest need of prayer, of faith, of most zealously seeking the Lord. This is the lack with a large number of our churches. It is impossible for them to retain the favor of God, to retain the communion of a Saviour’s love. They are themselves unconverted. They have a name to live, but they are dead at a time when everyone who names the name of Christ should be a living epistle, known and read of all men. They have not brought into their Christian life that spirit, that mind, that was in Christ Jesus. They know not how to draw with Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 102a, 1897, 19)
Many marvel that there is so little vital, pure godliness, so little love and tender compassion, so little tender regard for one another. Many of Christ’s followers have lost their first love. They have not a knowledge of God and of Jesus Christ whom He has sent. The persons with whom we associate, those with whom we come in contact, need our help, our guidance, a word [in] season. They may be in such a condition of mind that a word in season will be sent home by the Holy Spirit as a nail in a sure place. Tomorrow some of these souls may be where we can never reach them again. God help us all to work while the day lasts, for the night cometh, when no man can work.
(12LtMs, Lt 102a, 1897, 20)
Hundreds might be saved if the professed churches that profess the truth of Christ were only what God would have them be—lightbearers in the world. The church in North Fitzroy needs the converting power of God upon hearts and characters. There are many who give themselves to much unbelief, much faultfinding, much bearing of false witness; but this is all the working of the evil spirit so that unity and love shall not exist. O, let the church be purged of all these corrupting elements. Let the truth accomplish its work upon hearts until we, the human agents, shall be complete in Him, is the earnest prayer of
(12LtMs, Lt 102a, 1897, 21)
Your sister in Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 102a, 1897, 22)
Lt 103, 1897
Sutherland, E. A. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia July 23, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in 13MR 254-259. + Prof. E. A. Sutherland
Battle Creek, Michigan Dear Brother:
I am more and more burdened as I see young men coming from the school at Battle Creek deficient in the education they should have. It pains me as I realize how many who should be instructed have not the privilege. From the light given me from the Lord, I know that four or five successive years of application to book study is a mistake. Those who encourage this, close application to books, working the brain and neglecting the education they should gain by using the muscles proportionately with the brain, are simply incapable of retaining the lessons they endeavor to learn.
(12LtMs, Lt 103, 1897, 1)
If one third of the time now occupied in the study of books, using the mental machinery, were occupied in learning lessons in regard to the right use of one’s own physical powers, it would be much more after the Lord’s order, and would elevate the labor question, placing it where idleness would be regarded as a departure from the Word and plans of God. The right use of one’s self includes the whole circle of human obligations to one’s self, to the world, and to God. Then use the physical power proportionately with the mental powers.
(12LtMs, Lt 103, 1897, 2)
While studying authors and lesson books part of the time, students should study with the same application the human machinery, and at the same time demonstrate the fact by using the physical organs in manual labor. Thus they answer the purpose of their Creator. They become self-made men and women.
(12LtMs, Lt 103, 1897, 3)
Had teachers been learning the lessons the Lord would have them learn, there would not be a class of students whose bills must be settled by some one or else they leave the college with a heavy debt hanging over them. Educators are not doing half their work when they know a young man to be devoting years of close application to the study of books, not seeking to earn means to pay his own way, and yet do nothing in the matter. Every case should be investigated; every youth kindly and interestedly inquired after, and his financial situation ascertained. One of the studies put before him as most valuable should be the exercise of his God-given reason in harmony with his physical powers—head, body, hands, and feet.
(12LtMs, Lt 103, 1897, 4)
The right use of one’s self is the most valuable lesson that can be learned. We are not to do brain work and stop there, or make physical exertions, and stop there; but we are to make the very best use of the various parts composing the human machinery, brain, bone, and muscle, body, head, and heart. No man is fit for the ministry who does not understand how to do this.
(12LtMs, Lt 103, 1897, 5)
The study of Latin and Greek is of far less consequence to ourselves, to the world, and to God, than the thorough study and use of the whole human machinery. It is a sin to study books to the neglect of how to become familiar with the various branches of usefulness in practical life. With some, close application to books is a dissipation. The physical machinery being untaxed leads to a great amount of activity in the brain. This becomes the devil’s workshop. Never can that life that is ignorant of the house we live in, be an all-round life. The schools are not half awake.
(12LtMs, Lt 103, 1897, 6)
The neglect of some parts of the living machinery, while other parts are put to the tax, and wearied and overworked, makes many youth too weak to resist evil practices. They have little power of self-control. The blood is called too liberally to the brain, and the nervous system is overworked. Exercise should be taken, not in play and amusement merely to please self, but exercise in the science of doing good. There is a science in the use of the hand. In the cultivation of the soil, in building houses, in studying and planning various methods of labor, the brain must be exercised; and students can apply themselves to study to much better purpose when a portion of their time is devoted to physical taxation, wearying the muscles. Nature will then give repose and sweet rest.
(12LtMs, Lt 103, 1897, 7)
The hand was made to do all kinds of work, and students who think that education consists only in book study never make a right use of the fingers and hands. Students should be thoroughly taught to do the very work that thousands of hands are never educated to do. The powers thus developed and cultivated can be most carefully employed.
(12LtMs, Lt 103, 1897, 8)
Students who apply themselves wholly to brain labor in the school room injure the whole living machinery by confinement. The brain is wearied, and Satan brings in a whole list of temptations, enticing them to engage in forbidden indulgences, to have a change, to let off steam. Yielding to these temptations, they do wrong things, which injure themselves and do mischief to others. This may be done only in sport. The brain is active and they desire to play some pranks. But some one must undertake to undo the mischief they did under temptation.
(12LtMs, Lt 103, 1897, 9)
Teach the students that their life is a talent, to be highly appreciated, and to be dedicated to the Lord. Teach them that they are to work in Christ’s lives. Students, your life is God’s property. He has entrusted it to you that you may carefully study how you can best honor and glorify Him. You are really the Lord’s, for He created you. You are His by redemption, for He gave His life for you. Who was it that paid the price of the ransom for your deliverance from Satan? It was the only begotten Son of God. He was the Majesty of heaven, and for His sake, you should appreciate every power, every organ, every sinew and muscle. Preserve every portion of the living machinery, that you may use it for God. Preserve it for Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 103, 1897, 10)
Your health depends upon the right use of your physical organism. Do not misuse or abuse any portion of your God-given powers, physical, mental, or moral. All your habits are to be brought under the control of a mind that is itself under the control of God. Unhealthful habits of every order, late habits of night, late hours in bed in the morning, rapid eating, are to be overcome. The digestion begins in the mouth. Masticate your food thoroughly. Let there be no hurried eating. Have your room well-ventilated, and perform useful, physical labor.
(12LtMs, Lt 103, 1897, 11)
tight lacing is a sin, and will bring its sure results. The lungs, the liver, the heart, need all the room the Lord has provided for them. Your Creator understood how much room the heart and liver requires in order to act their vital parts in the human organism. Let not Satan tempt you to crowd the delicate organs so that they shall be trammeled in their work. Do not, because the fashions of this unregenerate world are taken up as desirable, so crowd the life forces that they have no freedom. Satan suggested all such fashions, that the human family might suffer the sure results of abusing God’s handiwork.
(12LtMs, Lt 103, 1897, 12)
The giving way to violent emotions endangers life. Many die under a burst of rage and passion. Many educate themselves to have spasms. These they can prevent if they will; but it requires willpower to overcome a wrong course of action. All this must be a part of the education received in the school, for we are God’s property. The sacred temple of the body must be kept pure and uncontaminated, that God’s Holy Spirit may dwell therein.
(12LtMs, Lt 103, 1897, 13)
We need to guard faithfully the Lord’s property, for any abuse of our powers shortens the time that our lives can be used for the glory of God. Bear in mind that we must consecrate all, soul, body, and spirit, to God. It is His purchased possession, and must be used intelligently, to the end that we may prolong and preserve the talent of life itself. By properly using our powers and talents to their fullest extent in the most useful employment, by keeping every organ in health to do the best and most useful service for God, by preserving every organ, that body and mind, sinew and muscle, may work harmoniously, we may do the best and most precious service for God.
(12LtMs, Lt 103, 1897, 14)
There are invalids in our world born with feeble constitutions. They suffer from no fault of their own. Let these study patient endurance. In so doing they can glorify God.
(12LtMs, Lt 103, 1897, 15)
Students, study for time and for eternity. Bring good, hard, earnest labor into your scholastic life. Do not feel that you must take a classical course before you enter the ministry. The Lord has given light that the largest number who have done this have, through the protracted study of books, disqualified themselves for the labor which was essential for them to do.
(12LtMs, Lt 103, 1897, 16)
What is Paul’s charge to Timothy? “Therefore I endure all things for the elect’s sakes, that they also may obtain the salvation which is in Christ Jesus with eternal glory. It is a faithful saying: For if we be dead with him, we shall also live with him; if we suffer, we shall also reign with him; if we deny him, he also will deny us. If we believe not, yet he abideth faithful; he can not deny himself. Of these things put them in remembrance, charging them before the Lord that they strive not about words to no profit, but to the subverting of the hearers. Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth.” [2 Timothy 2:10-15.]
(12LtMs, Lt 103, 1897, 17)
Lt 104, 1897
Sutherland, E. A. Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia December 15, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in PH086 40-48. Dear Brother:
In your letter you ask me serious questions and lay out propositions which are sensible and right. There should be schools established wherever there is a church or company of believers. Teachers should be employed to educate the children of Sabbathkeepers. This would close the door to a large number who are drifting into Battle Creek—the very place where the Lord has warned them not to go. In the light that has been given me, I have been pointed to the churches that are scattered in different localities, and I have been shown that the strength of these churches depends upon their growth in usefulness and efficiency.
(12LtMs, Lt 104, 1897, 1)
A large amount of the responsibility piled up in Battle Creek is not in accordance with the principles that the Lord has set before us. There should be fewer buildings erected in Battle Creek to call the crowds of people there. All these large buildings should not be crowded together as they are. They should have been placed in different localities and not in the very midst of one city. The various other cities should have their representatives of the truth. I cannot go contrary to the will of God and say, Erect more buildings in Battle Creek; but I would say, Build in other localities. There should be fewer interests centered at Battle Creek and far more in other places where there is nothing to give character to the work of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 104, 1897, 2)
In all our churches there should be schools, and teachers in those schools who are missionaries. It is essential that teachers be educated to act their important part in educating the children of Sabbathkeepers, not only in the sciences, but in the Scriptures. These schools, established in different localities and conducted by God-fearing men and women, as the case demands, should be built upon the same principles as were the schools of the prophets.
(12LtMs, Lt 104, 1897, 3)
Special talent should be given to the education of the youth. The children are to be trained to become missionaries; and but few understand distinctly what they must do to be saved. Few have the instruction in religious lines that is essential. If the instructors have a religious experience themselves, they will be able to communicate to their students the knowledge of the love of God they have received. These lessons can only be given from those who are themselves truly converted; and this is the noblest missionary work that any man or woman can undertake.
(12LtMs, Lt 104, 1897, 4)
Children should be educated to read, to write, to understand figures, to keep their own accounts, when very young. They may go forward, advancing step by step in this knowledge. But before everything else they should be taught that the fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom. They may be educated line upon line, precept upon precept, here a little, and there a little; but the one aim ever before the teacher should be to educate the children to know God, and Jesus Christ whom He has sent.
(12LtMs, Lt 104, 1897, 5)
Teach the youth that sin in any line is defined in the Scriptures as “transgression of the law.” [1 John 3:4.] Sin originated with the first great apostate. He was a disobedient subject. He led the family of heaven into disobedience, and he and all who were united with him were cast out of the Paradise of God. Teach the children in simple language that they must be obedient to their parents and give their hearts to God. Jesus Christ is waiting to accept and bless them if they will only come to Him and ask Him to pardon all their transgressions and take away their sins. And when they ask Him to pardon all their transgression, they must believe that He will do it.
(12LtMs, Lt 104, 1897, 6)
God wants every child of tender age to be His child, to be adopted into His family. Young though they may be, the youth may be members of the household of faith and have a most precious experience. They may have hearts that are tender and ready to receive impressions that will be lasting. They may have their hearts drawn out in confidence and love for Jesus, and live for the Saviour. Christ will make them little missionaries. The whole current of their thoughts may be changed so that sin will not appear a thing to be enjoyed, but to be hated and shunned.
(12LtMs, Lt 104, 1897, 7)
Small as well as older children will be benefitted by this instruction; and in thus simplifying the plan of salvation, the teachers will receive as great blessings as those who are taught. The Holy Spirit of God will impress the lessons upon the receptive minds of the children, that they may grasp the ideas of Bible truth in their simplicity. And the Lord will give an experience to these children in missionary lines; He will suggest to them lines of thought which the teachers themselves did not have.
(12LtMs, Lt 104, 1897, 8)
The children who are properly instructed will be witnesses for the truth. Teachers who are nervous and easily irritated should not be placed over the youth. They must love the children, because they are the younger members of the Lord’s family. The Lord will inquire of them as of the parents, “What have you done with my flock, my beautiful flock?” [Jeremiah 13:20.]
(12LtMs, Lt 104, 1897, 9)
It is surprising to see how little is done by many parents to save their own children. Every family in the home life should be a church, a beautiful symbol of the church of God in heaven. If parents realized their responsibilities to their children, they would not under any circumstances scold and fret at them. This is not the kind of education any child should have. Many, many children have learned to be faultfinding, fretful, scolding, passionate children, because they were allowed to be passionate at home. Parents are to consider that they are in the place of God to their children, to encourage every right principle, and repress every wrong thought.
(12LtMs, Lt 104, 1897, 10)
If in their own homes children are allowed to be disrespectful, disobedient, unthankful, and peevish, their sins lie at the door of the parents. It is the special work of fathers and mothers to teach their children with kindliness and affection. They are to show that as parents they are the ones to hold the lines, to govern, and not to be governed by their children. They are to teach that obedience is required of them, and thus they educate them to submit to the authority of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 104, 1897, 11)
In educating children and youth, teachers should never allow one passionate word or gesture to mar their work, for in so doing they imbue the students with the same spirit which they themselves possess. The Lord would have our primary, as well as our schools for older persons, of that character that angels of God can walk through the rooms and behold, in the order and principles of government, the order and government of heaven. This is thought by many to be impossible; but every school should begin with this, and should work most earnestly to preserve the spirit of Christ in temper, in communications, in instruction, the teachers placing themselves in the channel of light where the Lord can use them as His agents, to reflect His own likeness of character upon the students. They may know that as God-fearing instructors they have helpers every hour to impress upon the hearts of the children the valuable lessons given.
(12LtMs, Lt 104, 1897, 12)
The Lord works with every consecrated teacher, and it is for his own interest to realize this. Instructors who are under the discipline of God do not manufacture anything themselves. They receive grace and truth and light through the Holy Spirit to communicate to the children. They are under the greatest Teacher the world has ever known, and how unbecoming it would be for them to have an unkind spirit, a sharp, harsh voice full of irritation. In this they would perpetuate their own defects in the children.
(12LtMs, Lt 104, 1897, 13)
O for a clear perception of what we might accomplish if we would learn of Jesus! The springs of heavenly peace and joy, unsealed in the soul of the teacher by the magic words of inspiration, will become a mighty river of influence to bless all who connect with Him. Do not think that the Bible will become a tiresome book to the children. Under a wise instructor the Word will become more and more desirable. It will be to them as the bread of life, and will never grow old. There is in it a freshness and a beauty that attracts and charms the children and youth. It is like the sun shining upon the earth, giving its brightness and warmth, yet never exhausted. By lessons from Bible history and doctrine, the children and youth can learn that all other books are inferior to this. They can find here a fountain of mercy and of love.
(12LtMs, Lt 104, 1897, 14)
God’s holy, educating spirit is in His Word. A light, a new and precious light, shines forth upon every page. Truth is there revealed, and words and sentences are made bright and appropriate for the occasion, as the voice of God speaking to them.
(12LtMs, Lt 104, 1897, 15)
We need to recognize the Holy Spirit as our Enlightener. That Spirit loves to address the children and discover to them the treasures and beauties of the Word of God. The promises spoken by the great Teacher will captivate the senses and animate the soul of the child with a spiritual power that is divine. There will grow in the fruitful mind a familiarity with divine things which will be as a barricade against the temptations of the enemy.
(12LtMs, Lt 104, 1897, 16)
The work of teachers is an important one. They should make the Word of God their meditation. God will communicate by His own Spirit to the soul. Pray as you study, “Lord, open thou my eyes that I may behold wondrous things out of thy law.” [Psalm 119:18.] When the teacher will rely upon God in prayer, the Spirit of Christ will come upon him, and God will work through him by the Holy Spirit upon the minds of the students. The Holy Spirit fills the mind and heart with sweet hope, and courage, and Bible imagery, and this will be communicated to the students. The words of truth will grow in importance and assume a breadth and fullness of meaning of which you never dreamed. The beauty and riches of the Word of God have a transforming influence upon mind and character. The sparks of heavenly love will fall upon the hearts of the children as an inspiration. We may bring hundreds and thousands of children to Christ if we will work for them.
(12LtMs, Lt 104, 1897, 17)
Let all to whom these words may come be melted and subdued. Let us in our educational work embrace far more than we have done of the children and youth, and there will be a whole army of missionaries raised up to work for God. I say again, Establish schools for the children where there are churches—those who assemble to worship God. Where there are churches, let there be schools. Work as if you were working for your life to save children from being drowned in the polluting, corrupting influences of this life.
(12LtMs, Lt 104, 1897, 18)
Too much is centered in Battle Creek. I need not advise that the sound of ax and hammer be heard in Battle Creek in erecting new buildings. There are places where our schools should have been in operation years ago. Let these now be started under wise directors. The youth should be educated in their own churches. In America you can build three school houses cheaper than we can build one in this country. It is a grievous offense to God that there has been so great neglect to make provision for the improvement of the children and youth when Providence has so abundantly supplied us with facilities with which to work.
(12LtMs, Lt 104, 1897, 19)
Can we wonder that children and youth drift into temptation, and become educated in wrong lines by their association with other neglected children? These children are not wisely educated to use their active minds and limbs to do helpful work. Our schools should teach the children all kinds of simple labor. Can we wonder, neglected as they have been, that their energies become devoted to amusements that do them no good, that their religious aspirations are chilled, and their spiritual life darkened? Thousands in their own homes are left almost uneducated. “It is so much trouble,” says the mother. “I would rather do these things myself; it is such a trouble; you bother me.”
(12LtMs, Lt 104, 1897, 20)
Does not mother remember that she herself had to learn in jots and tittles before she could be helpful? It is a wrong to children to refuse to teach them little by little. Keep these children with you. Let them ask questions, and in patience answer them. Give your little children something to do, and let them have the happiness of supposing they help you. There must be no repulsing of your children when trying to do proper things. If they make mistakes, if accidents happen, and things break, do not blame [them]. Their whole future life depends upon the education you give them in their childhood years. Teach them that all their faculties of body and mind were given them to use, and that all are the Lord’s, pledged to His service. To some of these children the Lord gives an early intimation of His will. Parents and teachers, begin early to teach the children to cultivate their God-given faculties.
(12LtMs, Lt 104, 1897, 21)
My brother, I feel deeply over the mistake of locating so many important interests at Battle Creek. There is a world to receive the light of truth. Had interests been located in cities where nothing is being done, the warning message would be given to other cities. You have asked me in regard to the schools being opened in our churches. I have tried to answer you. That light which has centered in Battle Creek should have been shining in other localities. Schools should have been opened in places where they are so much needed. This will provide for the children and youth who are drifting in to Battle Creek. Let the church carry a burden for the lambs of the flock in its locality, and see how many can be educated and trained to do service for God.
(12LtMs, Lt 104, 1897, 22)
Lt 105, 1897
Skinner, Brother “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia March 19, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother Skinner:
We received a letter from Brother Daniells today, and enclosed with it was yours to him. My brother, we except you to come to Cooranbong, not merely to serve as a cook, but as an educator. We need just the help you can give us. We want you to have a class, and the whole school, old and young, be in that class as learners. If the matters were merely to go through the cooking which women are accustomed to do, we might get that want supplied, but it is in altogether different lines. It is to educate those who have intelligence and perceptive faculties to understand how to cook upon healthful principles. Come right along. We have been expecting you for weeks. Brother Lacey cannot begin with the school, and we must all take hold together and make it a success. We must not be left now.
(12LtMs, Lt 105, 1897, 1)
I understand that Maude Camp and you are to be married. If so, why not have her come and have the advantages of the school, which she has desired so much. I would be very pleased with this union. Maude has proved herself to be a faithful, good-principled girl. You could both come. We really greatly desire to see Maude, who was, for a long time, a member of my family. She only left me because her mother desired her presence so much. I hope you will both come. I promised to help Maude in her expenses in attending school. I will do this. I want the dear, faithful girl to have the advantages she has so longed for.
(12LtMs, Lt 105, 1897, 2)
You must come, my brother, for we do not know what we could do unless you did come. We want the education in these lines to begin at once. It is one of the most essential in the school. Brother Lacey has been very sick, but he is now improving, although still very weak. Dr. Deck has watched this case of typhoid fever all the way through, while Brother Semmens has given hygienic treatment.
(12LtMs, Lt 105, 1897, 3)
Now, my brother, it is educators that we want, and we are under the necessity to [have you] come, come, come, as soon as possible, and help us in our necessity. We need you now, just now. Brother and Sister Lacey can do nothing to make plans, and you could help us. Brother Haskell will give Bible studies. The Lord has been restoring Brother Lacey. We hope you will not disappoint us. If I had thought you had any idea of not coming, I would have written sooner. There, I think I have said enough. The Lord lead and guide you to make right decisions.
(12LtMs, Lt 105, 1897, 4)
Lt 106, 1897
Starr, Brother and Sister [G. B.] “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales May 14, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in 15MR 286-293. + Dear Brother and Sister Starr:
We were glad to receive your letter, but sorry, very sorry that the rebellious element is still active in the service of the first leader of all rebellions. And he will keep them in his service. I have been carrying heavy burdens of responsibility, one thing following upon the heels of another, until I am very weary. I have frequently been unable to sleep, and am often writing at the hours of twelve p.m. and one a.m., with pen in hand working off the burden that lies heavily upon my soul. But I feel the greatest weight when I think of these men, who have had great light and great opportunities and yet have turned from the light to give heed unto fables. My prayer to God has not ceased in their behalf. Yes, I tell it all to the Lord, and I do not cease to beseech the Father in the name of His Son Jesus Christ that He will break the infatuation that is upon these souls, and let them see who is their leader.
(12LtMs, Lt 106, 1897, 1)
For about three weeks I have been exhausted. I have not attended meetings at all. This work of responsibility that I carry alone is very severe on me. Yet thus it has been ever since the camp meeting at Adelaide, one burden following another. You are aware that in Melbourne they needed special help. Well, that burden I carried for a long time until Brethren Miller and Woods again united with the office. Then, on coming home, we found that an element was at work here in the influence of Brother Shannon and wife. They had done all they possibly could not only in Cooranbong but in other places, to disparage the work here.
(12LtMs, Lt 106, 1897, 2)
Brother Lawrence united with Brother Shannon to complain, and to use his aftersight rather than his foresight. He revealed himself as the most selfish, penurious, money-loving man that I have ever had any knowledge of. We could do nothing with them. What Brother Lawrence would confess one day he would take back the next. This influence was carried to Africa by Brother Shannon, and Hardy there united with Shannon to make everything at Cooranbong appear as black as night. I have written hundreds of pages to set forth the truth as it is.
(12LtMs, Lt 106, 1897, 3)
Then came the apostasy in Adelaide. I cared not for anything they might say against me, as far as myself was concerned; but I cared for the flock of God, whom they were feeding with falsehood and leading in strange paths. And I cared for their own souls. At the family altar I prayed for them and for the poor souls deceived by them. I prayed for them in the silent watches of the night. I kept these matters before the Lord.
(12LtMs, Lt 106, 1897, 4)
Thus one perplexity after another kept coming in until I am completely exhausted with heart trouble. It seemed sometimes that I should not recover. For several days I have not been able to sit up much, and have been so weak that I could not endure the sound of the human voice. But the day before yesterday I was beginning to feel a little stronger, and today [I am] still better. I am up very early, for I have not slept past two o’clock for many mornings in succession. But I am in the hands of the Lord. I have tried to think of a place somewhere where for some weeks I could be free from perplexity and anxiety, but I do not know where that place can be. But the Lord sees, the Lord knows, and He can help; He can carry this burden which presses me so heavily. The greatest difficulty, the very weightiest burden, is the thought of the souls who have been tempted and are being rejoiced over by the synagogue of Satan.
(12LtMs, Lt 106, 1897, 5)
We are nearing the close of this earth’s history. The Lord is soon to come. Must we give up these souls to be led and controlled by Satan? Must we leave them to perish in their sins? O, the value of the human soul! They have cost Jesus Christ so much! And if I feel so sad over the losing of one soul, how must Jesus Christ be grieved. He gave His life for them, and one soul is of more value with God that the wealth of the whole world.
(12LtMs, Lt 106, 1897, 6)
This morning I designed to attend the early morning meeting for the first time, but I dare not. I find I am not strong enough to expend my vitality unless I am required to do this. Brother Haskell has been taking up the subject of the sanctuary. I so much wish that you could be present to hear him. All who hear him say that he is familiar with the subject, and understands it, proving every idea and statement made from the Scripture. They all were very much gratified to hear him, and say that he goes far deeper in his understanding of Bible subjects than anyone they have heard.
(12LtMs, Lt 106, 1897, 7)
But we will not make comparisons. The Lord is good, and when I see the old burden bearers who have not withheld themselves from the Lord and from denial of self, but who have given themselves to serve Him with heart and pen and voice and means, I know that the Lord will certainly use these old standard bearers if they will cling fast to Him. The old and white-haired veterans reveal the truth of the sayings of David, “O God, thou hast taught me from my youth, and hitherto have I declared thy wondrous works.” [Psalm 71:17.] He seems to feel that the inspiration of his early zeal is not extinct. Though he is old and grey haired, he entreats that the Lord will not forsake him, but will remain with him still to bear his testimony to the present generation.
(12LtMs, Lt 106, 1897, 8)
Young men are needed in the work—those who will undertake the work interestedly and will carry it forward zealously and strongly. But the Lord is, and ever will be, with the old, steadfast leaders who have held fast to the truth in times of peril. When the foundation of the faith of the younger men seems to be swept away and their houses falling, the testimony, like that of Caleb, will be heard from the old warriors, “Let us go up at once, and possess it; for we are well able to overcome it.” Then the voice of unbelief was heard. “We be not able to go up against the people, for they are stronger than we.” [Numbers 13:30, 31.] One word of unbelief prepares the way for more. Satan does not easily let alone any men whom he can tempt to dishonor God by his unbelief.
(12LtMs, Lt 106, 1897, 9)
“And they brought up an evil report of the land which they had searched unto the children of Israel, saying, The land, through which we have gone to search it, is a land that eateth up the inhabitants thereof; and all the men that we saw in it are men of great stature. And there we saw the giants, the sons of Anak, which come of the giants; and we were in our own sight as grasshoppers, and so we were in their sight.” [Verses 32, 33.]
(12LtMs, Lt 106, 1897, 10)
What effect did this report have upon the congregation? “And all the congregation lifted up their voice, and cried: and the people wept that night. And all the children of Israel murmured against Moses and against Aaron; and the whole congregation said unto them, Would God that we had died in the land of Egypt! or would God we had died in this wilderness! And wherefore hath the Lord brought us unto this land, to fall by the sword, that our wives and our children should be a prey? Were it not better for us to return into Egypt? And they said one to another, Let us make a captain, and let us return into Egypt.” [Numbers 14:1-4.] Let all read carefully the fourteenth chapter of Numbers, and let them understand that men can make false reports as did these who had been sent on an errand which concerned the movements of more than a million of people.
(12LtMs, Lt 106, 1897, 11)
“And Joshua the sun of Nun, and Caleb the son of Jephunneh, which were of them that searched the land, rent their clothes; and they spake unto all the company of the children of Israel, saying, The land, which we passed through to search it, is an exceeding good land. If the Lord delight in us, then he will bring us into this land, and give it to us; a land which floweth with milk and honey. Only rebel not ye against the Lord, neither fear ye the people of the land; for they are bread for us: their defence is departed from them, and the Lord is with us; fear them not. But all the congregation bade stone them with stones.” [Verses 6-10.]
(12LtMs, Lt 106, 1897, 12)
Those who bore the discouraging report and brought discouragement to the whole camp of Israel, when opposed because of their unfaithful witness, served the satanic powers in complete rebellion. And they carried the disappointed congregation with them, in that they believed their interpretation of the land. The congregation took the wrong side, and, inspired by satanic agencies, they cried out against the faithful spies and bade them stone Joshua and Caleb who dared to bear the truthful representation in regard to the land.
(12LtMs, Lt 106, 1897, 13)
But there is always a defense provided for those who have borne witness for the truth. What was it that saved the lives of Joshua and Caleb? “And the glory of the Lord appeared in the tabernacle of the congregation before all the children of Israel. And the Lord said unto Moses, How long will this people provoke me? And how long will it be ere they believe me, for all the signs which I have shewed among them? I will smite them with the pestilence, and disinherit them, and will make of thee a greater nation, and mightier than they.” [Verses 10-12.]
(12LtMs, Lt 106, 1897, 14)
We have here a positive evidence that the anger of the Lord is awakened against the rebellious people—those who had been blessed with great light and precious opportunities to know the will of God, which was communicated to them by Christ Himself, their invisible Leader, enshrouded in the pillar of cloud by day and the pillar of fire by night. God had been their defense against the vast army of Pharaoh; He had wrought for them, providing them food when hungry; He had quieted their murmurings by giving them springs of cool water flowing from the rock. He had manifested to them His glory, and yet when Satan tempted them, they believed all the suggestions and representations he put into their minds against Moses and Aaron, against Joshua and Caleb.
(12LtMs, Lt 106, 1897, 15)
The Lord had worked wondrously for them, yet they were ever ready to turn away from them and follow the suggestions of Satan. But they were passing the boundary of God’s forbearance and patience. He declared, “I will smite them with the pestilence, and disinherit them, and will make of thee a greater nation and mightier than they.” [Verse 12.]
(12LtMs, Lt 106, 1897, 16)
But “Moses said unto the Lord, Then the Egyptians shall hear it, (for thou broughtest up this people in thy might from among them;) and they will tell it to the inhabitants of this land; for they have heard that thou Lord art among this people, that thou Lord art seen face to face, and that thy cloud standeth over them, and that thou goest before them, by day time in a pillar of cloud, and in a pillar of fire by night. Now if thou shalt kill all this people as one man, then the nations which have heard the fame of thee shall speak, saying, Because the Lord was not able to bring this people on the land which he sware unto them, therefore he hath slain them in the wilderness.
(12LtMs, Lt 106, 1897, 17)
“And now, I beseech thee, let the power of my Lord be great, according as thou hast spoken saying, The Lord is longsuffering and of great mercy, forgiving iniquity and transgression, and by no means clearing the guilty visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children unto the third and fourth generation. Pardon, I beseech, thee, the iniquity of this people according unto the greatness of thy mercy, and as thou hast forgiven this people from Egypt even until now.” [Verses 13-19.]
(12LtMs, Lt 106, 1897, 18)
O Moses, thou man of mighty faith, privileged to plead in behalf of rebellious Israel in such wise and understanding words! Thou wouldst not receive inducing promises even from God, that He should let Israel alone to be destroyed and His name be dishonored among the heathen nations. The promise of great honor Moses would not accept. And what saith the Lord? “And the Lord said, I have pardoned according to thy word. But as truly as I live, all the earth shall be filled with the glory of the Lord. Because all those men that have seen my glory, and my miracles, which I did in Egypt and in the wilderness, and have tempted me now these ten times, and have not hearkened to my voice; surely they shall not see the land which I sware unto their fathers, neither shall any of them that provoked them see it. But my servant Caleb, because he hath another spirit with him, and hath followed me fully, him will I bring into the land whereunto he went; and his seed shall possess it.” [Verses 20-24.]
(12LtMs, Lt 106, 1897, 19)
And what about the men who had caused the Israelites to murmur? “And the Lord spake unto Moses and to Aaron saying, ... Say unto them, As truly as I live saith the Lord, as ye have spoken in mine ears, so will I do to you; your carcasses shall fall in this wilderness; and all that were numbered of you, according to your whole number, from twenty years old and upward, which have murmured against me, doubtless ye shall not come into the land, concerning which I sware to make you dwell therein, save Caleb the son of Jephunneh and Joshua the son of Nun. But your little ones, which ye said would be a prey, them will I bring in, and they shall know the land which ye have despised. But as for you, your carcasses, they shall fall in the wilderness. And your children shall wander in the wilderness forty years, and bear your whoredoms, until your carcasses be wasted in the wilderness. After the number of the days in which ye searched the land, even forty days, each day for a year, shall ye bear your iniquities, even forty years, and ye shall know my breach of promise.” [Verses 26, 28-34.]
(12LtMs, Lt 106, 1897, 20)
The Lord promised the children of Israel: “Ye shall see the altering of my purpose.” (Margin) Thus we see that the Lord’s promises are upon condition of obedience. He says, “Ye shall do my judgments, and keep my ordinances, to walk therein; I am the Lord thy God. Ye shall therefore keep my statutes and my judgments; which if a man do, he shall live in them; I am the Lord.” [Leviticus 18:4, 5.] Read the first chapter of Deuteronomy carefully, and see why the Lord refused to bring the adults of the army that left Egypt into the promised land. Also Deuteronomy 28.
(12LtMs, Lt 106, 1897, 21)
“And Moses said unto the children of Gad and to the children of Reuben, Shall your brethren go to war, and shall ye sit here? And wherefore discourage ye the heart of the children of Israel from going over into the land which the Lord hath given them? Thus did your fathers, when I sent them from Kadesh-barnea to see the land. For when they went up to the valley of Eschol, and saw the land, they discouraged the heart of the children of Israel, that they should not go into the land which the Lord had given them.
(12LtMs, Lt 106, 1897, 22)
“And the Lord’s anger was kindled the same time, and he sware, saying, Surely none of the men that came up out of Egypt, from twenty years old and upward, shall see the land which I sware unto Abraham, unto Isaac, and unto Jacob; because they have not wholly followed me; save Caleb the son of Jephunneh, the Kenezite, and Joshua the son of Nun: for they have wholly followed the Lord. And the Lord’s anger was kindled against Israel, and he made them wander in the wilderness forty years, until all the generation, that had done evil in the sight of the Lord, was consumed. And, behold ye are risen up in your fathers’ stead, an increase of sinful men, to augment yet the fierce anger of the Lord toward Israel. For if ye turn away from after him, he will yet again leave them in the wilderness; and ye shall destroy all this people.” [Numbers 32:6-15.]
(12LtMs, Lt 106, 1897, 23)
The Lord God is a jealous God; yet He bears long with the sins and transgression of His people in this generation. If the people of God had walked in His counsel, the work of God would have advanced, the messages of truth would have been borne to all people that dwell on the face of the whole earth. Had the people of God believed Him and been doers of His Word, had they kept His commandments, the angel would not have come flying through heaven with the message to the four angels that were to let loose the winds that they should blow upon the earth, saying Hold, hold, the four winds that they blow not upon the earth until I have sealed the servants of God in their foreheads. But because the people are disobedient, unthankful, unholy, as were ancient Israel, time is prolonged that all may hear the last message of mercy proclaimed with a loud voice. The Lord’s work has been hindered, the sealing time delayed. Many have not heard the truth. But the Lord will give them a chance to hear and be converted, and the great work of God will go forward.
(12LtMs, Lt 106, 1897, 24)
Lt 107, 1897
Starr, Brother and Sister [G. B.] “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia May 7, 1897 Previously unpublished. + Dear Brother and Sister Starr:
Your letter has been received. I am glad to hear from you at any time. In searching over my writings, I have come across some matter that was given to Brother and Sister Holland, who have both given up the Sabbath. I am sorry for this. Through the power and grace given me of the Lord, I labored for them; but all the visiting, all the prayers offered, all the earnest efforts put forth, did not save them from making shipwreck of their faith. I was sorry that they did not heed the voice of warning, and build upon the rock.
(12LtMs, Lt 107, 1897, 1)
“He that hath (knoweth) my commandments, he it is that loveth me, and he that loveth me shall be loved of my Father, and I will love him, and will manifest myself to him. Judas saith unto him, not Iscariot, Lord, how is it that thou wilt manifest thyself unto us, and not unto the world? Jesus answered, and said unto him, 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. He that loveth me not keepeth not my sayings. And the word which ye hear is not mine, but the Father’s which sent me.” [John 14:21-24.]
(12LtMs, Lt 107, 1897, 2)
There is an inexpressible fullness in these words. No one needs to err if they will heed the words spoken by Christ in regard to the law of God. We need to urge these words home to every individual soul. We have no time to lose now. Every soul needs to be wide awake, or we shall be taken unawares. Has not the warning been given that everything that can be shaken will be shaken? Should we then be surprised to see the shaking time come just prior to the coming of the Son of man in the clouds of heaven with power and great glory? We need to be established, to be built up in the faith, to gather for the soul those properties that will make us firm and unmovable.
(12LtMs, Lt 107, 1897, 3)
The Lord Jesus asked the disciples, “What went ye out for to see? A reed shaken by the wind?” [Luke 7:24.] We have opportunity to see this class in abundance. What was it that imperilled the life of John? It was the straight and proving testimony that was given to Herod because of his sins. Herod’s unlawful wife was so exceedingly mad that she could not rest until the head of the greatest prophet that ever lived was brought to her in a charger. Those who reprove in the gate are hated. The plain testimonies of the Spirit of God will cut the fleshly heart, piercing even to the joints and the marrow. The God-given testimony will work, even as a savor of life unto life, or of death unto death. And these testimonies will be given when required, whether men will hear, or refuse to hear, and to heed. The work of God will go forward without them, but they are the losers. The third angel’s message will triumph, and all who will voice, with heart and soul, the third angel’s message will triumph with that message.
(12LtMs, Lt 107, 1897, 4)
We are to awaken the sleeping world. “And the third angel followed them, saying with a loud voice, If any man worship the beast or his image, and receive his mark in his forehead or in his hand, the same shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God, which is poured out without mixture into the cup of his indignation; and he shall be tormented with fire and brimstone in the presence of the holy angels, and in the presence of the Lamb.... Here is the patience of the saints, here are they that keep the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus.” [Revelation 14:9, 10, 12.]
(12LtMs, Lt 107, 1897, 5)
My brethren and sisters, this lesson that has been given you in Adelaide is to teach you the way of the Lord. You cannot trust in man or make flesh your arm. There is one you may trust, who will never mislead or disappoint you. It is He who has paid the infinite price for your soul. O that the church in Adelaide may so humble their hearts before God that He can abundantly bless them! “If any man be in Christ, he is a new creature.” [2 Corinthians 5:17.] Out of Christ we may make every pretension, and yet not be a partaker of the divine nature. Pretense and assumption is not pure godliness. The words of Peter are right to the point. “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who according to his abundant mercy hath begotten us again to a lively hope, ... to an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled, and that fadeth not away.” [1 Peter 1:3, 4.]
(12LtMs, Lt 107, 1897, 6)
I must close now.
(12LtMs, Lt 107, 1897, 7)
Lt 108, 1897
Starr, Brother and Sister [G. B.] “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia December 14, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother and Sister Starr:
I think your letter to Queensland is good. It presents the matter in a correct way. They know not what to expect, and they must not be disappointed.
(12LtMs, Lt 108, 1897, 1)
I am glad the rain is now over. There is a slight fog here this morning. We had a beautiful sunset last evening.
(12LtMs, Lt 108, 1897, 2)
I pray for you who are working in Sydney most earnestly. I pray that the Lord will direct you to the scattered ones who have not yet been visited. From the light God has given me, I know that there are hundreds awakened and deeply concerned in regard to the Sabbath. I was cautioned to be guarded in reference to censuring the ministers and churches, for this will not be wise. Preach the truth, Bible truth, straight, but give no reason for the convicted ones to think that we are making a raid on the churches. The ministers are ready to catch every word, and will misinterpret and misapply our words, as they do the Scriptures, to mean something of which they should be afraid. Their enlightenment is to confuse and to mistake. We must be wise as serpents and harmless as doves. But the trumpet must give a certain sound. Truth spoken as it is in Jesus, and yet in demonstration of the Spirit, will have the endorsement of the Holy Spirit.
(12LtMs, Lt 108, 1897, 3)
The Lord lives and reigns. He will work, and none can hinder. The “I will’s” of Christ must be plain and decidedly brought out. The clear beauty of the truth, kept before the people, will make its impression, for the Holy Spirit, who is Truth, will shine into the heart and into the chambers of the mind. The Word of the God of truth is a sharp, twoedged sword, which cuts both ways. The power of the truth will do its work.
(12LtMs, Lt 108, 1897, 4)
The power of the world and false religions have an overmastering power to hold men in deception and delusion. We need to bring all the cheerful joy that heaven so abundantly supplies into our work. There should be no sinking into the slough of despond. The Lord has spoken comforting words to those who will honor Him by receiving them, “Peace I leave with you, my peace give I unto you; not as the world giveth give I unto you. Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid.” [John 14:27.]
(12LtMs, Lt 108, 1897, 5)
We need to talk faith and move onward, forward, and upward, believing and receiving every word of the promises that God has given us. Said Christ, “I will not leave you comfortless.” Talk this to every poor, doubting, troubled soul. “I will not leave you comfortless, I will come to you.” [Verse 18.] The Lord would have us believe that He will do just as He has said He would. Then believe, believe, and walk by faith. Because I live, Christ says, ye shall live also. We are to gather up every ray of light and flash it upon the pathway of others.
(12LtMs, Lt 108, 1897, 6)
Be of good courage. “I will bring it to pass.” [Isaiah 46:11.]
(12LtMs, Lt 108, 1897, 7)
In love.
(12LtMs, Lt 108, 1897, 8)
Lt 109, 1897
Starr, Br-Sr. [G.B.] Refiled as Lt 107, 1897.
Lt 110, 1897
Shannon, Brother “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia February 5, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in ML 331; CTr 83. + Brother Shannon:
At eleven o’clock, p.m. Friday night, I am aroused to write out things which I dare not withhold. Sleep has passed from my eyes, and slumber from my eyelids.
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 1)
The Lord gave Abraham a lesson terrible in its significance. This lesson has been immortalized on the pages of sacred history, that from age to age all may learn that the Lord who gave, can also take away; that all is His.
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 2)
In a vision of the night, in his home in Beer-sheba, when he was one hundred and twenty years old, Abraham received the startling command, “Take now thy son, thine only son Isaac, whom thou lovest, and get thee into the land of Moriah, and offer him there for a burnt offering upon one of the mountains which I will tell thee of.” [Genesis 22:2.] His son, his only son, the son of promise, to be sacrificed. There was no more sleep for Abraham that night. The voice had spoken only to him and had been heard only by him. God had promised him that his name was to be perpetuated in Isaac, but here was a severe trial of his faith.
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 3)
Abraham had clung to the promise of a son from his own wife Sarah, and God had fulfilled His promise. But now God says, “Take now thy son, thine only son Isaac, whom thou lovest.” [Verse 2.] He left Ishmael out of the question, saying, “Thine only son Isaac.” Had Abraham been a selfish, coldhearted man, absorbed in ambitious projects, without a tender and affectionate attachment for his son, he would not have felt this terrible summons so deeply, but he loved his son tenderly.
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 4)
How could Abraham reason upon the former word of God? God had already told him that through Isaac his seed should be as the sand of the sea for multitude. As he stepped out into the night, he seemed to hear the divine voice that called him out of Chaldea fifty years before, and said to him, “Look now toward heaven, and tell the stars if thou be able to number them. So shall thy seed be.” [Genesis 15:5.] Can it be the same voice that commands him to slay his son? He remembered the promise, “I will make thy seed as the dust of the earth, so that if a man can number the dust of the earth, then shall thy seed also be numbered.” [Genesis 13:16.] Is it not the voice of a stranger that commands him to offer his son as a sacrifice? Can God contradict Himself? Shall he cut off the only hope of the fulfillment of the promise? Must he become childless?
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 5)
But Abraham does not reason; he obeys. His only hope is that the God who can do all things will raise his son from the dead. The knife was raised, but it did not fall. God spoke, “It is enough.” The faith of the father and the submission of the son was fully tested. “Now I know that thou fearest God, seeing that thou hast not withheld thy son, thine only son from me.” [Genesis 22:12.]
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 6)
Abraham’s test was the most severe that could ever come to a human being. Had he then turned from God, he would never have been registered as the father of the faithful. Had he deviated from God’s command, the world would have lost this rich example of faith in God and victory over unbelief.
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 7)
This lesson is given to shine down through the ages, that man may learn that nothing is too precious to give to God. Confidence in the divine Word will lead to a doing of that Word. It is when we look upon every entrusted gift as the Lord’s, to be used in His service in all ways and at all times, that we secure the heavenly benediction. Give back to God your entrusted possession and you will have more entrusted to you as a faithful steward, and will be able to answer when God calls. Keep your possessions to yourself and you will receive no reward in this life, and will lose the life which is to come.
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 8)
God tries the faith of His people today to test their characters. Those connected in any way with the school, which had long been delayed for want of means, who are willing to deny self and make sacrifices for God in times of emergency, are the ones whom God will honor with a partnership in His work. Those who are not willing to work for small wages, in order to carry out the purposes which God has devised, will be tested and tried, that their course may appear to human eyes as it stands before the eyes of One who has a full knowledge of the heart and all its inward workings.
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 9)
The Lord speaks of some who will not open or shut the doors of God’s house for naught. My brother, you have developed a selfishness that has worked in various ways to the increase of itself. It has been strengthened by exercise, until the whole man has come under the jurisdiction of Satan, as was Judas. Judas had the privilege of being connected with Christ as one of His disciples. But his spirit did not agree with the principles Christ kept continually before them, and in the place of heeding these teachings, he worked against them.
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 10)
My brother, when work at the school was offered you for four shillings a day, and this was all your labor, for eight hours a day, was worth under the circumstances, and you refused it, were you in the service of men whose personal interest was being benefited? You were situated where you could have helped the work that God has signified should be done to establish a school. It was not men whom you insulted by your refusal to labor; it was God. This was the test of the depth and breadth of your heart interest in the school which is to do the very work which God has pointed out must be done.
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 11)
Brother Shannon has been weighed in the balance and found wanting. Said the divine Instructor, His heart was not right with God. His own interest came first. He would serve the Lord if in so doing he could reap all the benefit he desired. Brother Lawrence has also been tested. God put him in trial before the whole universe of heaven, and he was pronounced wanting. Men have had a much more favorable opinion of Brother Lawrence than the Lord has for He has watched the principles that underlay the springs of action. Brethren Shannon and Lawrence have not discerned any difference between the sacred and the common. They have treated the Lord’s work as though it possessed no more sacredness than a common business enterprise.
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 12)
This work is to be a character-detector, trying the spirit of men, proving who will be trustworthy, the Lord’s faithful Calebs. Those who, in times of trial and pressure from want of means, will do their very best for God for the truth’s sake, showing that they have the fear of God before them, are the men God will choose as men to be depended on. They may have need of experience in many lines, but if they will not become offended and sit on Satan’s stool of idleness, submitting their minds, their hearts, and their physical powers to the enemy, if they will do their duty because they recognize that there are duties to be done, the Lord will increase their wisdom and understanding by giving them knowledge as He did Daniel, thus enabling them to be representative men. But God cannot use the men who respect only the value of men, who do not see that they should be willing to render service to God.
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 13)
All these principles have been placed before Brethren Shannon and Lawrence, that they might see their force and necessity; but notwithstanding the light that the Lord has been pleased to give them, they have indulged their covetousness. They refused to come into working order. The spirit they cherished was an offense to God. He was working every moment in their behalf to keep them alive, and yet they refused to work for Him without stipulated wages; and He would not accept their service. They had their choice. While the school grounds, God’s property, were in want of faithful workers who would show what could be done on the land, because Brother Lawrence could not get the sum he desired for his labor, he refused, like a rebellious child, to use his hands or his With the necessities of the case before him, he remained in idleness as far as doing good was concerned. What did he care? The treasury was almost empty, but what did that signify to him?
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 14)
The Lord has recorded every thought and every feeling, and He has placed His estimate upon these men. By Him they are reckoned as unfaithful stewards. They have been weighed in the balance and found wanting. Brother Lawrence has been weaving the web of selfishness, every thread of which is deciding his future destiny for eternity. When he desired to purchase land, because he could not trade in the same way as he has done all his life, he refused to pay the sum which he himself had stipulated. He would have taken any amount as a gift, irrespective of the fact that the other side would be robbed; and then he would have complained that the stewardship of others was faulty.
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 15)
Unless Brother Lawrence is converted, and his character transformed, he will be to the cause of God wherever he goes, His life is a long series of transgressions of the law of Jehovah. He could be a blessing to no church. He has not used his mind as a storehouse in which to place the inestimable treasures found in the Scriptures. He has not been learning in the school of Christ, although he has had every opportunity to hear the truth, to receive the truth, and to partake of the richest banquet that can be offered to human beings.
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 16)
Had he eaten of the Word of God, his spiritual experience would have been after the likeness of Christ, but he had drunk so deeply of worldly speculation in little things, with which Christ and the truth have no agreement, that he has formed an appetite for buying and selling and getting gain without bringing truth and righteousness into his business transactions. The spirit is the same in the deal, whether the transactions be large or small. He longs for the advantage to be gained by him, exactly as did Judas; and in many respects his case is worse than that of Judas, in proportion to the increased light that has come to the church since the ascension of Christ and the impartation of the Holy Spirit.
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 17)
God has given us great light and great opportunities. Brother Lawrence could have accepted the truth and taken it into the inner sanctuary of the soul, but his taste has not been cultivated in this line. He has formed a habit of seeking to obtain everything below its real value, and then selling it so that he will gain. He has been working in this line so long that his whole mind, soul, and spirit is leavened. If this spirit be cherished, it will place him in the ranks of those who educate and train their powers in this line. Principle is sacrificed for an oft-practiced worldly policy, but the adept in such work is really despised by the world.
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 18)
Unfair dealing has been carried on upon the locality selected for this school. The virtue of the characters of some has been tainted and stained, and their influence has led many astray. God will not tolerate this work. If the one who has been working so perseveringly against his own eternal interests could see that God has no use for those who, like Nadab and Abihu, use common fire in place of the sacred, he would be alarmed. All the time that Brother Lawrence spent in idleness, he might have given to God. He might have given to his capabilities and the time he values so highly, and trusted to God to properly estimate it. A day lost passes into a mournful record in the books of heaven. A day spent in unselfish service for God is better than a thousand spent in self-serving.
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 19)
If Brother Lawrence had qualifications which he could see that his brethren did not possess, what was he here for unless it was to impart his knowledge faithfully, kindly, and interestedly? My brother, all the ability that you possess is God’s property. He could take away your reason and leave you as a beast of the field, as He did Nebuchadnezzar. God has borne long with your robbery of Him, but you have been so much engaged in an illegitimate business, that He will not favor you in any way after your day of test and trial is over.
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 20)
When you give God your heart, you will no more be blind in regard to right and wrong, as in the transaction of robbing a poor man of the money that was his just due. You will look with disgust upon the perverted principles that you have practiced for years. Your trade in regard to the horse and the cow speaks loudly, in unmistakable language
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 21)
You know not the time of your visitation. You know not what is due to your God. These transactions, which compose the texture of your character, make that character an offense to God. All such business is bad enough when done in the world; but God has a controversy with you, for you have robbed God. You would have robbed Him by bargaining for land at less than your own figures estimated it to be worth. Your sense of propriety is so far perverted that you traffic with property that has been purchased by money given for the service of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 22)
Had you commenced a work in your own heart, had you dedicated to God all your lent capabilities, you would have realized that all you have and are belongs to Him, and you would not have placed the sacred things on a basis with common things. You would long ago have fixed your supreme affections on Him who is too wise to err, who is altogether lovely, and the chiefest among ten thousand.
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 23)
If you are not on this ground to advance and build up the work in all lines where it is possible, what are you here for? You have taken from and lessened the facilities which will be essential to carry forward the work in this locality. If you took from the school the value of one shilling or one pound, this should make you afraid; but you have done more than this. God reckons up the time you spent in idleness, nursing a rebellious spirit. Did you think that when you could have helped, and would not, you were doing service to God?
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 24)
You ought to see these things in such a light that you would abhor yourself for your narrow selfishness. You are blind, and by precept and example you have been communicating principles that will make others as blind as yourself. God looks at the motives which prompt to action. In His providence He has allowed matters to come to the light that will be reproved, and that most sharply. Wherein have you unselfishly benefited the school? You have withheld that which would have helped forward the work. You have looked on, sitting on the devil’s idle stool, seeing things which you thought you could improve; but you did not attempt to do this. You might have helped in many ways if you had given heart, soul, strength, capabilities, all to God. When you do this, Christ will be yours, heaven will be yours, eternal life will be yours, all things, through Christ, will be yours.
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 25)
Did you come to this place to speculate with God, to see if you could not rob Him here as you have done throughout your life? You have placed yourself, not as a true, loyal brother, but as a faultfinder, waiting an opportunity to take from God, in jots and tittles, and in larger things.
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 26)
“The children of thy people still are talking against thee by the walls and in the doors of the houses, and speak one to another, every one to his brother, saying, Come, I pray you, and hear what is the word that cometh forth from the Lord. And they come unto thee as the people cometh, and they sit before thee as my people, and they hear thy words. But they will not do them; for with their mouth they show much love, but their heart goeth after their covetousness. And, lo, thou art unto them as a very lovely song of one that hath a very pleasant voice, and can play well on an instrument; for they hear the words, but they do them not.” [Ezekiel 33:30-32.]
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 27)
“Wherefore the Lord saith, Forasmuch as this people draw near me with their mouth, and with their lips do honor me, but have removed their heart far from me, and their fear toward me is taught by the precept of men: therefore, behold, I will proceed to do a marvelous work among this people, even a marvelous work and a wonder: for the wisdom of their wise men shall perish, and the understanding of their prudent men shall be hid. Woe unto them that seek deep to hide their counsel from the Lord, and their works are in the dark, and they say, Who seeth us? and who knoweth us?
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 28)
“Surely your turning of things upside down shall be esteemed as the potter’s clay: for shall the work say of him that made it, He made me not? or shall the thing framed say of him that framed it, He had no understanding? ... And in that day shall the deaf hear the words of the book, and the eyes of the blind shall see out of obscurity, and out of darkness. The meek also shall increase their joy in the Lord, and the poor among men shall rejoice in the Holy One of Israel. For the terrible one is brought to nought, and the scorner is consumed, and all that watch for iniquity are cut off: that make a man an offender for a word, and lay a snare for him that reproveth in the gate, and turn aside the just thing for a thing of nought.” [Isaiah 29:13-16, 18-21.]
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 29)
All who fear God will accustom themselves to look closely at their principles in the light of the Word of God, and to regard with awful respect the commands of God. Their souls should be pervaded by a deep, abiding sense of the importance, sanctity, and authority of heavenly principles. They should maintain the most intimate connection with God, the pure, sacred spring from whence their strength and light is derived. Then brother will stand by the side of brother, and each will lift every jot he can possibly sustain. Those who do this will have help from God, and will be among those who will share in the triumphs of the truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 30)
The Lord asks you again, “What doest thou here?” [1 Kings 19:13.] You have repeatedly stated that you were a man of your word, but you deny this by your actions. You have professed to believe in Jesus Christ, to be obedient to His requirements. Why do you not keep your word with God? Any man that is not true to God is not true to his neighbor in business deal. You flatter yourself that you are a man true to your word, but God declares this to be false. When you see a man with whom you desire to trade, you advantage yourself to his disadvantage, when the word of truth spoken by you would put him on his guard and cause you to lose your chance. By carrying these matters through as you do, you act falsehoods. This you have done in your trading here.
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 31)
In order to favor you and retain you here, hoping that you could be a help, and that your influence would be a blessing, transactions in trade have been consummated that never would have been had you behaved as a noble Christian gentleman. But you have acted the part of a schemer. God has marked your actions from first to last. He has taken your measurement as if you were conducting a trade with Him, and thus it stands in the books of heaven.
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 32)
All these things make you an unsafe man. The only hope for your soul is a transformation of character. When you have a new heart, you will live in an atmosphere very different from that in which you have lived since you came here. When tempted to scheme in business you will strangle the first purpose Satan would form in your mind, so that it will not breathe the breath of life. You can reform; it will be a daily, hourly struggle; but if you come into conscious, loving communion with God, the principles of truth and righteousness and mercy will be more and more clearly discerned. You will then keep the last six commandments, which you have so often transgressed. You will not study how you can obtain an advantage of your neighbor, but you will aid others by your perceptive faculties and by your sympathy. You will give tangible proof of your love by co-operating with Christ in helping your fellow men whom you must meet in the judgment. You will price your time as God’s time, to be used in His service, and you will earnestly strive to help others.
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 33)
With strenuous efforts and the continual grace of God you may overcome your practice of untruthful and dishonest trading. If you yield yourself to God, the deep and holy principles of His law will become part of your character. You will then love to minister to others. You will love to stimulate others to serve God.
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 34)
God has given you talents to use to His name’s glory, not for your own advantage. God despises your course of action; it is hateful in His sight. In your dealing with the school, God has permitted you to reveal your selfishness, that His reproof might come to you. Will you receive it? Do not longer flatter yourself that your word is so wonderfully sacred, because for years you have been piling falsehood upon falsehood in your deal with your fellow men. Your every offer of low sums for an article that you know to be worth more than you offer is a deception. A change in these things will elevate your whole being. If you will make a business of this work, if you will honor God with all your heart, and love your neighbor as yourself, God will bless you. This is the whole duty of man.
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 35)
The perils of the last days are upon us. Let no one think that he has acquired a valuable acquisition when he has learned the tricks common with buyers and sellers. No man can pride himself on his truthfulness, for unless he has overcome, he does not know that truthfulness is. No one can know the strength of his truthfulness and honesty until he has passed the fiery ordeal of the temptation to acquire means in questionable ways. Men may, at one period of their lives, shudder at the thought of any species of dishonesty as seen in the practice of others, but if they do not cultivate strict integrity in every transaction, they will soon learn to sell their birthright for a mess of pottage.
(12LtMs, Lt 110, 1897, 36)
Lt 111, 1897
Sister Refiled as Lt 5, 1884.
Lt 112, 1897
Steed, Brother; Haskell, S. N.; Farnsworth, Brother “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia January 18, 1897 Previously unpublished. + Dear Brethren Steed, Haskell, and Farnsworth:
I am very sorry to write you that which I feel it to be my duty to write in reference to Brother and Sister Lawrence. We know you will be disappointed. We expected that they would be the right kind of help in Gisborne, that they would be efficient in religious meeting, and would encourage and strengthen others. We now have positive evidence that they would prove a failure. Their habits are fixed; their lives are narrow and self-centered. They have not educated themselves to grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 112, 1897, 1)
We know that Brother Lawrence cannot take charge of any church interest, either to speak or to hold Bible readings. From his own lips I learned that he has not the qualifications necessary for one who leads meetings. He is so dull and slow and tedious that if he should attempt to lead, he would be of no benefit. With regard to his wife, I really think she is not in her right mind. She must be unbalanced.
(12LtMs, Lt 112, 1897, 2)
Therefore, by request, I write you this. I send you these copies that you shall not in any wise be misled. You cannot be more disappointed than we have been in this matter. Where the missionary work done by Brother and Sister Lawrence shall come in remains to be seen. Sister Lawrence seldom speaks in meeting, and then it is only a very few words. She asked me if it would not be best for her just to read a verse in the Bible in meeting, and say nothing. She has a very large gift of talking upon unimportant, temporal matters, but her tongue is not educated or disciplined to be a witness for Jesus Christ. She talked at random last Sabbath in meeting, when we hoped there would be a break.
(12LtMs, Lt 112, 1897, 3)
Brother Lawrence did his duty. The Holy Spirit is working upon his mind. He sees some things, but they are like “men as trees walking.” [Mark 8:24.] He has many things to see in an altogether different light. His life has been narrowed down to small items. He has not expanded or ennobled under the influence of truth. The word given to me was, Brother Lawrence is parsimonious. The dictionary will give you the meaning of this word.
(12LtMs, Lt 112, 1897, 4)
Brother Lawrence and Brother Shannon have both watched for the mistakes made by Brother Hare. The mill business has been a problem and an expense, yet we have not felt that it could be given up, for it is impossible to get lumber except from Sydney or Newcastle, and then it costs much. The mill machinery has not been of sufficient force to carry all parts of the work. I cannot explain this, as I have not had any conversation with Brother Hare.
(12LtMs, Lt 112, 1897, 5)
I will explain other matters in another letter. Brother Haskell, we need you here without delay. I have carried the burden as long as I can. Brother Lawrence may be saved if he can have help now. The Lord is working with Brother Lawrence. But he needs help from some one else besides me, one who understands business lines. I was much in hopes of Brother Lawrence, but his wife is a great talker, and she would confuse his mind, and cause him to return to his old lines of working and dealing. She is pharisaical.
(12LtMs, Lt 112, 1897, 6)
In the night season I was in a little company, and Brother and Sister Lawrence were there. One, the Lord’s Watcher, our Counsellor, came into our midst, and laying his hand on Brother Lawrence’s shoulder, said, “You will not see His face, (Revelation 22:4), unless you realize that you are parsimonious.” The dictionary gives the meaning, close, covetous. You will not know what this means without a thorough conversion, in your maxims and in your customs and in every phase of your character. “And there shall be no more curse, and the throne of God and the Lamb shall be in it, and his servants shall serve him.” [Verse 3.] Have you not served your own personal interest all your life? But a little period of your probation remains. You have not a moment now to lose. If you lose heaven, you lose everything. Those who serve God, and love Him supremely, and their neighbor as themselves, perform the principles of the law of God. They keep the first four, and the last six commandments.
(12LtMs, Lt 112, 1897, 7)
“And they shall see his face, and his name shall be in their foreheads, and there shall be no night there, and they need no candle, neither light of the sun, for the Lord God giveth them light, and they shall reign for ever and ever.” [Verses 4, 5.]
(12LtMs, Lt 112, 1897, 8)
All who are saints in heaven will first be saints upon the earth, in connection with the human family. This will be their test—to love God with their whole heart, mind, and strength, and their neighbors as themselves. This has not been done by you. You plan and figure for yourself, and in this you have forsaken the counsel of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 112, 1897, 9)
I have written in haste a part of what I have. I must have Brother Haskell here. I never should have been left alone as I have been.
(12LtMs, Lt 112, 1897, 10)
Lt 112a, 1897
Semmens, Brother “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia March 10, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in 20MR 278-281. + Dear Brother Semmens:
I have just sent you a telegram. In a letter written to Brother Lacey, the father of Herbert Lacey, Sister Lacey was describing, I think, the treatment you were giving Brother Lacey, the ice, etc. used to keep down the fever.
(12LtMs, Lt 112a, 1897, 1)
I feel that the ice used is a mistake. The light which has been given me in reference to several critical cases has been represented to me as a sick child I had in charge, and in every case the directions given were, Do not apply ice to the head, apply hot fomentations This will quell the fever much sooner even than cold. The reaction after the cold applications raises the fever, in the place of killing it. This direction has been given me again and again. In some cases, the ice applications may be warrantable, but in most cases, they are not advisable. If has any vitality, the system will sent the blood to where the cold is, and very often the system has no power for this taxation. Brother Herbert has low vitality. Some cases may endure this kind of treatment, but I greatly fear for Brother Lacey, if it is continued. Use hot water. In nine cases out of ten it will do a more successful work than the cold ice would do.
(12LtMs, Lt 112a, 1897, 2)
I cannot now write out all the cases I have handled under the light given me of God, but every case has worked favorably. I have given these directions to physicians of repute, those not of our faith, and those of our faith, and in every case, even in fevers, they have reported success in treating with hot water in the place of cold water or applications of ice.
(12LtMs, Lt 112a, 1897, 3)
My husband and myself were urgently requested to go from Battle Creek to Allegan, in the case of Dr. Lay’s wife, to pray for her, for there was little hope of her life. We went about thirty-five miles. No one had been to see the woman but her husband, Dr. Lay, and the physician in that place. We inquired the reason of her prostration. They said it was hemorrhage from the lungs. My husband inquired “What are you doing?” Dr. Lay responded, “Putting on cold compresses.” We then told the doctors that they were doing the worst thing for the woman that they could do. They should keep hot water bags to her feet, and hot water bags to her lungs and stomach. The cold water, or ice water, to the lungs was diverting the blood from limbs and body to meet the cold application, and another hemorrhage would certainly appear soon. “Why,” the doctors said, “this is sensible; why did we not consider, and reason from cause to effect?”
(12LtMs, Lt 112a, 1897, 4)
The cold was immediately replaced by hot, and she was much more comfortable. She had been lying for three days. They had not dared to move her for fear of hemorrhage. Her clothing was removed the next day, and she began to feel natural. Dr. Lay said, “You have, by your counsel, saved the life of my wife.” He was the most grateful man I ever saw. She lived for about twenty years after that sickness.
(12LtMs, Lt 112a, 1897, 5)
There was another woman, greatly respected in Allegan, who was full of malaria. She came to the sanitarium for treatment. She had been under treatment two weeks, but received no benefit. One night I dreamed that Dr. Lay came to me with much perplexity expressed in his countenance. I said, “What is it, Doctor?” He said, “I am put to my wits end to know what to do in the case of Sister _____. She does not improve at all.” Said I, “Dr. Lay, what influence would it have on cold tallow to put it in cold or tepid water?”“None at all,” he said. “I have no more to say,” I said. “A word to the wise is sufficient.”
(12LtMs, Lt 112a, 1897, 6)
The next day Dr. Lay came to our house, and desired an interview with me. He repeated the words in my dream, and I gave the same answer. I said, “Give her as hot [a] treatment as she can bear.”“Why did I not think of this myself?” he said. He acted upon the light given, with perfect success.
(12LtMs, Lt 112a, 1897, 7)
We were living on our farm, eighty miles from Battle Creek. The snow had been very deep, the rain had set in and made the water standing in the road a river. Brother Wilson, father of the Brother Wilson now in Tasmania, had been sick, and a telegram was sent for Dr. Lay to come immediately. His father was in a terrible state of erysipelas. The brother of father Wilson came to see me early one morning and presented the case before me. I said, “I cannot go, Brother Wilson;” for Brother King was receiving treatment at our house. He had been kicked by a horse and his skull was broken, and the doctor would not trust him in any one’s hands but my husband’s and myself; for he said, that there was only one chance out of a hundred for his life. The crisis had now come, and we could not leave him.
(12LtMs, Lt 112a, 1897, 8)
I said, “Brother Wilson, I had a dream last night. I was taking care of a sick child. Its head was swollen enormously, and the child was unconscious. Some were saying ‘Put cold water on its head.’ One came in and stood by the bed, and said, ‘This is a critical case. Cold water is not the right prescription. Take two flannel sheets, wet them as hot as you can handle them, and wrap him up in the pack, and put a flannel wet in warm water round his head. Keep this in operation until he manifests sensibility to heat. Work, quickly and thoroughly; for you will have no time to lose.’”“Now,” said I to Brother Wilson, “call at your sister’s, get the blankets, and follow directions precisely.” He did this, and put on the third application, he began to shrink; for he was revealing sensibility. O what rejoicing was in that house. The battle was fought, and the victory gained, before Dr. Lay arrived.
(12LtMs, Lt 112a, 1897, 9)
The second or third night I dreamed of having the care of a child that was weak, and seemed unable to rally. I thought the same physician stood by the cradle, and said, Have you any wine in the house? Beat up a raw egg and give it to the child with grape wine three times each day. He will rally. Dr. Lay came the next morning and said he must return to the sanitarium on the morning, that the erysipelas was conquered, but that he was extremely weak. I am perplexed to know what to do. I told him my dream, and he went immediately, and gave him the strengthening potion. He gained strength rapidly. This occurred when Willie was about twelve years old.
(12LtMs, Lt 112a, 1897, 10)
I might present case after case of a similar character. When I have taken treatment at the sanitarium, Dr. Kellogg has always told the head nurses to allow Sister White to prescribe her own treatment. They used to give me cold applications to my head, but it was always an injury to me, and I changed them to warm applications to the spine and head, and to the eyes hot salt water fomentations, but seldom ever cold, I have had inflammation to the eyes, but hot applications were used, and with good success.
(12LtMs, Lt 112a, 1897, 11)
I send you at this time pulverized coal [charcoal]. Let him drink the water, after it has stood a while to extract the virtue. This should be cold, when used. When used for fomentations over the bowels, coal should be put into a bag, sewed up, and it will serve several times. Have two bags, use one, and then the other.
(12LtMs, Lt 112a, 1897, 12)
I send this to you by Sara. Let her stand by your side and help you share the responsibility in the most critical period. Herbert Lacey is a man of value, a man the Lord loves. The enemy must not come in and take him away. We are praying for you and for him, that you may be guided aright, and that you may have the help of the great Physician.
(12LtMs, Lt 112a, 1897, 13)
Sara is not much pleased to go. Make it as pleasant for her as you can. We shall miss her here, but for a few days I consent for her to go to you. Counsel together, and Sara will help you. She has tried to vindicate cold and ice water treatment, but I differ with her. There is not strength in that frail body now to bear any such heroic treatment. O, how my heart yearns over Herbert Lacey. He is precious in the sight of the Lord, and we must not fail to do everything in our power for him.
(12LtMs, Lt 112a, 1897, 14)
I have given you the light God has given me, and I consider that it is light. I sent the telegram, because I did not then expect that Sara would go to Sydney. May the Lord bless you as a family, is my prayer.
(12LtMs, Lt 112a, 1897, 15)
In love to you all.
(12LtMs, Lt 112a, 1897, 16)
We will make Herbert’s case a special subject of prayer. Tell Brother Baker to pray for him. You and your wife pray that the Lord will raise him up to health.
(12LtMs, Lt 112a, 1897, 17)
Lt 113, 1897
Slocum, Sister [Booth] “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia June 9, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in WM 333-334; PH048 16. Dear Sister Booth Slocum:
I have been writing to Gilbert Collins, and will send you a copy of the same. I am drawn out to make an appeal for the cause of God here in New South Wales, Australia. You will see by my letter to Gilbert Collins that we are engaged in the work of God as missionaries in this locality. I have no time to write much, for the mail goes tomorrow; but I ask you, my sister, if you can help us with means to put up a meetinghouse in Cooranbong. I have hired five thousand dollars from South Africa, and five hundred besides, on which I pay interest. I dare not make myself responsible for any more on this line. I ask you to make an offering to the Lord. We know that the time has come when the Lord’s house should be built in this place.
(12LtMs, Lt 113, 1897, 1)
We know that money is in the fullest sense a talent committed to the servants of God to use for the advancement of His work. “The silver is mine, and the gold is mine, saith the Lord of hosts.” [Haggai 2:8.] We should look upon all, every penny that we have, as absolutely the Lord’s. We cannot regard our possessions as our own property. I have invested my means, as fast as it has come in, in building meeting houses in different localities and to sustain the laborers in the gospel field.
(12LtMs, Lt 113, 1897, 2)
Those in this country who receive the truth are mostly poor; and in the winter time it is a hard matter for them to sustain their families. Since writing the foregoing, a letter was brought to me from a brother Pocock, a man who was a coach builder. He was in great poverty two years ago, and we gave him work. He was obliged to leave his family, a wife and five children, in the suburbs of Sydney, and come to Cooranbong, about ninety miles off, to obtain work. Before this he was in partnership with his brother, who also is a coach builder. But when he embraced the Sabbath, he lost his situation; he worked for small wages, and finally he could get no work.
(12LtMs, Lt 113, 1897, 3)
He is an intelligent, refined man, an able teacher in the Sabbath School, and is a sincere Christian. We kept him as long as we had work that he could do, and when he left, he modestly asked if we could let him have a few books on present truth; for he had none. I gave him about six dollars’ worth of books. He also asked if we had any cast off clothing that we could give him, that his wife might make over for the children. I provided him a box of clothing, for which he was very grateful.
(12LtMs, Lt 113, 1897, 4)
This was a year ago. In the letter just received, he asks in a very modest way if we have any cast off clothing that we could send him for his family for this winter. Sr. Carswell and members of our family have just been visiting several families who are very destitute, and who have embraced the truth since we came to Cooranbong. The fathers are fishermen. But fishing is no longer a paying business, as they catch but few fish.
(12LtMs, Lt 113, 1897, 5)
Last evening we had a Dorcas society [meeting] in our home, and my workers who help in the preparation of my articles for the papers, and do the cooking and sewing, five of them, sat up until midnight, cutting out clothing. They made three pairs of pants for the children of one family. Two sewing machines were running until midnight. I think there was never a happier set of workers than were these girls last evening.
(12LtMs, Lt 113, 1897, 6)
We made up a bundle of clothing for this family, and thought it was about all we could do. Sister Carswell is now on this errand of mercy to this poor family, cutting out garments from the material provided. There are also other families to be supplied. And now comes another request, and we must supply them with things for winter wear. Thus it has been ever since we came to this country. We shall certainly heed the call to send a box of clothing to these needy ones. I merely tell you these things that you may know that we are surrounded by poverty. The wife of this fisherman is to be baptized next Sabbath. The poor have the gospel preached unto them. The people of this locality have very little of this world’s goods.
(12LtMs, Lt 113, 1897, 7)
We have worked in every line to establish the truth in this country. Brother Haskell has given me of his means to help in lifting the standard of truth. He has laid nothing up. I have invested his means in building chapels, and in the school work. I lay up nothing, but today am paying interest on ten thousand dollars. The injunction, “Owe no man anything,” does not touch this kind of working. [Romans 13:8.] I walk by faith. I trust that when the call comes to me, for this money loaned me, I shall be able to repay it after a few months’ notice, but could not possibly do this now.
(12LtMs, Lt 113, 1897, 8)
“But this I say, He which soweth sparingly, shall reap also sparingly, and he which soweth bountifully shall reap also bountifully. Every man according as he purposeth in his heart, so let him give; not grudgingly, or of necessity, for God loveth a cheerful giver. And God is able to make all grace abound toward you, that ye, always having all sufficiency in all things, may abound to every good work: (as it is written, He hath dispersed abroad, he hath given to the poor: his righteousness remaineth forever. Now he that ministereth seed to the sower both minister bread for your food, and multiply your seed sown, and increase the fruits of your righteousness;) being enriched in everything to all bountifulness, which causeth through us thanksgiving to God.
(12LtMs, Lt 113, 1897, 9)
“For the administration of this service not only supplieth the want of the saints, but is abundant also by many thanksgivings unto God; whiles by the experiment of this ministration they glorify God through your professed subjection to the gospel of Christ, and for your liberal distribution unto them and unto all men; and by their prayer for you, which long after you for the exceeding grace of God for you. Thanks be to God for his unspeakable gift.” [2 Corinthians 9:6-15.]
(12LtMs, Lt 113, 1897, 10)
The Lord rewards every man according to his works. He invites to co-operate with Him, and graciously condescends to use the means He has placed in our hands in carrying forward His work. We feel so sorry that the work of God is often crippled and left undone for want of the funds in somebody’s hands, who ought to say as did David, “Blessed be the Lord God of Israel, our father, for ever and ever.”“Thine, O Lord, is the greatness and the power and the glory and the victory and the majesty: for all that is in the heavens and the earth is mine. Thine is the kingdom, O Lord, and thou art exalted as head above all. Both riches and honor come of thee, and thou reignest over all; and in thine hands is power and might, and in thine hand it is to make great, and to give strength unto all. Now therefore, our God, we thank thee, and praise thy glorious name. But who am I, and what is my people, that we should be able to offer so willingly after this sort? For all things come of thee, and of thine own have we given thee.” [1 Chronicles 29:10-14.]
(12LtMs, Lt 113, 1897, 11)
As Christian workers, we are not to seek money from worldly, unconverted people by pressing and teasing. We are not to imitate the churches by instituting bazaars and various God-forbidden expedients to bring in a little means. We see no directions in the Word for fancy fairs, concerts, and other objectionable practices for raising funds to advance His work. The curse of God is upon all this kind of work. It is polluting and degrading the work of God, defiling His holy temple.
(12LtMs, Lt 113, 1897, 12)
God calls for His own in gifts and freewill offerings. And the giver receives no equivalent more than the promise of God. Self-denial is to be practiced. Self-sacrifice is enjoined in the Word of God. “He that will come after me,” said Christ, “let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. So shall he be my disciple.” [See Mark 8:34.]
(12LtMs, Lt 113, 1897, 13)
We are engaged in a great work. Many fields are calling for messengers to be sent to them. But because of the lack of means in the treasury, the messengers cannot go. Christ’s work was to preach the gospel to the poor. The Lord is soon to come, and we need to make every sacrifice possible to open new fields. This is an entirely new field. There are places which should be entered close by us. Newcastle is only twenty miles from Cooranbong in one direction. Maitland, another large place, is twenty miles in another direction. These places have been, and are now being, canvassed for our books. But no effort has been made to minister the Word.
(12LtMs, Lt 113, 1897, 14)
But I must stop here. Will you send us means to carry forward the work of God? As soon as the school buildings are finished and a meetinghouse erected, we shall enter new fields. Mission fields are opening everywhere. I ask you, my sister, to read my letter to others in New Bedford or in the suburbs of New Bedford, and help the cause of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 113, 1897, 15)
Yours in love.
(12LtMs, Lt 113, 1897, 16)
Lt 113a, 1897
Tuxford, Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales September 24, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in Ev 633. Dear Sister Tuxford:
I send a letter by this mail to Willie White. Please put it in his hands at once if you see him. He should not make one day’s delay in coming to Cooranbong. School closes in four weeks, and Brethren Daniells and Palmer are to be here two weeks before the school closes in order to counsel together in regard to methods of work. I hope there will be no delay. W. C. White ought to have been here some time ere this; and if he is not delayed now, but will urge his way homeward, I shall be rejoiced.
(12LtMs, Lt 113a, 1897, 1)
I have not been well for some days. A great exhaustion seems to be upon me, and I have been strengthless for some days past.
(12LtMs, Lt 113a, 1897, 2)
Our chapel is nearly completed. We have been waiting one week for lumber to enclose the house. It is ceiled up and roofed, and finished as far as it can be inside. The siding must now go on. We are waiting for the boat. The house would have been completed now had it not been for this delay. We want to be in a place where we can worship God with decency and in order.
(12LtMs, Lt 113a, 1897, 3)
I have not strength to write more. Yesterday I was awake at two o’clock. I took my pen, and wrote out important matter. When daylight came, exhaustion came upon me. I could only ride out and get the air. This morning I rise at my usual hour, three o’clock. I have been writing now since that time. My head at times becomes very weary, but nevertheless I am rejoiced that I have as much strength as I have at my age. I feel thankful for clearness of mind.
(12LtMs, Lt 113a, 1897, 4)
I do wish that you, my sister, and all the believers in Wellington were as far advanced as we are in having a place where you can worship God. But the Lord is not a stranger to our necessities.
(12LtMs, Lt 113a, 1897, 5)
September 24. We have just learned that the boat bearing our load of timber is in the lake, and will reach the landing at 4 p.m. So near the Sabbath she must unladen her burden; and how this will be done I know not. Those who brought the load will unload her, and nothing can be moved before Sunday. Thus we are brought into straight places. We can now complete the house for God before the delegates come to the meeting. One week will put on the siding. The ceiling within has been done, the floor has been laid, and the painting within is going on. We shall thank the Lord and take courage when the house of worship is completed. All our brethren carpenters have donated a portion of labor, and have worked zealously.
(12LtMs, Lt 113a, 1897, 6)
We have had the spirit of prayer, and our faith has ascended to heaven. We believe in Him who has said, “Ask and ye shall receive.” [John 16:24.] If ever a people was in need of help at every step, it is Seventh-day Adventists. The mind must be brought in contact with God. Our confidence in human agencies must be shaken, but our confidence in God will be firm, constant, and unshaken. We must have a knowledge of God and of the truth as it is in Jesus. When we all have a great desire to save souls, in accordance with the great love that Christ has expressed for perishing souls by giving His life a sacrifice, and taking the curse of sin upon Himself, we shall have great earnestness and perseverance. We must pull souls out of the fire. I am deeply in earnest when standing before the people; I see souls unsaved.
(12LtMs, Lt 113a, 1897, 7)
We must co-operate with God if we would be ministers of righteousness. That which will make Jesus glad is to see souls purified, made white through faith in the cleansing blood of Jesus Christ. We need to cultivate faith, then we will talk faith, and act faith whatever may be the appearance or circumstances. Faith in God must not grow weaker, but stronger. But self must be kept hidden in the cleft of the Rock. Then and then only can men and women have a correct view of God our Saviour. We must give ourselves to God, and He will work in us both to will and to do of His good pleasure.
(12LtMs, Lt 113a, 1897, 8)
There is nothing that so much retards and cripples the work in its various branches as jealousy and suspicion and evil surmisings. These reveal that disunion prevails among the workers for God. Selfishness is the root of all evil. The workers suppose that they are working themselves and doing some great thing. If some other one were doing the same work, it would appear to their mind as altogether inferior and of little importance.
(12LtMs, Lt 113a, 1897, 9)
I must not write you much now. I feel deeply the cloud of unbelief that interposes between our souls and God. We dishonor God by our unbelief. When we believe God, then we will be strong, not in trusting in ourselves but in putting our trust in God, claiming Him as our strength and our efficiency. O so many have never given their idol “I” to God. The great apostle had this experience; he could say, “I live, yet not I, but Christ liveth in me.” [Galatians 2:20.]
(12LtMs, Lt 113a, 1897, 10)
Self is a great usurper, placing itself where God should be. The Lord is not acknowledged as He should be—as all and in all. Self looms up in great proportions. The talk is of self, and the mind glorifies self. This is the reason that the Lord does not do more for us. This is why He does not bless us, reveal His power, and manifest His grace. When will we learn to hide self behind Jesus, and let Him appear as the One altogether lovely, and the chiefest among ten thousand?
(12LtMs, Lt 113a, 1897, 11)
Lt 114, 1897
Tenney, Brother and Sister [G. C.] “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia July 1, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in FBS 78-80. + Dear Brother and Sister Tenney:
I have been reading your letter. Thank you for writing in response to my letter. I should have written to you at first, but I thought that if Fannie would show repentance, I would be pleased to have her soul saved if possible. I do not read her articles at all, but my attention was called to the articles in the Instructor and the Review by one who understood the articles in the Review perfectly. In them she has represented the family of McKenzie.
(12LtMs, Lt 114, 1897, 1)
The mild Miss Ashbury is Miss Fannie Bolton. Mr. and Mrs. Morehouse are Brother McKenzie and his wife, who live in Parramatta. The representation that Fannie gives of Miss Ashbury is, I suppose, exactly her estimate of herself. In this romance she has represented herself as having a perfection of character that she has never revealed in connection with that family, or any family where she has been an inmate.
(12LtMs, Lt 114, 1897, 2)
False ideas are traced in this story. Fannie did have a room in the hired home of Brother and Sister McKenzie, and the rent from this helped them in a time of their great poverty; but everything in this story is exaggerated. She has had some threads to use in making out this story, but the main history was transacted at Ashfield, where the first camp meeting was held in New South Wales. At that camp meeting some of these things did take place, and those who are familiar with the facts will recognize the ones meant. Should McKenzie get hold of the paper, as I have no doubt he will, there would be one of the greatest commotions that could take place, for Brother and Sister McKenzie are both sensitive and proud.
(12LtMs, Lt 114, 1897, 3)
He did become tempted. We had Brother Belden move his family and furniture from Parramatta to the Ashfield campground. I helped them by giving them clothing, milk, fruit, and money. Brother McKenzie became displeased with Brother Caldwell, because Brother Caldwell was put in as elder of the church, while Brother McKenzie was not put into office.
(12LtMs, Lt 114, 1897, 4)
W. C. White and Emily Campbell found Brother McKenzie in work. His daughter Julia is a fine, nice girl, but Julia is represented as being married. Emily Campbell and I paid Julia’s carfare to the city, and she and Emily attended a school where shorthand was taught. At this time Caldwell was working the typewriter for Fannie, and I felt that matters were not going right. I was warned in a dream, and I talked with both of them, telling them that it was not right for them to be together.
(12LtMs, Lt 114, 1897, 5)
I talked with McKenzie about this matter, and he said that Caldwell’s coming to his home at all times of the day, and in the evening, was working up a scandal. Well, we met with much opposition from both Fannie and Caldwell. They said that McKenzie had no sense or reason for his evil surmisings. But the burden was laid heavily upon me, and I told them it could not be thus any longer. There was my parlor, [used as] Willie’s office; they could write in that, for Willie was away, either in Melbourne or New Zealand.
(12LtMs, Lt 114, 1897, 6)
Well, this familiarity continued. I told Caldwell that I could not have him connected with my work. He told me that there was nothing between him and Fannie, and yet the warning kept coming, “She is your adversary.” My burden was very great, for I had no rest in spirit. The poor man, McKenzie, took to smoking and drinking, and I think they had a hard time of it. Fannie was then away at Cooranbong.
(12LtMs, Lt 114, 1897, 7)
The work between Fannie and Caldwell was begun at the camp meeting. There she became enamored of a married man with two children. She utterly denied that there was any affection between her and Brother Caldwell. She stood before me in my tent and declared that there was nothing to the reports. For one year after this, she was good for nothing to me, only a dead, heavy load.
(12LtMs, Lt 114, 1897, 8)
The warning from God kept coming, and finally at the Armadale camp meeting matters came to a head. Fannie claimed to make most of my books. Both at the Ashfield and Armadale camp meetings she was inspired by Satan. While at the Brighton camp meeting, her course of action was anything than what a Christian’s should be. And after the camp meeting I cut loose from her. I discharged her. We had a very serious time, but she begged and wrote so humbly that I forgave her, and foolishly tried her again. She was taken back and given another trial.
(12LtMs, Lt 114, 1897, 9)
When living at Preston, I told her that I could never have her in my home to live with me again. At the Brighton camp meeting she told the Malcolm family, who had recently come to the faith, that she had to make my books herself. She said that Sister White did not know how to write or put two sentences together, that she was a very ignorant woman, and that her, Fannie Bolton’s, talent supplied lack.
(12LtMs, Lt 114, 1897, 10)
Fannie begged to go to the Armadale camp meeting, saying that she would do my writing, and not take up the children’s meetings; but she did not keep her word. One short article, I think, she prepared for me. There was at this time an advertisement in one of the papers regarding one of my books. When Fannie noticed this advertisement, which spoke of Professor Prescott compiling the book, she vehemently declared with wild gesticulations, that it was a lie. She was all broken up, and declared to Sara that she had done the work herself, and now Professor Prescott was taking the glory of it. But Sister Prescott had been told Fannie’s story at Cooranbong, and she could see things in their true bearing.
(12LtMs, Lt 114, 1897, 11)
In talking with Sister Prescott, Fannie claimed to be the author of some sentence in this book which they thought was very beautiful. But when she made this assertion, Sister Prescott told her that she knew better, because she had a letter from Sister White, in her own handwriting, which contained the same sentence. If Sister Prescott is in Battle Creek you may talk with her in regard to this, and she will be able to tell you just how it was.
(12LtMs, Lt 114, 1897, 12)
I had a letter written to Dr. Kellogg, which Fannie saw lying on my table as she came into my room. In this letter she saw her own name. She called Sara into another room and told her that she had seen a letter addressed to Dr. Kellogg on Sister White’s table, and that in this letter she saw her name. She then asked Sara to get this letter and give it to her, so that she might see what Sister White was writing about her to Dr. Kellogg. Sara faced her and asked, “What do you take me for? Do you think I have come all the way from America to do that sort of work?” Fannie insisted that Sara should get the letter for her, but Sara declared that she would do no such thing. From this time Fannie seemed to have but little confidence in Sara.
(12LtMs, Lt 114, 1897, 13)
I have told you these things that you may understand about the matter. We had the affair between Fannie and Caldwell all through the Armadale camp meeting. I talked with them both separately, and told them that the Lord had a controversy with them both. They denied that there was anything like particular attachment between them. I knew better, but the Lord helped me to work through the meeting.
(12LtMs, Lt 114, 1897, 14)
Just the meeting closed, Fannie came to me and said, “O Sister White, I have come to you as to a mother. I do love Brother Caldwell with all my heart, and my heart is just broken. Three times has this cup of bliss been presented to me, and then been snatched away.” Then the girl said, “I prayed that if it was right for us to get married, his wife might get a divorce from him, and it was not many weeks before she did get a divorce. Now don’t you think the Lord heard my prayer?” I dared not talk with her, for I had to speak that day before a large congregation. If Sister Prescott is in Battle Creek, she will be able to tell you the particulars.
(12LtMs, Lt 114, 1897, 15)
Well, from that time I cut loose from Fannie, never, to connect with her again. But a little while after this, Fannie was in Sydney and wrote me another confession. I thought that I could not take her back, but the Spirit of the Lord rested upon me, and said, Give her another trial. So I decided that I would see Fannie and tell her that I would again take her back. This I did, and she remained with me several weeks, and then decided that she wanted to go home to her mother. I told her that she might feel free to do so.
(12LtMs, Lt 114, 1897, 16)
And now after all the suffering and distress that I have passed through because of the actions of these two, and the downright lies they told, to have Fannie Bolton put these articles in the paper, exalting her poor, miserable, blind, poverty-stricken soul, Miss Ashbury is a little too large a mouthful for me to swallow.
(12LtMs, Lt 114, 1897, 17)
It tastes strongly of the dish. If I can find them, I will send you copies of letters written to both Fannie and Caldwell.
(12LtMs, Lt 114, 1897, 18)
I hardly know how to address my letter, but I will send this letter to you and ask you to place it in the hands of the ones who should have it. I know not who is in Battle Creek at the present time, whether yourself is there, but I will write to you.
(12LtMs, Lt 114a, 1897, 1)
Will you please to send me several of all the articles in pamphlet form that have been published of my testimonies?
(12LtMs, Lt 114a, 1897, 2)
Can you tell me why I do not receive my books Mount of Blessing? Why is there such a delay? If the securing [of] cuts shall keep a book nearly two years after it is written, would it not be best to send the book without cuts? Time is passing into eternity, the end is near, and I say, Sell the books and get them into circulation.
(12LtMs, Lt 114a, 1897, 3)
I was very much disappointed that you did not return to this country. I hope it is God's will you will come back to this country. I have thought this a long time, but I am not able to write much for this mail. I am having serious trouble with my heart. I am greatly exhausted, but my trust is in God.
(12LtMs, Lt 114a, 1897, 4)
Much love to you and yours.
(12LtMs, Lt 114a, 1897, 5)
Brother Tenney, it just occurs to my mind to write to you in regard to Elder Haskell. He feels very much disturbed over the delay taking his accounts over here for settlement. He is at the present time a valuable worker. He goes deeper into Bible subjects than most of our ministers. He is one of the old hands that has served the cause of God from nearly the very first.
(12LtMs, Lt 114a, 1897, 6)
Now I have a request to make that our brethren shall honor the old laborers in the cause of God who are doing just as efficient work as they have ever done in the former days.
(12LtMs, Lt 114a, 1897, 7)
If it is his choice to have his bills for labor, the settling be in Battle Creek, see that his request is granted.
(12LtMs, Lt 114a, 1897, 8)
I know again and again we have had to wait for months before we could draw from the Echo office. He has spent everything in the cause of God, he says, in the various enterprises. The work has all. And then I ask, Why should he not in this matter of payment have his wish?
(12LtMs, Lt 114a, 1897, 9)
I could not have got along unless I had received money from Elder Haskell to invest in the work here in Australia. Fourteen thousand dollars he has invested now here in Australia.
(12LtMs, Lt 114a, 1897, 10)
I think that some of this I may be able some time to pay, but all I have has been invested also, and in this missionary field such ones of us should be considered, and he has nothing at all now, only just what he is consuming in actual necessities.
(12LtMs, Lt 114a, 1897, 11)
I wish you to make what wish you choose of this to bring about a right condition of things.
(12LtMs, Lt 114a, 1897, 12)
Lt 115, 1897
Tenney, Brother [G. C.] “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia July 5, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in FBS 80-81. Dear Brother Tenney:
I received your letter. I am sending you a copy of a letter I have sent to Fannie Bolton. You can see from this letter that I regard Fannie as one who cannot retain a spirit of contrition for any length of time. She is so inflated with Fannie Bolton that she does not know herself a few moments after she has expressed deep humiliation because of her own course of action. She springs into life speedily, and blossoms out wonderfully, dwelling on the goodness, love, mercy, and forgiveness of God toward her, taking all the promises to herself.
(12LtMs, Lt 115, 1897, 1)
In the past she has expressed wonderful sorrow for her wicked course of action, but she does not stay penitent. She does not continue to be contrite in heart. She flashes forth, thinking she is inspired by God. While she was praying the Lord that if it was right for her to marry Caldwell his wife might get a divorce from her husband, she told me that as she talked and gave Bible readings, the people turned pale to hear her talk, and she thought she was inspired by God. Her imagination is very strong, and she makes such exaggerated statements that her word is not trustworthy.
(12LtMs, Lt 115, 1897, 2)
I feel so sorry that these productions of hers ever entered our papers. Brother Schowe from Pennant Hills, who has long been a Government schoolteacher, recently made me a visit. He accepted the Sabbath in 1894. He seems to be a man of good sense and excellent education. He is a regular subscriber for nearly all our papers, the Review and Herald, and Youth’s Instructor, etc. He opened the subject himself, and said to me, “Sister White, did you notice those strange articles in the Review and Herald? I thought it a little strange that such productions should be suffered to go through the papers.” He had no knowledge whatever of the course Fannie had pursued toward me. I told him that I did not read the articles till my attention was called to them by others. Then I read one in the Review, and one in the Instructor. Brother Schowe said, “Miss Bolton must have lost her balance of mind.”
(12LtMs, Lt 115, 1897, 3)
O, I am so sorry and ashamed to have the paper go to others with such articles as this in it. Piece after piece from Fannie’s pen appears in the papers. What does it mean? When I can find them, I will send you copies of some letters written by me to her, and her answers. When she was in my family, it seemed that Satan used her as his agent to invent those things that would make the whole household miserable. She would have her times of confession, and would then say all that one could ask another to say. But she would go over the same ground again and again, each time worse than before, until I decided that Satan’s temptations, working upon her desire for recognition, were so strong that she had no power to escape from the snare. She was one with the enemy, working in his service.
(12LtMs, Lt 115, 1897, 4)
Now, my brother, if it had not been for these articles in the Review, I would have held my peace. I thought that if Fannie would only keep away from me, and trouble me no more, I would not expose her, but would let the poor, deluded, misshapen character alone. But when she figures so largely in our papers, I must speak. I dare not keep silent. Such productions do no one any good, and the blessing of the Lord cannot attend them.
(12LtMs, Lt 115, 1897, 5)
Lt 116, 1897
Wessels, Peter Summer Hill, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia February 17, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother Peter Wessels:
We were pleased to receive a donation from you of £50. It came at a time when we needed it very much. When it came, we had been away from Cooranbong eight days and were staying at the Health Home, in order to do something in fitting it up.
(12LtMs, Lt 116, 1897, 1)
Brother and Sister Semmens are energetic, self-denying people. They spent several years at Battle Creek, to obtain an education in the medical missionary work. They returned about eighteen months ago and expected to go right into this work, but we had no money. He took hold of the conference work, giving Bible readings, visiting, and looking after the religious interests of the people; and he had good success.
(12LtMs, Lt 116, 1897, 2)
Dr. Kellogg thought we should have a sanitarium at once; and so we might if we had been in America, where we could have called upon those who know us for means to carry forward the work. But here every step has been attended with difficulty. Last year I furnished the means to keep five laborers in the field, and as to calling for means, we might as well try to make brick without straw.
(12LtMs, Lt 116, 1897, 3)
I want the doctor to come over here and see the field. One thing I know, a good work has been done in this region; but a great deal more needs to be done. We have only just made a beginning. We cannot make much advancement, but we cannot neglect the poor. We must be kind and courteous. We must have an interest in the necessities of the poor. By showing an interest in the wants of suffering humanity, we can best reach hearts. The culture of the mind and heart is much more easily accomplished when we feel such tender sympathy in others that we scatter our benefits and privileges to relieve their necessities.
(12LtMs, Lt 116, 1897, 4)
Getting and holding all we can for ourselves tends to poverty of soul; and as the soul and mind is the principal part of the man, we must see that all its powers are kept unpolluted and holy unto the Lord. A practical exhibition of piety, of pure and undefiled religion is to visit the fatherless and the widow in their affliction, and to keep ourselves unspotted from the world. This is the power of the gospel.
(12LtMs, Lt 116, 1897, 5)
We must work in Christ’s lines. This is of far more consequence to us than sermons or professions or creeds. The world will watch our attitude, our works, our principles. With keenness and severity it will criticize all we do in temporal lines. We are constantly making an impression, favorable or unfavorable, to the Christian religion, upon some member of the human family. We should demonstrate to the world that Bible religion prompts to industry and frugality, but in no case encourages avariciousness, penuriousness, over-reaching, or any dishonesty.
(12LtMs, Lt 116, 1897, 6)
Religion is service to God. The faith we claim to believe will, if the heart is refined and purified, lead us nearer to Christ. If Christ abides in the soul-temple, it will be free from all worldly projects and all selfishness. We are under holy vows to God to have our faith grounded in truth and justice.
(12LtMs, Lt 116, 1897, 7)
The world and the Christian cannot be in co-partnership. “Ye are the light of the world.... Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven.” [Matthew 5:14, 16.] The Lord help us all to keep His commandments. The first four commandments reveal the duty of man to his God. “Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soul, and with all thy strength, and with all thy mind.” Here the mental, moral, and physical powers are embraced. “This do,” said Christ, “and thou shalt live.” [Luke 10:27, 28.] He is speaking of eternal life in the kingdom of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 116, 1897, 8)
The divine regulations which regulate the life of the obedient children of God demand that we love God supremely, and our neighbor as ourselves. “Whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them.” [Matthew 7:12.] This is the genuine experience of everyone that is born of God. In doing the commandments of God there is great reward. Your temporal life will be one of usefulness, and Jesus will not be ashamed to call you His brother.
(12LtMs, Lt 116, 1897, 9)
Satan has had, and still has, great power over human minds. His constant suggestion is, “You cannot bring the principles of life eternal into your daily life. In order to acquire the things of this world, you must follow my practice. Serve me; I hold the kingdoms of wealth in my grasp. Pleasure, happiness, and honor are at my disposal. If you would obtain wealth, hearken to my counsel. Do not be over scrupulous in regard to honor or honesty. If you do, the world will take every advantage of you. Look out sharply for your own interest, and do not entertain whimsical notions of honesty or benevolence. Work on my plans, and serve me, and I will see that you have money.” These specious temptations will be proffered to all who serve God.
(12LtMs, Lt 116, 1897, 10)
My dear brother, the Lord Jesus loves you, and would have you cherish that faith that works by love and purifies the soul. “O for freedom,” says one, “so that I shall not be under the condemnation of the law.” There is indeed a remedy for all who hunger and thirst. “Therefore being justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ.” [Romans 5:1.]
(12LtMs, Lt 116, 1897, 11)
Lt 117, 1897
Wessels, Peter “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia January 26, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in ML 25, 263. Dear Brother Peter Wessels:
Lie low at the feet of Jesus. “Take my yoke upon you,” He says, “and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart, and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.” [Matthew 11:29, 30.]
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 1)
Christ’s last prayer for His disciples, recorded in (John 17), followed the instruction given in John 16:24-33. This prayer was not fully appreciated by the disciples till after the resurrection of their Lord, and the descent of the Holy Spirit. Then it was understood and fully appreciated. “These words spake Jesus, and lifted up his eyes to heaven, and said, Father, the hour is come; glorify thy Son, that thy Son also may glorify thee. As thou hast given him power over all flesh that he should give eternal life to as many as thou hast given him. And this is life eternal, that they might know thee, the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent.
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 2)
“I have glorified thee on the earth; I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do. And now, O Father, glorify thou me with thine own self with the glory which I had with thee before the world was. I have manifested thy name unto the men which thou gavest me out of the world; thine they were, and thou gavest them me; and they have kept thy word. Now they have known that all things whatsoever thou hast given me are of thee. For I have given unto them the words which thou gavest me; and they have received them, and have known surely that I came out from thee, and they have believed that thou didst send me.” [John 17:1-8.]
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 3)
These words I was reading to you in the vision of my head upon my bed. I said to you, You are not free in spirit, and never can be free as long as you struggle to maintain your own individual superiority, and keep yourself in your own hands. When you yield yourself to God, as a poor, weak child, who has not walked in His footsteps but has followed paths leading away from Him, you will find help and courage, and will be strengthened to return to the Lord.
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 4)
You are not following Christ today; you are following Peter Wessels. If you would cast your helpless soul on God, and no longer seek to carry yourself, the Lord would help you into the right way. But He will never justify you in a wrong course of action. Never! Never! Never! You may inaugurate special interests of your own, but they will never prosper. The Lord is a sin-pardoner, but He is not a sin-justifier. Sin must be cut out of the life of the servant of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 5)
“The disciples came to Jesus, saying, Who is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven? And Jesus called a little child to him, and set him in the midst of them, and said, Verily I say unto you, Except ye be converted, and become as little children, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven. Whosoever therefore shall humble himself as this little child, the same is greatest in the kingdom of heaven. And whoso shall receive one such little child in my name receiveth me. But whoso shall offend one of these little ones, it were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and that he were drowned in the depths of the sea. Woe unto the world because of offenses! for it must needs be that offenses come, but woe unto that man by whom the offense cometh! Wherefore if thy hand or thy foot offend thee, cut them off, and cast them from thee; it is better for thee to enter into life halt or maimed, rather than having two hands or feet to be cast into everlasting fire.” [Matthew 18:1-8.]
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 6)
Study what this means with reference to your individual experience. The enemy works through the world to offend. He strives to lead God’s people to do that which will imperil their spiritual purity and the healthfulness of their thoughts. You have yielded to him, and you are not cleansed from these things. Your spirit is not clean before God. Your heart goes out after your idols.
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 7)
Think how in this work you have corrupted the imagination and the soul. I entreat you, for Christ’s sake, to take heed, lest you perish. Do not, I beg of you, sell your soul for a mess of pottage. You are not in that state of mind that a man should be who receives from the conference credentials as a shepherd of the flock of God. You know you are not.
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 8)
You have been presented to me, not as a man who is contrite in heart, but as a man who is struggling to wrestle himself into a higher position. The Spirit that prompts to this course of action is not inspired by God, but is of the enemy. The human agent should not desire to be first; his greatest anxiety should be to understand what it means to be, in thought and spirit and practice, a pure, clean, consecrated agent for God.
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 9)
Please read the thirteenth chapter of John. I am writing on this chapter for The Life of Christ, and I would have you study it with the greatest carefulness and much prayer, for you are in constant weakness because you have made yourself weak. Humble repentance and contrition of soul, and entire dependence upon God through Jesus Christ, is your only hope. Do not, I beg of you, do anything rash. Do not, for Christ’s sake, act the part of Judas, and betray your Lord.
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 10)
Your peril is greater than you realize. But while your thoughts are constantly intruded upon by the subtle, specious devising of the enemy, you can go before God, and say in truth, “Thou hast searched me, and known me; thou art acquainted with all my ways; thou knowest my thoughts afar off.” [See Psalm 139:1-3.] The Lord knows all about it; He has a thorough understanding of the character of your mind. By Him all thoughts are estimated, all actions weighed. He sees every unlawful thought upon which the mind feeds; He knows every impulse of the sinful heart.
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 11)
A man that has money has power. Money has influence, and it gains for him the confidence of poor, ignorant human beings. Over these he has an influence for good or for evil. When such a man uses his influence wrongly, and educates the ignorant in practices of iniquity, in practices which he would not have his relatives or the church know of because he is ashamed of them, what think you of that man being sustained in the ministry?
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 12)
The men chosen by God to do His work will fear and tremble before Him, and will cry out, “Who is sufficient for these things?” [2 Corinthians 2:16.] You think it would be a terrible thing for your relatives to know of your past course of action. You would not want the church or the world to know the secret actions of your life. But God knows all about it, and the heavenly universe knows it. He whose eyes are too pure to behold iniquity sees it all. If you could see it as He sees it, if you could know what a hatred He has of such sin, how you would despise yourself. I will send again to you the testimony I sent before. Do not disregard it. Read it. Be convinced that the Holy Spirit has sent it to you; and put away your sin.
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 13)
“Men of low degree,” says the psalmist, “are vanity, and men of high degree are a lie; they are altogether lighter than vanity.” [Psalm 62:9.] If the thoughts or motives of a king or of a beggar are employed in any dishonest way, even though it be but to covet a penny, the Lord knows it. There is a right way, and a wrong way. The actions done upon this earth determine the destiny of the actors. God weighs every man in the scales of the sanctuary. You have been weighed in the balances, and found wanting.
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 14)
My brother, ask yourself the question, Is God near me, or is He afar off? Must I ascend to heaven, and bring Him down to this world? Must I descend into the deep to bring Him up? No; the Lord and all the heavenly intelligences are very near this world. Let not the spirit of reverence place God so far above this world that He seems to be beyond the reach of the humble seeker after Him. The beings that He has created need Him, and they can have Him. His church is to Him the dearest object in the world. He is not far away from any one of us.
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 15)
“In Him we live, and move, and have our being.” [Acts 17:28.] If we climb up into heaven, he is there; if we go down into the deep, he is there; if we take the wings of the morning, and fly into the uttermost parts of the earth, even there shall his hand find us, and his right hand guide us. If you humble your soul before God, and seek Him with all your heart, you will not seek in vain. When you feel the necessity of drawing nigh to God, God will draw nigh to you. Your soul will be kindled with a holy fire, which will burn upward because kindled by God.
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 16)
What does Christ require of thee? Thorough cleansing of the soul-temple, that it may be fitted for His abiding presence. O that your soul may have a spiritual hunger for the personal knowledge of God. O that it may be touched with the love of Christ. Christ is to be your all and in all. Self is our enemy, and must be suppressed. Live your short period of probation close to God. Jesus Christ is your Helper. “God forbid that I should glory,” writes Paul, “save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom the world is crucified unto me, and I unto the world.”“I am crucified with Christ; nevertheless I live, and the life which I now live in the flesh, I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave himself for me.” [Galatians 6:14; 2:20.]
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 17)
Cry unto God in your soul, longing after the righteousness of Christ, and your thoughts will be turned to the love of Christ; you will no longer desire the highest place; your soul will cry out, “God, be merciful to me, a sinner.” [Luke 18:13.] The response will come, “The blood of Jesus Christ his Son, cleanseth us from all sin.” [1 John 1:7.] Stand only in God, looking unto Jesus, the Author and Finisher of your faith. I entreat you to look to Jesus. Let the Lord be your fear and your dread. Fear to offend Him. Hide self in Christ, and then you will be as humble as a child.
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 18)
Have you purified your soul? Have you washed your garments of character, and made them white in the blood of the Lamb? Are they purified and made white? Remember the promise to the overcomer, “He that overcometh, the same shall be clothed in white raiment, and I will not blot out his name out of the book of life, but I will confess his name before my Father, and before his angels.” [Revelation 3:5.]
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 19)
“Because thou hast kept the word of my patience, I also will keep thee from the hour of temptation, which will come upon all the world, to try them that dwell upon the earth. Behold, I come quickly: hold that fast which thou hast, that no man take thy crown. Him that overcometh will I make a pillar in the temple of my God and he shall go no more out; and I will write upon him the name of my God, and the name of the city of my God, which is new Jerusalem, which cometh down out of heaven from my God; and I will write upon him my new name.” [Verses 10-12.]
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 20)
“And to the angel of the church of the Laodiceans write, These things saith the Amen, the faithful and true witness, the beginning of the creation of God, I know thy works, that thou art neither cold nor hot: I would thou wert cold or hot. So then because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spue thee out of my mouth. Because thou sayest, I am rich and increased in goods and have need of nothing; and knowest not that thou art wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked: I counsel thee to buy of me gold tried in the fire, that thou mayest be rich; and white raiment, that thou mayest be clothed and that the shame of thy nakedness do not appear; and anoint thine eyes with eyesalve, that thou mayest see.
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 21)
“As many as I love, I rebuke and chasten; be zealous, therefore, and repent. Behold, I stand at the door, and knock: if any man hear my voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and he with me. To him that overcometh will I grant to sit with me on my throne, even as I also overcame, and am set down with my Father on his throne.” [Verses 14-21.]
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 22)
“Blessed are the pure in heart; for they shall see God!” [Matthew 5:8.] In the estimation of God, a pure heart is more precious than the gold of Ophir. A pure heart is the temple where God dwells, the sanctuary where Christ takes up His abode. A pure heart is above everything that is cheap and low; it is a shining light, a treasure house from which come uplifting, sanctified worlds. It is a place where the imagery of God is recognized, and where the highest delight is to behold His image. It is a heart that finds its whole and only pleasure and satisfaction in God, and whose thoughts and intents and purposes are alive with godliness. Such a heart is a sacred place; it is a treasury of all virtue. He who possesses such a heart is an example for old and young. This perfect temple wants no guest, relishes no company that does not perfectly harmonize with God.
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 23)
The very thoughts of those whose hearts are pure are brought into captivity to Christ. They are occupied with thinking how they can best glorify God. No unworthy imagery is introduced and cherished in the mind. O my brother, you need the renewing power of the Holy Spirit, that your thoughts and example may be such as heaven can acknowledge.
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 24)
I present this from God to you. God will work only with those whose hearts are willing to come into harmony with Him. When this is done, the soul is fitted to bring forth the highest purposes of God, according to His will. Then the bright beams of the Sun of Righteousness shine into the soul, and are communicated to others.
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 25)
Will you be patient? Do not hurry to get into a responsible place, but walk carefully and softly before God, and follow on to know the Lord. Thus you may perfect a Christian character. This work requires simplicity, and much prayerful thought, and a daily self-surrender to God. The true brightness of life and of character is that which comes from God. It is by reflecting heavenly light that we increase in brightness and efficiency. Lift up your soul in its brokenness and inefficiency, and the Lord will give you an experience that will be a blessing to you. But do not walk apart from God, thinking that of yourself you can grow spiritually, for it is impossible to do this.
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 26)
You and your brother Philip ought to stand in the light of heaven’s radiance, reflecting light to all in your home. The families with which you are connected should be blessed by your influence. This was the Lord’s purpose; this was your appointed work. But as Satan succeeds in keeping you discontented and at variance with your brothers, his object will be gained. By neglecting your appointed work, you will cause the ruin of some connected with you. The very ones you might help, if you had a living connection with God, will be lost unless you change, for if you fail, they will surely fail, through your influence. Because of your complaints, your mother will misjudge the brethren in whom she should have confidence. Unless God helps you, you are not ready for Christ’s appearing.
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 27)
When Christ was upon this earth, He gave lesson upon lesson regarding the pure character of His kingdom. The principles He laid down contrasted sharply with the ideas the disciples had previously received from the teaching of the rabbis. Christ taught that a moral fitness alone would secure an entrance into His kingdom, and He showed that whatever the disciples had received from the rabbis that was contrary to this was false. God requires the homage of a consecrated soul, which has prepared itself, by exercising that faith that works by love, to serve God.
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 28)
The highest ideal of perfection is held up by God. The soul must be perfect, that it may become a habitation for the Lord God of hosts. All that he has man has received from God. He cannot give God anything that will enrich Him; for all is God’s. But God is willing to give power to those that surrender themselves to Him. John writes, “As many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name.” [John 1:12.] The child of sinful practices may be purified and cleansed from every defilement if he sees that sin is sin. This you have not yet seen in such a light that you would die rather than sin.
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 29)
My brother, will you have faith in God? In every age truth has been given for that age. The Christian evidence that we need, is found not in the experience of men but in our Bibles. The Word of God is the man of our counsel, for it brings us down from age to age, bearing its testimony to the unchangeableness of the truth. Not one of the ancient defenses of the word of God, appropriate for special times, has become worn out. No part of the Bible has died from old age. All the past history of the people of God is to be studied by us today, that we may benefit by the experiences recorded.
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 30)
“Moreover, brethren, I would not that ye should be ignorant, how that all our fathers were under a cloud, and all passed through the sea; and were all baptized unto Moses in the cloud and in the sea; and did all eat the same spiritual meat; and did all drink the same spiritual drink; for they drank of that spiritual rock that followed them, and that rock was Christ. But with many of them God was not well pleased; for they were overthrown in the wilderness. Now these things were our examples, to the intent that we should not lust after evil things, as they also lusted.
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 31)
“Neither be ye idolaters, as were some of them; as it is written, The people sat down to eat and to drink, and rose up to play. Neither let us commit fornication, as some of them also committed and fell in one day three and twenty thousand. Neither let us tempt Christ as some of them also tempted, and were destroyed of serpents. Neither murmur ye, as some of them also murmured, and were destroyed of the destroyer. Now all these things happened into them for ensamples; and they are written for our admonition, upon whom the ends of the world are come. Wherefore let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall.” [1 Corinthians 10:1-12.]
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 32)
I know you are in great peril, but Jesus died for you. “Cast not away therefore your confidence, which hath great recompense of reward. For ye have need of patience, that, after ye have done the will of God, ye might receive the promise. For yet a little while, and he that shall come, will come and will not tarry. Now the just shall live by faith, but if any man draw back, my soul shall have no pleasure in him.” [Hebrews 10:35-38.]
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 33)
“Wherefore (as the Holy Ghost saith, Today if ye will hear his voice, harden not your hearts, as in the day of temptation in the wilderness; when your fathers tempted me, proved me, and saw my works forty years. Wherefore I was grieved with that generation, and said, They do alway err in their heart; and they have not known my ways. So I sware in my wrath, They shall not enter into my rest.) Take heed, brethren, lest there be in any of you an evil heart of unbelief in departing from the living God. But exhort one another daily, while it is called today, lest any of you be hardened through the deceitfulness of sin. For we are made partakers of Christ if we hold the beginning of our confidence steadfast unto the end.” [Hebrews 3:7-14.]
(12LtMs, Lt 117, 1897, 34)
Lt 118, 1897
Wessels, Peter Summer Hill, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia February 1897 Previously unpublished. + Dear Brother Peter Wessels:
I am constrained to write to you this morning. You are often tempted and tried, but the word given to me for you is, “Come unto me, all ye that labor, and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.” This rest you will find nowhere else but in Christ. “Take my yoke upon you,” Christ says, “and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart; and ye shall find rest unto your souls.” [Matthew 11:28, 29.] You are in no case to suppose that if you yoke up with the enemy, to do his will and ways, this peace and rest will be yours to enjoy. Jesus is acquainted with you. He knows every temptation with which every soul is beset. Your eye must be constantly fixed upon Jesus, “the Author and Finisher” of your faith. [Hebrews 12:2.] The Lord is your Helper. He is at your right hand to strengthen you as you walk in companionship with Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 1)
The Lord Jesus has given His life for you, and He wants you to behold Him, “the Lamb of God that taketh away the sin of the world,”“the one altogether lovely,”“the chiefest among ten thousand.” [John 1:29; Song of Solomon 5:16, 10.] “But we all with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord, are changed into the same image, from glory to glory (character to character), even as by the Spirit of the Lord.” [2 Corinthians 3:18.] “Blessed be God, even the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercies, and the God of all comfort; who comforteth us in all our tribulation, that we may be able to comfort them which are in any trouble, by the comfort wherewith we ourselves are comforted of God. For as the sufferings of Christ abound in us, so our consolation also aboundeth in Christ.”“Now he which stablisheth us with you in Christ, and hath anointed us, in God; who hath also sealed us, and hath given the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts.” [2 Corinthians 1:3-5, 21, 22.] This we may all enjoy.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 2)
“Whether therefore ye eat, or drink, or whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory of God. Give none offence, neither to the Jews, nor to the Gentiles, nor to the church of God.” [1 Corinthians 10:31, 32.] “Therefore, my beloved brethren, be ye steadfast, unmovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord.” [1 Corinthians 15:58.] “Watch ye, stand fast in the faith, quit ye like men, be strong.” [1 Corinthians 16:13.]
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 3)
My brother, the Lord has given you talents of influence to use in your own family Every entrusted capability is from God. You may now cast your helpless soul upon Jesus Christ, for He sees how Satan tempts, and He knows how to deliver the tempted ones. If you seek Him with all your heart, He will help you to help souls away from temptation, and give evidence that you are led and taught of God. Press close to the bleeding side of your Redeemer.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 4)
Keep your hand in the hand of Jesus. Never separate from Him, but keep your mind in captivity to Christ, and your whole being in subjection to Him. Then your language will be, “Thanks be unto God, which always causeth us to triumph in Christ, and maketh manifest the savor of his knowledge by us in every place. For we are unto God a sweet savor of Christ, in them that are saved, and in them that perish; to the one we are the savor of death unto death; and to the other the savor of life unto life. And who is sufficient for these things? For we are not as many, which corrupt the word of God; but as of sincerity, but as of God, in the sight of God speak we in Christ.” [2 Corinthians 2:14-17.]
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 5)
We shall have many things to try us. The enemy of God and man is watching constantly to lead us into bye and forbidden paths. We need to study the Word of God, to be encouraged and strengthened and stablished, and settled in the truth, “knowing that whatsoever good thing any man doeth, the same shall he receive of the Lord, whether he be bond or free.” [Ephesians 6:8.]
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 6)
“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 against the wiles of the devil. 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. Wherefore take unto you the whole armor of God, that ye may be able to stand in the evil day, and having done all, to stand. Stand therefore, having your loins girt about with truth, and having on the breastplate of righteousness. And your feet shod with the preparation of the gospel of peace; above all, taking the shield of faith where with ye shall be able to quench all the fiery darts of the wicked. And take the helmet of salvation, and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God.” [Verses 10-17.]
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 7)
I cannot bring to you peace and joy, and love of Christ. But Christ Himself will give it you if you will seek Him with all your heart. “For God is my record how greatly I long after you all in the bowels of Jesus Christ. And this I pray, that your love may abound yet more and more in knowledge and in all judgment; that ye may approve things that are excellent; that ye may be sincere and without offence till the day of Christ; being filled with the fruits of righteousness, which are by Jesus Christ, unto the glory and praise of God.” [Philippians 1:8-11.] In the night season, I have been troubled on your account, and the Lord said, “Write the things I shall give thee.” I have done this. Will you heed the light given you of the Lord, and receive encouragement to be a faithful doer of the Word?
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 8)
Dear Brother: I received your letter in the last mail from Africa, but too late to answer it. I thank you most heartily for your liberal act in the means you have sent me. It came at a most opportune time. We were in need of means. My secretary, Miss McEnterfer and I rode over to see the first school building which is now completed. The foundation and cellar is laid for the second building, which to be one-story, to be used as cook room and dining room. The question arose in my mind, “Where is the lodging room for the students?” And the answer came, “the upper storey of the mill.”
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 10)
This place is wholly unfit for such a use. The great cracks in the floor and boards enclosing it are so large that one or two fingers could be put in them. This would prove a cold, uncomfortable place. We have been compelled for nearly one year to use this upper storey for a meeting place, with the furniture belonging to the school piled up on one side and end of the building. My heart has ached as I have entered this place for the worship of God, and I have felt that it was a dishonor to His Holy name. I could not endure the thought of having to worship God through the winter months in such a place.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 11)
I had most earnestly prayed the Lord for guidance in the matter, and also for means to build a chapel. When I was told by Brother Hare that we should have to depend on tents and the upper storey of the saw mill for the accommodation of our students, my heart was deeply pained. I am sure the Lord urged the suggestion upon my mind to put an additional storey above the dining-room and kitchen, partition one half off for the students to occupy for lodging rooms, and the other half we will use for a chapel. The whole structure can be only enclosed, < not finished,> but this will be better than the loft above the mill.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 12)
I asked Brother Hare why we could not depart from the plan of the designer, and put up a chamber. The same roofing and shedding would cover the whole. The matter was discussed, and after a few moment’s favorable thought that night, there was a more full consideration, and our decision was made. We could not possibly finish every part of this building, but it will answer our purpose if only sided up, and then we can wait for means to come in to build a chapel and finish this second building. It was thought that one hundred and fifty pounds would do the extra work above the original design, and would accommodate us in our present distress. So this brings us considerable relief. The money you sent will be a help at this time to invest in the enterprise. I felt so thankful that we were just in time to see what was needed, and to have the work done. Nothing need be left undone in carrying out our plans. We thank the Lord for the means sent, and you, the Lord’s agent for sending it.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 13)
We have now a congregation of from one hundred to one hundred and twenty-five. But the conference funds are so low we could not support workers in Sydney or in Cooranbong. Yet there is need of workers. Brother Baker is the only minister we have had in all the New South Wales Conference. Brother Semmens, who is entering into the building up of a medical institute, is giving treatment, and doing as well as can be expected; but he needs, and must have, some one co-operating with him as a manager. He does all he can. He has to take two services on Sabbath and one on Sunday. This is too much for him. Brother Baker is called out to long distances where they have never heard a minister.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 14)
Three hundred miles from Sydney, the Macedonian cry comes to us, “Come over and help us.” [Acts 16:9.] One letter received from a young man twenty-two years of age says, “We are poor, but we have a minister. We had the loan of Great Controversy, and in that book we found that we are not keeping the right day, that the seventh day is the Sabbath, and not the first day of the week.” The eldest son began to keep the Sabbath. Then his two sisters and three brothers came into the truth. The opposition from the father was very strong. Some of their neighbors were interested, and they thought would embrace the truth and be baptized. He said they were all paying tithes, and he would pay part of his fare if a minister could be sent.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 15)
Brother Baker spent about two weeks there. The first night he put up at an hotel a few miles from the place where the family he came to visit were living. Next morning he visited the family. They were living on a large sheep ranch. The house was a very poor specimen of a house, but everything within was clean and neat. The eldest member of the family was a daughter, twenty-four years of age, who managed the concerns of the home.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 16)
Brother Baker was made welcome, but was told that the father was hard and unimpressible. He asked if he might not be entertained there, saying he would take any kind of fare. He was told that he must see her father; she dared not say he could stay. He went to the field where the brothers were at work, and put the same question to them, and was answered as the eldest girl had answered him. They dared not say he could stay. “You must ask him yourself,” they said. “Well,” said Brother Baker, “one of you go with me.”“No,” they replied, “that would not be wise; you had better go alone.” He went, and introduced himself to the father, telling him that he had come to hold meetings, and baptize his children. He said he would prefer to remain in the family, and would be willing to receive any kind of fare if he would consent to take him in. The man responded heartily, saying that he was welcome, and in the talk they had, he said that his children were good, obedient children. The father seemed much affected by the conversation.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 17)
Brother Baker held meetings at two different places, and quite an interest was manifested. The children said their father never read the Bible, and he was, they thought, an infidel. But he was present in the family, and listened to the explanation of the Scriptures, and seemed to be struggling with deep feelings. At the baptism the father was present. The mother had been dead several years.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 18)
When Brother Baker left, the father handed him a pound, and with tears in his eyes invited him to come again. So he was not so hardened as his children supposed. Their courage in taking their position on Bible truth has certainly had its influence. These children work hard and accept what the father will give them, having no stated wages. Quite an interest was manifested by the neighbors, and Brother Baker was well satisfied with his visit.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 19)
And now another call comes from two hundred miles away, where they have heard no minister. Several have taken their stand for the truth and want to be baptized. The Spirit of the Lord is working in the regions beyond. O that we could obtain the means that are being wasted in pleasure, and almost thrown away in luxuries! If those who are spending their money for that which is not meat, either for body or soul, would devote their means to the Lord’s service, we would have a day of rejoicing.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 20)
O for the money that has been wasted and squandered for pleasure and selfish gratification! Jesus, the Majesty of heaven, came to our world to be an example of perfect obedience. We have this Pattern before us; let us copy it. He in whose heart is enshrined the beautiful and pure image of Christ has a model that is elevated, sacred, and uplifting, by which to shape his life and character. Our Redeemer suffered for us in the flesh, gave up everything for us. He left the royal courts, stepped down from His high position, clothed His divinity with humanity, and being in the form of man, humbled Himself. For our sakes He became poor, that we through His poverty might be made rich.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 21)
A young ruler came to Christ, asking, “What shall I do that I may inherit eternal life?” Christ said to him, “If thou wilt enter into life, keep the commandments.” [Matthew 19:16, 17.] In speaking of the commandments, our Lord confined Himself to the last six. The principle of these commandments is embraced in the words, “Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thy self.” [Verses 18, 19.] Here the ruler was shown his lack. Christ showed him the idol of his affections, He revealed the danger that imperilled his soul.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 22)
The young man then said to Him, “All these things have I kept from my youth up; what lack I yet?”“Jesus said to him, If thou wilt be perfect, go and sell all that thou hast, and give to the poor, and thou shalt have treasure in heaven; and come and follow me.” [Verses 20, 21.]
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 23)
The heart of Christ hungered and thirsted for the love of this young man. He looked upon him with loving interest. He longed to hear him choose the self-denying path of self-sacrifice. He longed to make him a co-laborer with Him in the work of restoring the moral image of God in man. He greatly desired him to transfer his affections to God, and lay up treasure in heaven, and become a partaker of His self-denial and self-sacrifice, sharing His reproach in this life, and in the end receiving the precious boon of eternal life and an imperishable treasure in the kingdom of God. Will he decide for Christ?
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 24)
“But when the young man heard that saying, he went away sorrowful, for he had great possessions.” [Verse 22.] He did not keep the commandments of God. Riches were his idol. He could not keep the commandments while the world was first in his love. He loved the goods which the Lord had entrusted to him, and which, as a faithful steward, he should have used in the service of God, more than he loved the Giver. His affections were placed on his treasure. Christ saw that his only hope was to surrender his riches; and He laid His hand on his possessions; it was the ruler’s only hope of eternal life. The ruler saw that he could not be a follower of Christ and retain his present style of self-indulgence. But to part with his earthly treasure for the heavenly seemed too much of a sacrifice, and he turned away from Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 25)
Yet Christ gave up all heaven and submitted to a shameful death to make it possible for that young ruler, as well as for every other human being, to keep His commandments.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 26)
The ruler’s possessions, his temporal blessings, were entrusted to him by God, that he might prove himself a faithful steward of his Master by dispensing the goods for the blessing of those who were suffering. And not merely was he to bestow gifts of a temporal character. The poverty of the soul was comprehended and embraced in Christ’s words.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 27)
The Majesty of heaven had made it possible for the ruler to do this work. He could have united with Christ as an interested partner in the great firm; he could have been a blessing to his fellow men. What a heritage he was losing! It was unseen treasure; but it was a heavenly possession, an immortalized inheritance, which there would be no possibility of his losing, for it was laid up by the throne of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 28)
“Thou shalt have treasure in heaven,” said Christ. [Verse 21.] This precious promise was assured to the young man if he would comply with the conditions laid down; but he went away sorrowful, because the conditions appeared to him so hard. Yet the One that laid them down had Himself become poor that He might present to all who would receive it the immortal, heavenly treasure, the eternal substance. But the ruler’s heart was bound up with his earthly possessions, and he refused to give them up, though they were his Lord’s goods, to be used as Christ directed. By obeying these words, he could have honored and glorified the name of the Giver.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 29)
“Then said Jesus unto his disciples, ... That a rich man shall hardly enter into the kingdom of God. And again I say unto you, It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God.” [Verses 23, 24.]
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 30)
There are thousands upon thousands that have the Lord’s goods in their keeping. Our Lord says to them, “If thou wilt enter into life, keep the commandments.” [Verse 17.] It is the only hope for those who love earthly treasure to lay it at the feet of Jesus. If they allow their minds to become absorbed in the world, if they glorify themselves, as though their treasures were their own, to do with as they pleased, their riches become to them a separating wedge to divide them from God. All who are doers of the Word will hold their time, their talents, their means, as sacred trusts, over which God has made them His stewards.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 31)
He who uses his entrusted capital and talents, whether rich or poor, with wisdom and does not, through love of self and love of display, misappropriate the entrusted goods but keeps the glory of God in view, and makes his entrusted means a blessing to suffering humanity, and a means of advancing the cause of Christ’s kingdom upon the earth, becomes a partner in the heavenly firm, and a co-laborer with Jesus Christ. He wears Christ’s yoke and lifts His burdens. He wins souls to Christ, because he is a representative of Christ’s character. He will lay up treasure in heaven, and will walk with Christ in heavenly communion.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 32)
The young ruler was sorry to part with Christ, but he gave Him up, although he had felt convicted that He could supply the want of his soul. To give up his earthly treasure, that was seen, for the heavenly treasure, that was unseen, was too much of a sacrifice. He decided not to try the experiment. When it was his privilege to choose Christ’s terms, the result showed that he prized the gift higher than the Giver. His claim that he had kept the law from his youth up was a deception, for the commandments of God require the whole man. “Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy strength, and with all thy mind, > [Luke 10:27.]
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 33)
It is not having a knowledge of God’s will, or making a profession of obedience, that secures for any one of us eternal life. It is the subjection of heart and soul and mind and strength to Jesus Christ, whose property we are. We are not owners of ourselves. “Ye are not your own; for ye are bought with a price; therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit, which are God’s.” [1 Corinthians 6:19, 20.] God’s requirements take in every phase of self-sacrifice.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 34)
Then Peter said, “Lo, we have left all, and have followed thee. And Jesus answered, and said, Verily, I say unto you, There is no man that hath left house, or brethren, or sisters, or father, or mother, or wife, or children, or lands, for my sake, or the gospel’s, but he shall receive an hundredfold now in this time, houses, and brethren, and sisters, and mothers, and children, and lands, with persecutions; and in the world to come eternal life. And many that are first shall be last, and the last first.” [Mark 10:28-31.] He who sacrifices for my sake, or the gospel’s, shall receive even in this life the richest blessings.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 35)
“Then took he unto him the twelve, and said unto them, Behold, we go up to Jerusalem, and all things that are written in the prophets concerning the Son of man shall be accomplished. For he shall be delivered unto the Gentiles, and shall be mocked, and spitefully entreated, and spitted on, and they shall scourge him, and put him to death: and the third day he shall rise again. And they understood none of these things; and this saying was hid from them, neither knew they the things which were spoken.” [Luke 18:31-34.] Christ would impress upon the minds of His disciples that His kingdom is not temporal, but spiritual.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 36)
My brother, you will have trials; you cannot avoid them. But do not, at any time, act rashly. Move quietly and pray much. The salvation of your soul is of more value than any amount of gold or silver. The blessing of your family should be highly prized by you as a treasure that cannot be measured with gold or with silver. You will appreciate these responsibilities when you reflect that they are to be prized as your richest treasure.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 37)
Keep your mind and your thoughts upon Christ. Enshrine the Saviour in your heart. O, I greatly fear, and am troubled in soul for you all. Were it not for the temptations which come because of riches, the Wessels family would now be in a more favorable position to win eternal life by obedience to all the commandments of God. You would all have a clearer insight into the truth. The sacred fences and barriers of the law of God would not be so readily overstepped. You would not feel at liberty to move as you please.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 38)
You need to pray more earnestly, and to cultivate the meekness and lowliness of Christ. The Lord Jesus loves you; He looks upon you with divine sympathy, and would draw you with the cords of His love; but there is great danger that you [and] will refuse to be drawn just as the young ruler. Christ loved him, and yet He laid before him the only conditions upon which he could secure eternal life. He refused these conditions. Will this be the case with any one of the Wessels family who have had the light of truth, who have loved the truth, who have enjoyed the grace of Christ? Will you choose to do as you please, irrespective of the eternal interests that are involved in your course of action?
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 39)
Your only safety lies in making an entire surrender to God. When you decide to be wholly the Lord’s in heart and soul and strength, you will be given a stability that will be maintained under all circumstances. You will have a much clearer insight into the truth. But all of you are in peril of coming short of the grace of Christ unless you follow on to know more decidedly and firmly than you have done.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 40)
The truth, brought into the sanctuary of the soul, will sanctify the receiver. It never leads him to do an unrighteous action. Truth never puts its delicate feet on false or uncertain ground, to accommodate itself to any circumstance, however plausible.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 41)
I entreat of every one to build upon the Rock, Christ Jesus. Then you will not be tossed with temptations, or left to drift upon the sea of opinion. Christ stretches out His hand to save every one who will grasp it. He will hold you if you will consent to be helped. “Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on thee, because he trusteth in thee.” [Isaiah 26:3.] This is our assuring promise. Keep your mind stayed on God. Yield not to uncertain flattery or attractions, for there is a heaven to win and a hell to shun.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 42)
Eternal life is worth a lifelong, persevering effort, an effort proportionate to the value of the treasure you would win. I would address myself to all the Wessels family, believers or unbelievers. Christ invites you to make Him your personal Saviour. John writes, “I write unto you fathers, because ye have known him that is from the beginning. I write unto you, young men, because ye have overcome the wicked one. I write unto you, little children, because ye have known the Father. I have written unto you, fathers, because ye have known him that is from the beginning. I have written unto you, young men, because ye are strong, and the word of God abideth in you, and ye have overcome the wicked one.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 43)
“Love not the world, neither the things that are in the world. If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him. For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life, is not of the Father, but is of the world. And the world passeth away, and the lust thereof; but he that doeth the will of God abideth forever.” [1 John 2:13-17.] Take heed to these words. Again John writes, “But ye have an unction from the Holy One, and ye know all things. I have not written unto you because ye know not the truth, but because ye know it, and that no lie is of the truth.” [Verses 20, 21.]
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 44)
I call upon you, in the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, to prepare for the coming of Christ in the clouds of heaven. Do not trifle away your precious, God-given opportunities. Day by day cast the love of the world out of your hearts. Understand by experience what it means to have fellowship with God. Prepare for the judgment, that you may escape the things that are coming upon the world, and stand before the Son of man.
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 45)
When Christ shall come to be admired in all them that believe, may you be of that number because you have joined yourself to the Lord, because you are on the side of Christ, on the side of the heavenly angels, on the side of God. God is always a majority. “Then shall the righteous man stand in great boldness, before the face of such as have afflicted him, and made no account of his labors. When the wicked shall be troubled with terrible fear, and shall be amazed at the strangeness of his salvation, so far beyond all that they looked for. And they, repenting and groaning for anguish of spirit, shall say, within themselves, This is he whom we had in derision, who was a proverb of reproach. We fools counted his life as madness, and his end to be without honor. Now he is numbered among the children of God, and his lot among the saints.”
(12LtMs, Lt 118, 1897, 46)
Lt 119, 1897
Wessels, Brother and Sister [Peter] “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia March 8, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 6BC 1073. Dear Brother and Sister Peter Wessels:
I am not expecting that this will be copied. Will you please tell me in your next if you can read it, for I would be pleased to write to you sometimes in my own hand-writing. I should be very much pleased to see you in your little family. May the Lord give you both grace to do His will. Let not your faith fail, neither be discouraged. Are you not glad that Jesus knows our every weakness? He knows how to succor those who are tempted. I have great hope that you, with your brother Philip, will be overcomers.
(12LtMs, Lt 119, 1897, 1)
You both should stand firmly for the truth and not, by any course of action you may pursue, bring dishonor to God. Your time, your, character, your influence, would be given to do Him service. Be true to yourself; make straight paths for your feet, lest that which is lame be turned out of the way. May the Lord grant His Holy Spirit to rest upon you in large measure. Then you will reveal Christ in words, in spirit, and in character. The mind that is brought into captivity to Jesus Christ will meditate upon heavenly things; and O, how sweet will be that contemplation.
(12LtMs, Lt 119, 1897, 2)
By the infinite sacrifice that the Lord God of heaven has made in giving His Son, that sinners might be saved from eternal death, we know that He means to counterwork sin. He has provided this expensive means to save the souls who would surely perish if He had not done so. In the place of punishing the guilty sinner, the Lord allowed His only begotten Son to suffer the penalty of transgression, that man might have another opportunity, that another probation might be granted him in which to return from transgression and sin to his loyalty to God, and stand before God in repentance. He cannot hope to stand before God innocent through the merits of Jesus Christ while he continues in sin. He must cease to transgress and become loyal and true.
(12LtMs, Lt 119, 1897, 3)
The Lord has given Jesus to our world, to a life of suffering and a shameful death in order to save perishing souls. And having done this, He will not withhold any facilities, any gift of heaven, that will enable man to accomplish the glorious work of salvation. By thus dying for man, Christ has shown that His love for the human family is measureless. And in rising from the tomb and proclaiming over the rent sepulchre of Joseph, “I am the resurrection and the life,” He makes manifest His triumph over death. [John 11:25.]
(12LtMs, Lt 119, 1897, 4)
God would have us realize that all this was done to counterwork sin and rebellion against God, and bring in everlasting righteousness. “For as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name.” [John 1:12.] He is able and willing “to save unto the uttermost all who come unto God by him.” [Hebrews 7:25.]
(12LtMs, Lt 119, 1897, 5)
Jesus, the precious Saviour, is your only hope. He loves you. He wants you to have faith in Him, and to prove Him. Do not let anything arise to trouble and cause you to lose your hold on God. Let us be sure that we retain our connection with God as His children. “And if children, then heirs, heirs of God, and joint heirs with Christ, if so be we suffer with him, that we may be also glorified together.” [Romans 8:17.]
(12LtMs, Lt 119, 1897, 6)
God loves His obedient children. He has a kingdom prepared, not for disloyal subjects, but for His children whom He has tested and tried in a world marred and corrupted by sin. As obedient children, we have the privilege of relationship with God. “If children,” He says, “then heirs” to an immortal inheritance. [Verse 17.]
(12LtMs, Lt 119, 1897, 7)
Christ would have us yoke up with Him. “Learn of me,” He says, “for I am meek and lowly in heart; and ye shall find rest unto your souls.” [Matthew 11:29.] We shall be overcomers. We “shall see his face,” and His name shall be in our foreheads. [Revelation 22:4.] We shall be His chosen ones on earth, to enjoy the kingdom of His grace; and we shall be with Him to share in His kingdom of glory in the heavenly world. We shall be heirs of God, and joint heirs with Christ, for He is our portion and our inheritance. We are partakers of His own divine nature, and one with Him in His perfection. We have the same life as Jesus; we are sons and daughters of God. Christ and His people are one.
(12LtMs, Lt 119, 1897, 8)
God loves His children who are overcomers the same as He loves His only begotten Son. Then let us have a sense of our relationship to God, and walk circumspectly before the world, for this is our training place for heaven. If we would be saints above, we must first be saints below. We see a great work to be done. We are not half awake. We need strong evidences at this time that the Lord is with us of a truth. We need to consecrate ourselves and all we have to the service of God. We are to be laborers together with Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 119, 1897, 9)
Wherever you are, remember that you are near to God. He would have you surrender yourself to Him with all that you possess. It is all the Lord’s. Let us sense the fact that the Lord sees us, that He hears every word we utter. “The eyes of the Lord are in every place beholding the evil and the good.” [Proverbs 15:3.] “For there is not a word in my tongue, but lo, O Lord, thou knowest it altogether.” [Psalm 139:4.] Satan may put into our hearts the inquiry, “How does God know? Is there knowledge in the Most High?” [Psalm 73:11.] Satan would have men forget that God is watching over them.
(12LtMs, Lt 119, 1897, 10)
If we would only believe that angels of God are constantly around us to protect us from Satan’s snares, and to be a present help in every time of need, we would grow strong. Sensing the companionship we have, we would do the things that are pleasing in the sight of God. How careful would we be lest our words should offend Christ whose character we are to represent to the world. We need to meditate and converse upon the love and compassion and mercy of God for us. Satan is not at all pleased with such pure, ennobling, and elevating themes, and he draws apart from us. It is for this reason that the words are given us, “Draw nigh to God, and he will draw nigh to you.” [James 4:8.] Let your thoughts and conversation be upon heavenly things. God’s promise to us is, “I will put my law in their inward parts, and write it in their hearts, and I will be their God, and they shall be my people.” [Jeremiah 31:33.]
(12LtMs, Lt 119, 1897, 11)
The truth, holiness, and perfection of character are attainable to everyone who strives for it. This is made the very foundation of the new covenant of the gospel. There has been no substitution of a changed law. The law spoken of on the Mount of Blessings to the people was the same law we have had from the beginning. In His teachings Christ showed how far-reaching are the principles of the law spoken from Sinai, and He made a living application of that same law whose principles remain forever the great standard of righteousness, the standard by which all shall be judged in that great day when the judgment shall sit, and the books shall be opened. The law of Jehovah is the tree, the gospel is the fragrant blossoms and fruit which it bears.
(12LtMs, Lt 119, 1897, 12)
The Lord Jesus was, in His work, to fulfil all righteousness, and as the Head of humanity show man that he can do the same work, and meeting every specification of the requirements of God. Through the treasures of His grace furnished to the human agent, not one need miss heaven. In the keeping of God’s commandments the path has been made easier to the fulfillment of all righteousness. Thus may we magnify the law and make it honorable.
(12LtMs, Lt 119, 1897, 13)
This is the precious privilege granted to us individually. The Lord is soon to come. We want to be among the number who are admired by all them that believe. We need to pray daily, to study and obey the Word of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 119, 1897, 14)
May the Comforter be by your side as you read this letter, written by my own hand. Think much of the tender compassion of Christ, and let your whole soul, strength, mind, and might be devoted to His service. I love you all as a family in Jesus Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 119, 1897, 15)
Lt 120, 1897
Wessels, Peter “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia March 10, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in TSB 128-129.
I am sorry that you feel injured because I let Brother Robinson have a copy of the letter I sent to you. I did not do this to injure you in any way. You had yourself written me that you had made matters known to him concerning yourself, and he thought you should confess the whole matter to the church. I thought that letter would prevent any such movement, and keep the matter as private as possible. I do not in any way favor his reading the matter to your mother. She has an abundance of sorrows to carry. I did not sanction any public exposure. I thought that the letter, which condemned the sin, also encouraged you to hope and trust in God. I supposed that it would help Brother Robinson to help you. If it has added to your affliction, making matters any worse for you, I am sincerely sorry.
(12LtMs, Lt 120, 1897, 1)
Whenever I have written a message of reproof, I have always sent one copy to the minister who is officiating in the church, that he may have wisdom to recover such ones as are in danger through temptation, giving them such advice as they need. I also knew, under existing circumstances, that it would not be possible to give you credentials as a shepherd, recommending you to the confidence of the people, because knowing your course of action, if you should in any way be overcome, the Lord would make the conference guilty of the sin of which you are guilty.
(12LtMs, Lt 120, 1897, 2)
The Lord would not favor the children of Israel, because of Achan’s sin, and the displeasure of God was not only upon Achan, but upon all Israel. “The children of Israel committed a trespass in the accursed thing: ... and the anger of the Lord was kindled against the children of Israel.” [Joshua 7:1.] He permitted thirty and six men to be slain to signify His displeasure against the sin in the encampment of Israel. Joshua was greatly afflicted. He knew not of the sin, or of the reason why the army of Israel was defeated. “And Joshua rent his clothes and fell to the earth upon his face before the ark of the Lord until the eventide, he and the elders of Israel, and put dust upon their heads.
(12LtMs, Lt 120, 1897, 3)
“And Joshua said, ... O Lord, what shall I say, when Israel turneth their backs before their enemies! ... And the Lord said unto Joshua, Get thee up; wherefore liest thou thus upon thy face? Israel hath sinned, and they have also transgressed my covenant which I commanded them; for they have even taken of the accursed thing, and have also stolen, and dissembled also, and they have put it even among their own stuff. Therefore the children of Israel could not stand before their enemies, but turned their backs before their enemies, because they were accursed; neither will I be with you any more, except ye destroy the accursed thing from among you.”“Up, sanctify the people, and say, Sanctify yourselves against tomorrow: for thus saith the Lord God of Israel, There is an accursed thing in the midst of thee, O Israel: thou canst not stand before thine enemies, until ye take the accursed thing from among you.” [Verses 6-8, 10-13.]
(12LtMs, Lt 120, 1897, 4)
You can see that the unknown sin existing among the tribes of Israel was charged against the whole church in the wilderness. Success in warfare against their enemies could not be given them until this evil thing was searched out, until they had done all in their power to expel the wrong and cleanse it from the encampment. God had testified, “Neither will I be with you any more, except ye destroy the accursed thing from among you.” [Verse 12.]
(12LtMs, Lt 120, 1897, 5)
I present this before you that you may not feel that the church has done a grievous thing against you, that they have done you a personal injury and desire to hurt you as a man. The Lord has placed men in responsible positions to guard the church which is the flock of God, and certain duties which the Lord requires of His church are enjoined upon them as His appointed agencies. Should they neglect to do this work devolving on them, the Lord charges the guilt of the wrongdoing upon the whole church. Until that wrong is corrected, and thoroughly purged from the church, the blessing of God will not rest upon it.
(12LtMs, Lt 120, 1897, 6)
The Lord will be honored by the people who claim to be His children. Any hidden impurities He will have searched out and thoroughly corrected, that the evil may in no wise exist and bring the displeasure of God upon the church. The sons of Eli did wickedly, and a message was sent to Eli in regard to their wicked practices. “Now Eli was very old, and heard all that his sons did unto all Israel.... And he said unto them, Why do ye such things? for I hear of all your evil doings by all this people. Nay, my sons; for it is no good report that I hear: ye make the Lord’s people to transgress. If one man sin against another, the judge shall judge him; but if a man sin against the Lord, who shall entreat for him? Notwithstanding they hearkened not unto the voice of their father, because the Lord would slay them.” [1 Samuel 2:22-25.]
(12LtMs, Lt 120, 1897, 7)
Eli did not remove the transgressors from their office. “And there came a man of God unto Eli, and said unto him, Thus saith the Lord, Did I plainly appear unto the house of thy father, when they were in Egypt in Pharaoh’s house? And did I choose him out of all the tribes of Israel to be my priest, to offer upon mine altar, to burn incense, to wear an ephod before me? and did I give unto the house of the fathers all the offerings made by fire of the children of Israel? Wherefore kick ye at my sacrifice and at mine offering, which I have commanded in mine habitation; and honorest thy sons above me, to make yourselves fat with all the chiefest of the offerings of Israel my people? Wherefore the Lord God Israel saith, I said indeed that thine house, and the house of thy father should walk before me forever; but now the Lord saith, Be it far from me; for them that honor me I will honor, and they that despise me shall be lightly esteemed.” [Verses 27-30.]
(12LtMs, Lt 120, 1897, 8)
I present this matter again before you, for your attentive consideration. If the officers who have charge in any branch of the work of God dishonor Him in any line connected with His work, the Lord lays that charge upon the whole church. He will not serve with any man’s sin. Those in positions of trust are to honor God by a faithful duty toward all, ministers or laymen. They are to do faithful work as representatives of the character of Jesus Christ, to maintain order and purity of morals in the church, so that there shall be no unrighteousness practiced in selfish dealing, brother with brother, or in breaking down the barriers which the Lord has erected to preserve the clean, pure virtues of His people. No liberties must be indulged, men with women or women with men, to become familiar with the uncovering of their nakedness. This, by searching the Scriptures, you will see that the Lord expressly forbids as a crime, a sin.
(12LtMs, Lt 120, 1897, 10)
But, as I have placed this matter so fully before you, I need not repeat. My brother, your sin was not confined to yourself. You were doing great dishonor to God by lustful practices, educating the young girls in practices which are ruinous to their morals, and also destroying to their bodies. All such things are an abomination in the sight of God. I do want you to understand this sin, and never approach unto anything of this character again, as long as life shall last, for it is a crime against the youth, which you should see, and see in all its destructive influence. These very ones you have educated will submit their bodies for others to corrupt. The restraints are gone. A minister, a shepherd of the flock has done this.
(12LtMs, Lt 120, 1897, 11)
I know also that the Lord has not left you, that He will pardon your transgression. But I do not want you to create a sentiment with your mother or with any one else that knows of the matter that Brother Robinson is your enemy. He has a work to do as one whom the Lord has entrusted with large responsibilities. It is a duty devolving upon the officers of the church to guard the flock of God over which they are overseers. Should they neglect to do this, the Lord will call them to an account.
(12LtMs, Lt 120, 1897, 12)
I hope you will not feel bitter toward Brother Robinson, even though you think he has done you harm, needlessly, in reading matters to your mother which were very humiliating for her to know. If you do entertain these feelings, the Lord will not bless you, but will turn His face away from you.
(12LtMs, Lt 120, 1897, 13)
I do not advise that this matter be made public before the whole church. It may be that you will be unwise, and pursue a course that will make this a necessity. But if you will walk humbly before God, as you should do, and draw nigh to God, He will draw nigh to you. If you are contrite in heart, He will pardon your sin if you repent. The Lord loves you, but you have hurt and wounded Christ in injuring the souls of His heritage.
(12LtMs, Lt 120, 1897, 14)
My brother, it behooves you to walk carefully and softly before God. The greatest hindrance to the perfection of your Christian character will be putting a light importance upon the matter under consideration. You have a wife and precious children to live for, to teach and to encourage in every holy practice. Here is a sufficient work to keep your affections pure and uncontaminated. The conscientious regard and discharge of all your duties will help you to preserve alive the love of God in your heart for wife and children, and above all, the love for God, remembering that God is ever present with you.
(12LtMs, Lt 120, 1897, 15)
Now, as one that loves your soul, I entreat you for Christ’s sake not to have hard feelings toward the officers of the church, whose duty it is to keep the church as pure as possible in every respect. Therefore you should not feel bitter against them because they do their duty in the fear of God. If they make a mistake, bear in mind that your course of action has placed them in great perplexity to know just what they should do. Do not create a sympathy in the mind of your mother, which will lead her love for her children to cause her to have feelings which should not exist in her heart. Because you think you are injured, you will separate her affections from, and destroy her confidence in, the church officers in the very things they are required to do.
(12LtMs, Lt 120, 1897, 16)
Now, my dear brother, come close to Jesus, and He will pardon your transgressions and forgive your sins.
(12LtMs, Lt 120, 1897, 17)
Lt 121, 1897
Wessels, Brother and Sister [Peter] “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia February 20, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in TMK 291, 363. Dear Brother and Sister Wessels:
Our future, eternal happiness depends upon having our humanity, with all its capabilities and powers, brought into obedience to God, and placed under the control of divinity. Many have no faith in Jesus Christ. They say, “It was easy for Christ to obey the will of His Father; for He was divine.” But His Word declares, “He was tempted in all points like as we are.” [Hebrews 4:15.] He was tempted according to, and in proportion with, His elevation of mind; but He would not weaken or cripple His divine power by yielding to temptation. In His life on earth Christ was a representative of what humanity may be through the privileges and opportunities granted them in Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 121, 1897, 1)
“Simon Peter, a servant and apostle of Jesus Christ, to them that have obtained like precious faith with us through the righteousness of God and our Saviour Jesus Christ: grace and peace be multiplied unto you, through the knowledge of God, and of Jesus our Lord, according as His divine power hath given unto us all things that pertain unto life and godliness, through the knowledge of him that has called us to glory and virtue: whereby are given unto us exceeding great and precious promises: that by these ye might be partakers of the divine nature, having escaped the corruption that is in the world through lust.” [2 Peter 1:1-4.] Take particular notice of the fourth verse: “Whereby are given unto us exceeding great and precious promises; that by these ye might be partakers of the Divine nature, having escaped the corruption that is in the world through lust.”
(12LtMs, Lt 121, 1897, 2)
When Satan tempted our first parents, he said, “Hath God said, Ye shall not eat of every tree of the garden? ... Ye shall not surely die; for God doth know that in the day that ye eat thereof, ye shall be as gods, knowing good and evil.” [Genesis 3:1, 4, 5.] Thus he tried to flatter them into believing that they should be raised above the sphere of humanity.
(12LtMs, Lt 121, 1897, 3)
But Christ, by the example He has set before us, encourages the members of the human family to be men, obeying the Word of God within the sphere of their humanity. He Himself became a man, not a bond slave to Satan to work out his attributes, but a man in moral power, obedient to the law of God which is a transcript of His character. Those who would rebel against subjection to a wise and good law emanating from God, are slaves to an apostate power. Jesus became a man that He might mediate between man and God. He clothed His divinity with humanity, He associated with the human race, that with His long human arm, He might encircle humanity, and with His divine arm grasp the throne of Divinity. And this, that He might restore to man the original mind, which he lost in Eden through Satan’s alluring temptation, that man might realize that it is for his present and eternal good to obey the requirements of God. Disobedience is not in accordance with the nature which God gave to man in Eden.
(12LtMs, Lt 121, 1897, 4)
Through the moral power Christ has brought to man, we may give thanks unto God who hath made us meet for the inheritance with the saints in light. Through Jesus Christ every man may overcome in his own behalf and on his own account, standing in his own individuality of character. The Word comes to him, “Behold the Lamb of God, that taketh away the sin of the world.” [John 1:29.] How important is the Christian faith! How our whole earthly solace hangs upon Him whose mission to earth was to give power unto men. Through His servant He declares, “For as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name.” [Verse 12.]
(12LtMs, Lt 121, 1897, 5)
Christ has declared that in His Father’s house are many mansions. “And if I go and prepare a place for you,” He says, “I will come again, and receive you unto myself: that where I am, there ye may be also.” [John 14:3.] When Christ lay in the tomb, His disciples called to mind these words. They pondered over them, and wept because they could not fathom the meaning of them. No faith and hope relieved the broken-hearted disciples. They could only repeat the words, “I will come again, and receive you unto myself: that where I am, there ye may be also.”
(12LtMs, Lt 121, 1897, 6)
Mansions are prepared for all who have subjected themselves in obedience to the divine law. And in order that the human family might have no excuse because of Satan’s temptations, Christ became one with them. The only Being who was one with God lived the law in humanity, descended to the lowly life of a common laborer, and toiled at the carpenter’s bench with His earthly parent. He lived the life which He requires of all who claim to be His children. Thus was cut off the powerful argument of Satan that God required of humanity a self-denial and subjection that He would not Himself render. And thus was taken from Satan’s hands the weapons he designed to use against God.
(12LtMs, Lt 121, 1897, 7)
Jesus asks no more of men than that they shall follow in His footsteps. He was the Majesty of heaven, the King of glory; but for our sakes He became poor that we through His poverty might be made rich. Almost His last words to us are, “Let not your heart be troubled. Ye believe in God, believe also in me.” [Verse 1.] In the place of being sorrowful, your hearts troubled, you should rejoice. I came into the world for your sakes. My time here is now accomplished. I shall henceforth be in heaven. For your sakes I have been an interested worker in the world. In the future I shall be engaged, just as devotedly, in a more important work in your behalf. I came into the world to redeem you; I go to prepare an abiding place for you in My Father’s kingdom.
(12LtMs, Lt 121, 1897, 8)
Lt 122, 1897
Wessels, Peter Refiled as Lt 106, 1896.
Lt 123, 1897
Wessels, Philip “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia March 8, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in TSA 47-53.
If we could only realize that Christ crucified is the great object of our faith. Had Christ lived, He could not have been our Redeemer. Our faith must lay hold of the sacrificial offering of His life as a ransom for the world. His holiness of life, the tender compassion, the sympathy He manifested for all human woe, would not have saved us had it stopped there. It was not until, when dying upon the cross, He cried in agony, “It is finished,” that the work was accomplished. [John 19:30.] Not until He had descended to the lowest depths of humiliation, until He could go no further, was the tyranny of Satan broken. It was the death of Christ that satisfied divine justice. This was the price our ransom cost. Nothing is wanting now but for the will of man to bow, self to be crucified, and Christ to live in the heart. The soul temple must be dedicated to Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 1)
Every part of man is the Lord’s property. Our time, our talents, our influence, must be devoted to Him. Our money is only lent us on trust, to be used in the service of God. It has not been given us in order that we might enhance our own honor, but as faithful stewards we must keep ever in view the honor and glory of God. The Lord requires the whole heart, the undivided affections. We are not to withhold anything from Him, for all are His purchased possession.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 2)
There can be no sinless swerving from the standard of God’s Word. The first principles of holiness have yet to be learned by the one to whom God’s will is not paramount. We are deeply sorry that you are in strange and forbidden paths. You know the truth, and yet you have turned from it, and when you should be rendering service to God, you are found denying your Saviour. O, Philip, how could you do this? How long will you venture in the course of transgression? You do not obey the first four commandments, nor the last six. What excuse will you give in the last day why you stepped from beneath the bloodstained banner of Jesus Christ, to stand under the black banner of the prince of darkness? Will you continue to remain in the ranks of the enemy? What will you say when you meet the Judge in that day when every man will meet the reward of his works?
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 3)
I appeal to you to break the Sabbath no longer. You are called of God to be a part of His great firm, to be in co-partnership with Him, to trade with the Lord’s entrusted goods, and to show yourself faithful in His service. Read the seventeenth chapter of John. Read and reread the prayer there offered by Christ for His disciples.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 4)
It is God’s will that you shall be converted and co-operate with Him. Would that you could see and know as I do the value of your soul and of the work the compassionate Saviour has done for you. When you shall once comprehend this, you will not for one hour stand where you are today.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 5)
Your position has had an influence upon your brothers. Not having had the light and experience that you have had, they have placed confidence in you, and have looked much to your course of action. You will not lose your own soul alone. You carry many with you. If you would now repent and, in accordance with the light you have had, take up the weapons of warfare, and fight on the Lord’s side, you would no longer risk your eternal destiny. You would place your affections on things above, and not on things on the earth. You would place a high estimate upon the eternal treasure and realize how meager is all earthly gain secured at the risk of losing your soul.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 6)
You need the changes which will mold the life after the divine Pattern. Christ has said of you, “Satan hath desired to have you, that he may sift you as wheat. But I have prayed for thee, that thy faith fail not.” [Luke 22:31, 32.] Brother Philip Wessels, the Lord is inviting you to come unto Him. He says, “Return unto me, and I will return unto you.” [Malachi 3:7.] He will heal all your backslidings; He will love you freely. [Hosea 14:4.] Now is our day of test and trial. The precious hours are passing away. There is no place of safety or repose or justification in the transgression of the law of God. He demands nothing short of absolute surrender to Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 7)
You must make no reserve. “He that hath my commandments, and keepeth them,” He says, “he it is that loveth me: and he that loveth me shall be loved of my Father, and I will love him and will manifest myself to him.” [John 14:21.] “If ye keep my commandments, ye shall abide in my love; even as I have kept my Father’s commandments, and abide in his love. These things have I spoken unto you, that my joy might remain in you, and that your joy might be full.” [John 15:10, 11.] Obedience to God’s commandments does not keep us in a sad, gloomy frame of mind; the contemplation of them is not a sorrow. Through them the cheerful beams of Christ’s righteousness shine into our hearts.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 8)
This, Brother Philip, I am commissioned to tell you, may be yours. The Lord understands your every weakness, and He longs to be your sufficiency and your strength. Bear in mind that the reckoning time must come with us all, and you know not the day nor the hour when your probation may close. The Master, in bestowing His rewards, will scrutinize the return of every talent. The great Shepherd will call His sheep by name, and lead them out. Probationary time will then be ended, and the destiny of every soul decided for eternity.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 9)
In that day the faithful servants appropriate no merit to themselves. They feel that they have done only their duty, and that very deficiently. They could have acquired nothing without the capital advanced them. The faithful servant says, “I have gained beside them other talents.” [Matthew 25:20, 22.] These talents embrace both money and influence. If it had not been for the capital advanced in money or in capabilities, they would have come out bankrupt for eternity.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 10)
When the Master takes account of His servants, He gives His approval to those who have done faithful work with His entrusted capital. He speaks to them words of commendation, and rewards them as if the merit were their own. “Well done, good and faithful servant,” He says, “thou hast been faithful over few things, I will make thee ruler over many things: enter thou into the joy of thy Lord.” [Verse 23.] The countenance of Christ is full of joy and satisfaction, He is filled with delight that He can bestow blessings upon them for their faithful service. “Henceforth I call you not servants, but friends.” [John 15:15.]
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 11)
The Lord would have every man faithful in His service, if only for his own present happiness and eternal good. And if they are not cheerful in His service, it is because they have not received their talents as God’s gifts; they have not used them as His entrusted treasure.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 12)
A man’s interest is proportionate with his faithfulness. The slothful servant, who bound up in a napkin and hid his Lord’s goods, complained that the Lord was not a just Master. This selfish servant took his Lord’s entrusted goods and used them to benefit himself, regardless of the many souls who were destitute of the knowledge of truth and salvation. He left them to perish in their sins, to receive their just sentence. God bestows His rewards according to the faithful use we make in this world of our time, our influence, and the goods entrusted to us. He will reward according to our works. We are to bear in mind that it is not our property that we have in our keeping. It is the Lord’s, to be invested in a way that will glorify Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 13)
The Lord has given to every man his work. He has never given you permission to use His talents by trading with or investing them regardless of His commandments. This is practicing double robbery toward God. Please consider this. God will require His own with usury. The transgressor of His holy law is robbing God in abusing His holy day, and placing it on a level with common working days.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 14)
I tremble for you, my brother. When I think of this unfaithfulness, it amazes me. I do not know how you dare go on as you are doing after you have had a knowledge of the truth, and know that you are trampling upon the Lord’s Sabbath week after week. You must give account for this. O be warned! Be warned! Flee unto Jesus; He is calling for you. Do despite no longer to His Spirit of grace. What can you say for this breach of trust in the great day of reckoning? Will you now place yourself on the Lord’s side, and be determined that you will obey His requirements under all circumstances? I ask you to make no delay lest you pass the boundary of the forbearance of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 15)
The world is mad. It is rushing on perversely, just as they did in the days of Noah, adding insult upon insult to Jehovah, and trying to put God out of their thoughts. The Lord Jehovah was long-suffering to the inhabitants of the Noachic world. He is “slow to anger,” but He is also great in power, and will not acquit the wicked. “The Lord hath his way in the whirlwind and in the storm, and the clouds are the dust of his feet.” [Nahum 1:3.] The long-suffering and forbearance of God is wonderful because it indicates that He puts constraint upon His own attributes. It is Omnipotence exercised over Omnipotence.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 16)
O, how my heart aches as the situation is presented before me. Those whom God is sparing are abusing His mercies, yet He does not cut them down as cumberers of the ground. Those who have a knowledge of His will have a great tendency to disregard His Word, to be disobedient, unthankful, unholy, abusing the Lord’s mercy, long-suffering and forbearance.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 17)
March 9, 1897
I cannot sleep past one o’clock. My heart goes out in yearning of soul for those who are living in the very last scenes of this earth’s history, and yet are insensible to what is just before them. A vast reformation would be wrought upon the world if the veil of the future could be lifted, and all could see and understand that very soon there is to be a change in the attitude of God in His dealings with the perversity of man.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 18)
If God had decided in His councils in heaven to visit the transgressor of His positive commands with instant death, there would have resulted a much greater carefulness and restriction of the inclination to do those things that are an offense to God. The very men who seem to be dead to entreaties and warnings sent in mercy by God, those who will not be deterred from their evil course of action, would be prudent to save their lives, even if they have no love for God.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 19)
But the Lord’s arrangement, made in council with His only begotten Son, was to leave man a free moral agent to a certain length of probation. His eye would discern all their works, but He would compel no man’s service. If the love displayed in his long-suffering and patience would not bring them to repentance and perfect surrender to the laws of His kingdom, then they must be left to choose whom they would serve. Their life must testify of their choice. If they love transgression and choose to disregard His laws after sufficient test and trial, their case is forever decided. God cannot have such as members of His family in heaven. Their punishment will come in accordance with the aggravating character of their defiance and rebellion against God. God’s long-suffering will give every opportunity for man to repent and turn to Christ as his only hope.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 20)
Because of the goodness and long-suffering of God, many have been led to consider and appreciate the mercy and lovingkindness of God, and this has led them to repentance, while on the other hand, others have become more careless, and have abused His mercy. To their everlasting loss and shame they have followed the mind and will of Satan irrespective of the future retribution that will surely come upon them for their disobedience and transgression. They will yet learn that God is jealous of His honor and His glory. He will not have His laws trifled with; He will not allow men to treat them with indifference and defiance without punishing them accordingly.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 21)
“Because sentence against an evil work is not executed speedily, therefore the heart of the sons of men is fully set in them to do evil.” [Ecclesiastes 8:11.] The means which the Lord has employed, in the gracious provision of His mercy, to soften and subdue the objects of His love, has, through the workings of Satan, encouraged the depraved and hardened hearts in perversity, resistance and transgression, that even as far back as the days of David led him to exclaim, “It is time for thee, Lord, to work; for they have made void thy law. Therefore I love thy commandments above gold; yea, above fine gold.” [Psalm 119:126, 127.]
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 22)
O that all might consider before it is everlastingly too late that there are limits to the mercy and forbearance of God! There are those, who by their impenitence under the beams of light that have shone upon them, are very near the line where the forbearance of God is exhausted. In mind and heart they are saying, “My Lord delayeth his coming,” and they eat and drink with the drunken. [Matthew 24:48, 49.] But God declares of such that “sudden destruction cometh upon them,”“and they shall not escape.” [1 Thessalonians 5:3.]
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 23)
At this time, when great light is shining forth from the Word of God, making dark mysteries plain as day, is the day of mercy, of hope, of joy and assurance to all who will be benefited thereby, to all who will open their minds and hearts to the bright beams of the Sun of Righteousness. But there is an opposite class to this: those who will not come to the Light, who despise the truth because it exposes error and transgression and sin, and as a result, depravity and boldness in transgression is becoming all-pervading.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 24)
There are diligent students of the Word of prophecy in all parts of the world, who are obtaining light and still greater light from searching the Scriptures. This is true of all nations, of all tribes, and all peoples. These will come from the grossest error, and will take the place of those who have had opportunities and privileges and have not prized them. These have worked out their own salvation with fear and trembling lest they shall become deficient in doing the ways and will of God, while those who have had great light have, through the perversity of their own natural hearts, turned away from Christ because displeased with His requirements.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 25)
But God will not be left without witness. The one-hour laborers will be brought in at the eleventh hour, and will consecrate their ability and all their entrusted means to advance the work. These will receive the reward for their faithfulness, because they are true to principle and shun not their duty to declare the whole counsel of God. When those who have had abundance of light throw off the restraint which the Word of God imposes, and make void His law, others will come in to fill their place, and take their crown.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 26)
While many have reduced the Word, the Truth, the holy law of Jehovah, to a dead letter, and by their example testify that the law of Jehovah is a hard, rigorous burden, while they say, “We will lay off this yoke; we will be free; we will no longer remain in covenant relation with God; we will do as we please,” there will be men who have had very meager opportunities, who have walked in ways of error because they knew not any other or better way, to whom beams of light will come. As the word from Christ came to Zacchaeus, “I must abide at thy house,” so the word will come to them. [Luke 19:5.] And the one supposed to be a hardened sinner will be found to have a heart as tender as a child, because Christ has deigned to notice him.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 27)
Great is the work of the Lord. Men are choosing sides. Even those supposed to be heathen will choose the side of Christ, while those who become offended, as did the disciples, will go away and walk no more with Him. And others will come in and occupy the place they have left vacant. The time is very near when man shall have reached the prescribed limits. He has now almost exceeded the bounds of the long-suffering of God, the limits of His grace, the limits of His mercy. The record of their works in the books of heaven is, “Weighed in the balances, and found wanting.” [Daniel 5:27.] The Lord will interfere to vindicate His own honor, to repress the swellings of unrighteousness and bold transgression.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 28)
What effect will the attempt of men to make void the law of God have upon the righteous? Will they be intimidated because of the universal scorn that is put upon the holy law of God? Will the true believers in the “Thus saith the Lord” become wavering and ashamed because the whole world seems to despise His righteous law? Will they be carried away by the prevalence of evil? No; to those who have consecrated themselves to God to serve Him, the law of God becomes more precious when the contrast is shown between the obedient and the transgressor. In proportion as the attributes of Satan are developed in the despisers and transgressors of the law of God, to the faithful adherent the holy precept will become more dear and valuable. He will declare, “They have made void thy law. Therefore I love thy commandments above gold; yea, above fine gold.” [Psalm 119:126, 127.] It is the ones who have been faithful stewards of the grace of God whose love of God’s commandments grows with the contempt which all around them would put upon them.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 29)
Wicked men and the church harmonize in this hatred of the law of God, and then the crisis comes. Then we see the class specified in (Malachi 3:13-15): “Your words have been stout against me, saith the Lord. Yet ye say, What have we spoken so much against thee? Ye have said, It is vain to serve God: and what profit is it that we have kept his ordinance, and that we have walked mournfully before the Lord of hosts? And now we call the proud happy; yea, they that work wickedness are set up; yea, they that tempt God are even delivered.” Here are a company of disaffected professed Christians, whose chief business is to murmur and complain and accuse God by accusing the children of God. They see nothing defective in themselves, but very much to displease in others.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 30)
But while they are murmuring and complaining and falsely accusing, and doing Satan’s work most zealously, another class is brought to our notice: “Then they that feared the Lord spake often one to another; and the Lord hearkened, and heard it, and a book of remembrance was written before him for them that feared the Lord, and that thought upon his name. And they shall be mine, saith the Lord of hosts, in that day when I make up my jewels; and I will spare them, as a man spareth his own son that serveth him. Then shall ye return, and discern between the righteous and the wicked, between him that serveth God, and him that serveth him not.” [Verses 16-18.]
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 31)
This subject is urging itself upon my mind. I want you to consider it, for it is a matter of vast importance. With which of these two classes shall we identify our interest? We are now making our choice, and we shall soon discern between him that serveth God, and him that serveth Him not. Read the fourth chapter of Malachi, and think about it seriously. The day of God is right upon us. The world has converted the church. Both are in harmony, and are acting on a short-sighted policy. Protestants will work upon the rulers of the land to make laws to restore the lost ascendancy of the man of sin, who sits in the temple of God, showing himself that he is God.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 32)
The Roman Catholic principles will be taken under the care and protection of the state. This national apostasy will speedily be followed by national ruin. The protest of Bible truth will be no longer tolerated by those who have not made the law of God their rule of action. Then will the voice be heard from the graves of martyrs, represented by the souls which John saw slain for the Word of God and the testimony of Jesus Christ which they held; then the prayer will ascend from every true child of God, “It is time for thee, Lord, to work, for they have made void thy law.” [Psalm 119:126.]
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 33)
When our first parents fell from their high estate through transgression, God’s law was made void. Then Christ entered upon His work as a Redeemer, and probation was granted to the inhabitants of the world. In Noah’s day men disregarded the law of God until almost all remembrance of Him had passed away from the earth. Their wickedness reached so great a height, violence, crime, and every kind of sin became so intensely active, that the Lord brought a flood of water upon the world and swept away the wicked inhabitants thereof. But mercy was mingled with judgment. Noah and his family were saved. In the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, we see that the Lord will interfere; fire came down from heaven and destroyed these wicked cities.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 34)
From time to time the Lord has made known the manner of His working. He is mindful of what is passing upon the earth. And when a crisis has come, He has revealed Himself, and has interposed [to hinder] the working [out] of Satan’s plans. He has often permitted matters with nations, with families, and with individuals to come to a crisis, that His interference might become marked. Then He has let the fact be known that there is a God in Israel who would sustain and vindicate His people.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 35)
When the defiance of the law of Jehovah shall be almost universal, when His people shall be pressed in affliction by their fellow men, God will interpose. The fervent prayers of His people will be answered, for He loves to have His people seek Him with all their heart, and depend upon Him as their Deliverer. He will be sought unto to do these things for His people, and He will arise as the protector and avenger of His people. The promise is, The Lord will avenge his own elect, which cry unto him day and night. [Luke 18:7.]
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 36)
The Protestant government will reach a strange pass. They will be converted to the world. They will also, in their separation from God, work to make falsehood and apostasy from God the law. In the place of those who have the light of truth allowing jealousy and evil surmisings to come in and weaken their love and union one with another, their united prayers should ascend to heaven for the Lord to arise and put an end to the violence and abuse which are practiced in our world. More prayer and less talk is what God desires, and this would make His people a tower of strength.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 37)
I cannot pursue this matter further now.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 38)
In love.
(12LtMs, Lt 123, 1897, 39)
Lt 124, 1897
Wessels, Sister [Philip] “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia March 7, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in DG 183-185. + Dear Sister Philip Wessels:
I will pen a few lines to you this morning. I hope and pray that you will not lose faith, or become discouraged. We all have our individuality; this cannot be submerged in another. You have a soul to save or to lose. The Lord will be to you a present help in every time of trouble. He would have you stand at your post of duty, relying wholly upon Him who has loved us and died for us.
(12LtMs, Lt 124, 1897, 1)
You now have a double responsibility, because your husband has turned his face away from Jesus. As a mother, your work is to bring your children to the Master. When Christ was upon earth, and the mothers brought their children to Him, the disciples were about to send them away, but Jesus rebuked the disciples, saying, “Suffer the little children to come unto me, and forbid them not; for of such is the kingdom of heaven.” [Matthew 19:14.]
(12LtMs, Lt 124, 1897, 2)
I know it must be a great grief for you to stand alone, as far as the doing of the Word is concerned. But how knowest thou, O wife, but that your consistent life of faith and obedience may win back your husband to the truth. Let the dear children be brought to Jesus. In simple language speak the words of truth to them. Sing to them pleasant, attractive songs, which reveal the love of Christ. Bring your children to Jesus, for He loves little children.
(12LtMs, Lt 124, 1897, 3)
Keep cheerful. Do not forget that you have a Comforter, the Holy Spirit, which Christ has appointed. You are never alone. If you will listen to the voice that now speaks to you, if you will respond without delay to the knocking at the door of your heart, “Come in, Lord Jesus, that I may sup with thee and thee with me,” the heavenly Guest will enter. [See Revelation 3:20.] When this element, which is all divine, abides with you, there is peace and rest. It is the kingdom of heaven come nigh unto you.
(12LtMs, Lt 124, 1897, 4)
Let every hour be one of trust and prayer and faith. You may expect trials. We must all be purified from dross, and made white and tried. In the time of trial, seek to bring every thought into captivity to Jesus Christ. One foe after another may come in unexpected ways, but dismiss the temptations of the enemy. In this way, we go on from grace to grace, from strength to strength, obtaining one spiritual victory after another.
(12LtMs, Lt 124, 1897, 5)
Hold fast to Christ, and He will give you His strong arm to lean upon. There is a crown of life for the overcomer.
(12LtMs, Lt 124, 1897, 6)
Close union with Christ means to do the words of Christ. He calls this union a continuance of His love. Then the heart is in harmony with God. Treasure up the promises, doing every little duty faithfully, as unto God. “If ye keep my commandments, ye shall abide in my love.” [John 15:10.] Here is compliance and dependence.
(12LtMs, Lt 124, 1897, 7)
You have a strong Helper, and while you trust in your surety, you are safe. The sapless twig, grafted into the living vine, partakes of the same nourishment [as] the vine, and becomes a branch When is seen the closest possible relation between the sinner and the Saviour, is when the sinner is a doer of the Word of God. Then the heart, the will, the mind, is in close union with Christ. By faith, finite, feeble, helpless humanity joins its feebleness to His strength. Such a union, entire confidence, and love our helplessness and dependence demands.
(12LtMs, Lt 124, 1897, 8)
Christ died a shameful death that He might bring us unto God. When the soul is persuaded that Christ is able to save to the uttermost all who come unto Him, when it resigns itself entirely to Him as an all-sufficient Saviour, when it clings to the promises made, and believes fully in Jesus, it is pronounced by God one with Christ. A soul that depends on Christ with the simplicity that your child depends upon its mother is justified, for it becomes one with the Substitute, who was justification and redemption. Herein is love, that the heart and will are knit together in Christ Jesus.
(12LtMs, Lt 124, 1897, 9)
What saith our Saviour? “I will not leave thee comfortless; I will come unto you.”“He that hath my commandments, and keepeth them, he it is that loveth me; and he that loveth me shall be loved of my Father; and I will love him, and will manifest myself to him.” When trials overshadow the soul, remember the words of Christ, remember that He is an unseen presence in the person of the Holy Spirit, and He will be the peace and comfort given you, manifesting to you that He is with you, the Sun of Righteousness, chasing away your darkness. “If a man loves me,” Christ said, “he will keep my words, and my Father will love him, and we will come unto him, and make our abode with him.” [John 14:18, 21, 23.] Be of good cheer; light will come, and your soul will rejoice greatly in the Lord.
(12LtMs, Lt 124, 1897, 10)
In much love.
(12LtMs, Lt 124, 1897, 11)
Lt 125, 1897
Wessels, John November 3, 1897 A letter by A. T. Robinson.
Lt 126, 1897
Wessels, Brother and Sister [John] “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia May 18, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 7MR 174-175; 8MR 367-368; 4Bio 305, 307. + Dear Brother and Sister John Wessels:
We received your letter on the last boat from Africa. About one week since, I had an ill turn through over work and inability to sleep. My heart is my weak organ, and it testified to me that I must be more careful and take on fewer burdens.
(12LtMs, Lt 126, 1897, 1)
I am so glad that Brother Haskell and Sister Hurd Haskell are with us. They both have ideas that are in harmony with the principles which the Lord has been teaching me for the last fifty-two years. In the past I have stood almost alone as far as bearing responsibilities are concerned. Brother Metcalfe Hare has been one in mind with me; but the burden has been very heavy for me to carry. The Lord said that He had help for me, one who was to share our responsibilities, and He would move upon his heart to come and connect with me in the work. We were glad to meet Elder Haskell at Adelaide. His services were of much value to us at that camp-meeting. His experience and knowledge of the truth, commencing in so early a stage of our history as Seventh-day Adventists, was needed in this country. From his youth upward, he has been a self-denying, self-sacrificing man. And now his age and grey hairs give him the respect of all who know him.
(12LtMs, Lt 126, 1897, 2)
We rejoice to tell you that we now have two buildings. The one first started is completed. The second is enclosed. This is as far as we can go at present, but we can use it all the same, for it is much better than anything we have had since coming to this region. We are more than pleased; we are deeply thankful Some feared that we could not commence the school at the time appointed. They looked at the still unfinished building, which was to be used for dining room, kitchen, boys’ sleeping rooms, and meetinghouse. Only a few of the weatherboards were on this building, no floors were laid, and a cistern of large circumference was to be dug, to provide water for both buildings. And we had only about three weeks before the time for the school to open.
(12LtMs, Lt 126, 1897, 3)
We appointed a meeting for Sunday morning, and called the church together. They are all poor. Several I have had to help from my own funds, by giving them food, clothing, and money. Brother Haskell had been sent for to visit Adelaide, when he was doing the best kind of work here, going out and digging in the earth, that we might be prepared when the rain came. Every bit of water has to come from a hole in the ground, and that has to be sunk deeper to bring water from beneath.
(12LtMs, Lt 126, 1897, 4)
We missed Brother Haskell’s counsel; but Sister Haskell, Brother Hare and myself counselled together, and in the meeting we laid the situation before the people, and presented the work that must be done. We then called for donation of money or labor; for the last of our funds has been expended. I told them I would give the time of all my workmen for two weeks. Two of these men volunteered to give one week’s work. Both have large families to support. Another of my workmen said that he owed the school a donation of two weeks’ work. Others offered themselves, and at nine o’clock that day thirty men, women, and children were on the ground, ready to commence operations.
(12LtMs, Lt 126, 1897, 5)
One brother, with a screw machine forced the floor boards into position, while the women, drove the nails. Thus the lower floor of the entire building was laid. Some thought it a strange thing that we had “lady carpenters,” but the very fact of the emergency gave them a stimulus, and the ladies did not spend their time in gossiping. An aged brother, Brother Tucker, who, I think, your mother must have seen in Cooranbong, aged seventy-nine, was, in his working days, a carpenter and cabinet maker. He helped in various ways. He put the first coat of paint on the window casings and the doors. This was a great help. Two unbelievers from Sydney were laying in the brick in the cistern, and the women passed them the brick, sliding them down the boards from above. The cistern is twelve feet deep. Other women passed brick to a brother who was laying the floor of the cellar. Others were cleaning the floors and windows of the completed building.
(12LtMs, Lt 126, 1897, 6)
For three weeks the work went forward with expedition and cheerfulness, and the school began the very day appointed. Brother Haskell had been telegraphed for—to return to Cooranbong—and we were glad to meet him. He had been called away because of the apostasy of two of the ministers, who had obtained the sympathies of the church. Brother Haskell’s testimony and labors, connected with the labors of Elders Daniells and Colcord, were needed to undeceive the church. God blessed their efforts. Such subtle working, under the influence of Satan has seldom been seen, and will be seen in the future history of the cause, because Satan is working with intensity of earnestness and unwearied zeal to carry things his own way against God and the truth. The church at Adelaide has gained an experience that will be of value to it, and only a few were lost to the cause. Brother and Sister Starr are laboring there at present, and some souls have taken their stand for the truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 126, 1897, 7)
Our school has been in progress since April 28. At first the attendance was rather small, but it is increasing. We have a primary department, in which the attendance numbers fifteen.
(12LtMs, Lt 126, 1897, 8)
Each morning at six o’clock Brother Haskell speaks from the Scriptures, giving a Bible lesson. This is free to all, and there is a goodly company out each morning, for it is a blessing to all. This study lasts for one hour. These meetings are intensely interesting. The subject thus far has been the Sanctuary question, and we are highly gratified to see the interest manifested. All are much interested in the way he presents the subject. He speaks in a clear, simple style, and brings in much Scripture to sustain every point. He feels that altogether too little has been said upon this subject, for it is the central pillar that sustains the structure of our position at the present time.
(12LtMs, Lt 126, 1897, 9)
I am so thankful to our heavenly Father that some of the old, experienced chosen ones of God who, like John, have grown grey in the work of advocating the truth, are here. In our experience we have seen some who although they apparently believed the truth, were not in the truth, and the truth was not in them. Some shall depart from the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits, and doctrines of devils, and when once they open the heart to unbelief, Satan comes in to possess the soul. The rapid change that takes place in the character and in the countenance, shows whom they have chosen as leader.
(12LtMs, Lt 126, 1897, 10)
The men who have lately apostatized say that the Sabbath does not amount to much. It makes no difference whether we keep it, or do not keep it. They say they are preaching sanctification, but where does their sanctification come in. They began the work of disaffection by their criticism. Here is where they fell, and here is where many will fall. To complain of our brethren in the ministry, to be suspicious of the gifts the Lord has set in the church, to always be finding spot and stain in something said or done is to follow the enemy. If one chooses to obtain this class of education, Satan will help him in a masterly manner. After the criticizers tell all that appears to them to be out of joint, they go into the manufacturing business, and commence to weave webs of falsehood. They abuse the confidence that has been reposed in them, and strive to destroy the reputation of the very ones that have ever been their truest friends.
(12LtMs, Lt 126, 1897, 11)
This was the class of work done at Adelaide. All should work earnestly to close the door to that class who are serving under Satan’s banner, and doing their best to counterwork the prayer Christ made to His Father just prior to His crucifixion: “Neither pray I for these alone, but for them also which shall believe on me through their word, that they all may be one; as thou, Father, art in me, and I in thee, that they also may be one in us; that the world may believe that thou hast sent me. And the glory which thou gavest me I have given them, that they may be one even as we are one; I in them, and thou in me, that they may be made perfect in one; and that the world may know that thou hast sent me, and hast loved them as thou hast loved me.” [John 17:20-23.] “A new commandment I give unto you, that ye love one another; as I have loved you, that ye also love one another. By this shall all men know that ye are my disciples, if ye have love one for another.” [John 13:34, 35.]
(12LtMs, Lt 126, 1897, 12)
Our work is to stop surmising evil of our brethren. We should seek ever to press together, and thus fulfill the longing of Christ to see His chosen people love one another as He loves them. “Lord, who shall abide in thy tabernacle? who shall dwell in thy holy hill? He that walketh uprightly, and worketh righteousness, and speaketh the truth in his heart. He that backbiteth not with his tongue, nor doeth evil to his neighbor, nor taketh up a reproach against his neighbor. In whose eyes a vile person is condemned, but he honoreth them that fear the Lord. He that sweareth to his own hurt, and changeth not. He that putteth not out his money to usury, nor taketh reward against the innocent. He that doeth these things shall never be moved.” [Psalm 15:1-5.] Notice particularly the response to the question, and the answer given in verses two and three.
(12LtMs, Lt 126, 1897, 13)
“These are the things that ye shall do: Speak ye every man the truth to his neighbor; execute the judgment of truth and peace in your gates, and let none of you imagine evil in your hearts against his neighbor, and love no false oath; for all these are things that I hate, saith the Lord.” [Zechariah 8:16, 17.] This is the evil we are to guard against. We read of the working of Satan in bearing false witness against Christ, and we know that every child of rebellion will do this evil work. They spoke against Christ, who was without stain or spot, and they will speak against His followers. Why then are not the professed followers of Jesus Christ afraid to treat their brethren and sisters as the Jewish nation treated the world’s Redeemer?
(12LtMs, Lt 126, 1897, 14)
“These things I command you that ye love one another. If the world hate you, ye know that it hated me before it hated you. If ye were of the world, the world would love his own, but because ye are not of the world, but I have chosen you out of the world, therefore the world hateth you. Remember the word that I said unto you, The servant is not greater than his lord. If they have persecuted me, they will also persecute you. If they have kept my sayings, they will keep yours also.” [John 15:17-20.] What reproach they heaped upon Christ! Shall we complain when we are made partakers of His reproach? Those who have drawn away from us, who have not remained in the truth, will talk, they will fabricate reasons as to why they did not remain steadfast. They will do just as Satan did, cast reproach upon some one else. God will be accused of unfairness.
(12LtMs, Lt 126, 1897, 15)
The Lord is leading out a people to stand in these last days, to keep by pen and voice their testimony before the world. They will present a far better report than faultfinding, lying presentations.
(12LtMs, Lt 126, 1897, 16)
The truth may be overlaid with falsehood; it may be misrepresented, misapplied, reproached, and scandalized. But the truth never dies. For a time its luster may be dimmed, but it shines forth again, speaking with a force that is of no human power. Christ is the Way, the Truth, and the Life. But although He is all this, He was rejected. Why did the people not believe on Him? Why did they not acknowledge Him? That question can only be answered in the judgment.
(12LtMs, Lt 126, 1897, 17)
The Word of God is our sure guide. We will follow the Word. It was given to us to eat and digest, and all who eat of this Word will find no pleasure in relating falsehoods. We have counsel in the Word. The Lord Jesus knew just what we needed. He knew that many would say, “Lo here is Christ,” and “Lo there is Christ.” But what said the one who knew all things? “Go ye not after them.” [Matthew 24:23; Luke 21:8.] He knows what all my cares and what all my temptations will be, and He speaks to me from the treasure house of His Word. And I believe that which He saith.
(12LtMs, Lt 126, 1897, 18)
There is not a smile on a poor man’s face, there is not a tear in a poor man’s eye, that is independent of the providence of God. We will not in any case be turned away from the truth, but we will continue to believe, until the truth shall triumph gloriously. Bear in mind, if any man shall say to you who have had light in regard to the truth, the Word God has given you—“Lo, here is Christ, or there, believe it not. For there shall arise false Christs and false prophets, and shall show great signs and wonders, insomuch that, if it were possible, they shall deceive the very elect. Behold, I have told you before. Therefore if they shall say unto you, Behold, he is in the desert, Go not forth; behold, he is in the secret chambers, Believe it not. For as the lightning cometh out of the east, and shineth even unto the west; so shall also the coming of the Son of man be.” [Matthew 24:23-27.]
(12LtMs, Lt 126, 1897, 19)
We must be on guard. We must watch and pray. “Thou hast a few names even in Sardis, which have not defiled their garments, and they shall walk with me in white, for they are worthy. He that overcometh, the same shall be clothed in white raiment, and I will not blot out his name out of the book of life, but I will confess his name before my Father, and before his angels.... Because thou hast kept the word of my patience, I will also keep thee from the hour of temptation, which shall come upon all the world, to try them that dwell upon the earth. Behold, I come quickly; hold that fast which thou hast, that no man take thy crown.” [Revelation 3:4, 5, 10, 11.]
(12LtMs, Lt 126, 1897, 20)
Lt 127, 1897
Wessels, John “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia January 1, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 6MR 78-81. Mr. John Wessels
Claremont, Cape Town, South Africa Dear Brother:
I received your letter today, and was somewhat disappointed to learn that you could not come at once. We had a difficult time securing a building for a sanitarium. Those who had the renting of the places we wished to secure were Wesleyans, and were much prejudiced against Seventh-day Adventists because of the Sabbath. They utterly refused to rent the house, saying that it would injure the future renting of it when it was known that it had been used for a hospital. Two large buildings were thus held from us. But for some reason, their feelings underwent a change, and they became desirous to rent the buildings.
(12LtMs, Lt 127, 1897, 1)
The largest of these we dared not rent. The walls, we feared, had the house leprosy. It might be done up to make it look all right, but we dared not trust it. There were also many outside attachments that darkened the rooms of the house. The kitchen was small, and so enclosed as to make it disagreeable and dark. All who looked at it decided that it would not do.
(12LtMs, Lt 127, 1897, 2)
The next large building that had been refused us was offered for one hundred and thirty pounds per year, and they came down £10. This seemed a large sum, but the location was good, and within about five minutes’ walk of the railway station. Every room seemed sweet and wholesome. A large back yard runs through the whole block to the next street. Quite an amount of vegetables might be raised on this land. There are also a number of fruit trees on the place, full of fruit.
(12LtMs, Lt 127, 1897, 3)
Brother Semmens and family moved in at once. Brother and Sister Baker engaged two rooms, for which they pay ten shillings per week. In order to help them, I hired one room, which I can occupy when I go into the city. I pay four shillings per week for this. I need not now, as I have in the past, be perplexed to know where I shall be accommodated. I shall fit up this room for myself, and any of our ministering brethren who may be passing through and have need of a place to lodge. They can board with Brother Semmens.
(12LtMs, Lt 127, 1897, 4)
I have some thoughts of paying for still another room to accommodate any of our people who may be sick and in need of treatment, yet unable to pay the full price. Should I pay four shilling and furnish another room, that would help them. Brother Semmens himself will pay ten shillings for two rooms for his family. By thus sharing the expense all round, the rent will be considerably lessened. Yesterday I sent him a draft for £10 and £15 today to help him in this strait place. They have to furnish the house, and must have money on hand to watch for opportunities to buy when households are breaking up.
(12LtMs, Lt 127, 1897, 5)
We are glad to report that the first school building is getting along finely. We shall build still another school building, the lower part to be used for a meetinghouse until we shall have more means.
(12LtMs, Lt 127, 1897, 6)
Last night I met with the people to speak to them on some matters that were essential. I will send you copies of the matter I brought before them. It was so oppressive in the chamber above the mill that I dared not venture to meet there. We had seats brought and set outside the building. My phaeton was drawn up, the horse taken out, and I sat in my phaeton and read and spoke to the people. Sara McEnterfer held a lantern at my right hand, and Brother Herbert Lacey a lantern at my left.
(12LtMs, Lt 127, 1897, 7)
I felt urged by the Spirit of the Lord to say those things that you will read. I have been very ill for three weeks. I am now recovering, but not so that I can stand upon my feet to speak. We had a large number out for so short a notice. Several families, humble, earnest people, have embraced the truth, and have the spirit of the message.
(12LtMs, Lt 127, 1897, 8)
Our meeting was a very solemn one, for I felt the necessity of every soul dedicating themselves to God, and commencing the new year by making a covenant with God by sacrifice. If all would do to the very best of their ability, then we could trust to God to help us. But there must be no selfishness in the service of God. When engaged in His work, there must not be a stipulated period of eight hours. Jesus did not work in that way. When means are so limited, we should not measure off precisely our period for work by minutes and hours, but put in all the service possible. God will help the workers to put the work through with expedition if their whole heart is in the work.
(12LtMs, Lt 127, 1897, 9)
But I have seen that selfishness is brought into the work of preparing buildings for His service. The workers must avoid weaving in one thread of their selfish spirit. They should strive to work as faithfully as it is possible for them to do. Heavenly intelligences will co-operate with those who have a real sense that they are doing service for God. The Lord wants men who will be liberal with their time. He wants upright men, men who practice truth and integrity, and who, in their service for God show that they respect and honor Him. Those who do the work of the Lord negligently, without sincerity and willingness, the Lord will repay in just the way in which they treat Him. “Those that honor me,” He declares, “I will honor.” [1 Samuel 2:30.] The Lord will be liberal to the soul that practices liberality in all his service for the Master; the liberal soul shall live by liberal things.
(12LtMs, Lt 127, 1897, 10)
I see so much stingy practice with God, so much downright robbery of Him, I am amazed. I wonder what men and women are thinking of. They do not consider the words of Christ, “Ye are not your own; for ye are bought with a price; therefore glorify God in your body and in your spirit, which are God’s.” [1 Corinthians 6:19, 20.] When we are so dependent upon God for every temporal and spiritual blessing, how can any who profess to be His sons and daughters fail to realize their obligations and their accountability to Him to do their very best?
(12LtMs, Lt 127, 1897, 11)
The Lord’s work should be done with a nicety, bringing all the tact and firmness and capability possible into it. There should be a wide-awake interest on the part of all, as though they could see the whole universe of heaven watching how the work of God is being done, and what kind spirit is brought into it. One lesson we are to learn is the secret of how to use the mind to think strongly, to put life into the work.
(12LtMs, Lt 127, 1897, 12)
The present moment is ours to employ to the very best advantage, or to misuse by doing the work in a rough, heartless, coarse manner. What use is made of the time after the eight hours system is accomplished? And how will it be used when there is constant reference to the will of God? Let those who can, donate an extra hour or two, or even three, to work. Thus they would please the Lord by presenting to Him a thank offering, something for which they do not receive pay.
(12LtMs, Lt 127, 1897, 13)
Many suppose that they must have holidays and recreation; but if the time thus spent were devoted specially to doing good, making use of the faculties to advance the cause of God in the world, either in planting crops for Him, in building chapels of schoolhouses, or any institution that the Lord is in need of to carry on His work, these things would not cost so heavily. If there were a company formed, who were devoted to the service of God, who would donate extra time above the eight hours, and call it the recreation hour, I know that they would receive a blessing. Many do this conscientiously. They will not be restricted in their movements, or bound about by precise hours, when they are engaged in the King’s business. The work which the Lord designs shall be done in preparing facilities calls for unselfish and cheerful labor.
(12LtMs, Lt 127, 1897, 14)
I have heard men and women who have been engaged in the work in the publishing houses and sanitariums complain of having to work over hours. If they cannot stop work after eight hours labor, they become dissatisfied. But these very ones, when they enter business for their own private benefit, will work on fully ten hours as they do in America, and often extend their labor to twelve hours. They make no complaint because it is in their own personal interest. It makes every difference whether the time is to be employed to their own special advantage, or for the service of God or their neighbor. If the extra time could be called the recreation hours, working from a sense of duty to benefit the oppressed, poverty stricken cause of God, I believe those who are able would find more advantage from this than from the hard, trying, taxing labor they often engage in in order to amuse themselves.
(12LtMs, Lt 127, 1897, 15)
Willing service in saving the means that is so limited is more satisfactory than hoarding means. With the right motive in view, such time would be reckoned as devoted to the service of God. This definite work for God in building, in planting, in reaping harvest, or any line of work, will cost considerable thought and labor. But it pays. God will multiply the resources; He will help in producing the means.
(12LtMs, Lt 127, 1897, 16)
Many are already working in this line, and have always done so. The devotion of time to God in any line of work is a most important consideration. Some can use the pen to write a letter to some far off friend. By consecrated personal labor we may in many ways do personal service for God.
(12LtMs, Lt 127, 1897, 17)
Some think that if they give a portion of their money to the cause of God, this is all they are required to do, and the precious time given them of God, in which they could do hours of personal service for Him, passes by unimproved. It is the privilege and duty of all who have health and strength to render to God active service. The giving of donations in money cannot take the place of this. Those who have no money can substitute personal labor, and even money can be made in various ways in this work.
(12LtMs, Lt 127, 1897, 18)
Every one may be a laborer together with God. The hours which have usually been spent in recreation that has not rested or refreshed either body or soul, may be spent in seeking to help some poor soul who is in need of help, in visiting the poor, the sick, and the suffering. Your time is God’s, and as Christians, we must use it to the glory of God. God has graciously entrusted us with twenty four hours in each day and night. This is a precious treasure by which much good can be accomplished. How are we using God’s golden opportunities? We must, as Christians, set the Lord always before us, if we would not lose precious hours in uselessness, and have nothing to show for our time.
(12LtMs, Lt 127, 1897, 19)
Time is money. If a man refuses to work because he cannot obtain the highest wages, he is pronounced an idler. Far better would it be for him to work, even if he receives much less than he supposes his labors are worth.
(12LtMs, Lt 127, 1897, 20)
Time is a talent committed to our trust that may be shamefully misused. Every child of God, man, woman, youth or child, should consider and appreciate the value of the moments of time. If they do this, they will keep themselves employed, even if they do not receive as high wages as they have been able to command. They should show their appreciation of diligence, and work, receiving what wages they can get. The idea of a poor man with a family refusing to work for moderate wages, because it is not showing, as he supposes, sufficient dignity for his trade, is folly that is not to be encouraged.
(12LtMs, Lt 127, 1897, 21)
How little has been bestowed upon this subject. How much greater prosperity might have attended the missionary enterprises if this talent of time had been thoughtfully considered and faithfully used. We are each one answerable to God for the time that has been wantonly thrown away, and for the use of which we must give an account to God. This is a stewardship that has been but little appreciated; many think it not sin to waste hours and days in doing nothing to benefit themselves or to bless others.
(12LtMs, Lt 127, 1897, 22)
Lt 128, 1897
Wessels, Brother and Sister [John] “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia June 25, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in 13MR 153-156. My dear Brother and Sister John Wessels:
I received your letter stating your connection with the sanitarium in South Africa. If you are a necessity where you are, then I would not in any way make duties for you. If the time has not yet arrived for you to leave your present situation, then continue where you are till you see your duty in this matter. The Lord has promised to give us wisdom on condition that we accept Him as our Guide and Counsellor, and ask of Him with unwavering faith.
(12LtMs, Lt 128, 1897, 1)
If any man lack wisdom, let him ask—of his brethren, thousands of miles away, who have no more wisdom than he himself, who are finite, and who make mistakes and errors in judgment? Thank the Lord, He has not directed us to any source so uncertain for counsel and direction. “If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him.” [James 1:5.] Will you not bring your plans to God, and lay them all before Him?
(12LtMs, Lt 128, 1897, 2)
“But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering. For he that wavereth is like a wave of the sea, driven with the wind, and tossed. For let not that man think that he shall receive any thing of the Lord. A double minded man is unstable in all his ways.” [Verses 6-8.]
(12LtMs, Lt 128, 1897, 3)
Here the inspired apostle has given us the only safe course to follow in our life experience if we would develop the attributes of a true Christian. There is to be no uncertainty in these matters. The Lord would have every one who receives Him by faith perfect a Christian character during probationary time. The work of the Spirit of God in a man is not a work that unfits him for the common duties of ordinary life. There is not to be one religion for business and another religion for the church. The work of the Spirit of God embraces the whole man, soul, body, and spirit.
(12LtMs, Lt 128, 1897, 4)
If the Word of God is cherished as an abiding principle in the heart, and held fast under all and every circumstance, man is brought, with his entrusted capabilities, [into subjection] to the Lord Jesus Christ. His undivided powers, even his thoughts, are brought into captivity to Christ. This is true sanctification. All the parts of the experience blend in complete harmony. He is “wanting in nothing.” He does not keep part to himself, to do with just as he pleases. He is bought with a price, and he knows it, because the Word of God declares it; and therefore he glorifies God in his body and spirit, which are Christ’s. [1 Corinthians 6:20.]
(12LtMs, Lt 128, 1897, 5)
It is important that all who are striving for perfection of character shall strive lawfully. “The light of the body is the eye. If therefore thine eye be single, the whole body shall be full of light.” [Matthew 6:22.] This says, “thine eye,” not some other person’s eye. The rich experience that it is our privilege to have, we lose when we expect some one else to do our seeing for us, and guide us in our spiritual experience as if we were blind. We must have a single eye to God’s glory, a single and persistent purpose to leave self and the preferences of others out of the question, not asking, “If I take this course, shall I increase my personal possessions, or shall I decrease them?”
(12LtMs, Lt 128, 1897, 6)
Great simplicity must be cherished by him who seeks wisdom of God. Then his feet will not slide. “The path of the just is as the shining light, that shineth more and more unto the perfect day. The way of the wicked is as darkness; they know not at what they stumble. My son, attend to my words; incline thine ear unto my sayings. Let them not depart from thine eyes; keep them in the midst of thine heart. For they are life unto those that find them, and health to all their flesh. Keep thy heart with all diligence; for out of it are the issues of life. Put away from thee a froward mouth, and perverse lips put far from thee. Let thine eyes look straight on, and let thine eyelids look straight before thee. Ponder the path of thy feet, and let all thy ways be established.” [Proverbs 4:18-26.]
(12LtMs, Lt 128, 1897, 7)
He who truly loves and fears God, striving with a singleness of purpose to do his will, will place his body, his mind, his heart, his soul, his strength, under service to God. Thus it was with Enoch. He walked with God. His mind was not defiled by an impure, defective eyesight. Those who are determined to make the will of God their own must serve and please God in everything. Then the character will be harmonious and well-balanced, consistent, cheerful, and true.
(12LtMs, Lt 128, 1897, 8)
“But if thine eye be evil,” if you study selfish purposes, and work only to that end, the whole character is defective, the whole body is full of darkness. [Matthew 6:23.] Such do not look to Jesus. They do not behold His character, and they are not changed into His image. The spiritual vision is defective, and the way from earth to heaven is darkened by the hellish shadow of Satan. So Satan is pleased to have it, for he can lead that person blindfolded to ruin.
(12LtMs, Lt 128, 1897, 9)
“If therefore the light that is in thee be darkness, how great is that darkness.” [Verse 23.] The conscience is the regulative faculty, and if a man allows his conscience to become perverted, he cannot serve God aright. His object in life shows to the world whether he is a Christian or in rebellion against God. His whole life is a failure. It is distorted and double, and all the faculties are misdirected. The profession may be all right, but the faith is perverted, and this is revealed by the practice, which misleads others. “No man can serve two masters; for either he will hate the one and love the other, or else he will hold to the one, and despise the other. Ye cannot serve God and mammon.” [Verse 24.]
(12LtMs, Lt 128, 1897, 10)
I have given you the definition of the Word of God as presented to me in James 1:2-8 and Matthew 6. Please read both these chapters; for we need to study carefully and prayerfully the special directions there given.
(12LtMs, Lt 128, 1897, 11)
I am making this letter longer than I designed. I learn that it will be a day or two before the steamer leaves Sydney. I shall mail this matter today.
(12LtMs, Lt 128, 1897, 12)
I have a deep interest in your spiritual welfare, and in that of your whole family. You are each living your probationary time day by day, obtaining your experience as the days pass; but you can go over the ground only once. Then let every precious moment be employed as you will wish it has been when the judgment shall sit, and the books shall be opened. Our Lord will judge us according to the opportunities and privileges that we have had.
(12LtMs, Lt 128, 1897, 13)
Speaking of faithful men of the past, Paul says, “These all died in faith, not having received the promises, but having seen them afar off, and were persuaded of them, and embraced them, and confessed that they were strangers and pilgrims on the earth. For they that say such things declare plainly that they seek a country. And truly if they had been mindful of that country from whence they came out, they might have had opportunity to have returned. But now they desire a better country, that is, an heavenly; wherefore God is not ashamed to be called their God; for he hath prepared for them a city.” [Hebrews 11:13-16.] The great hope which the patriarchs and prophets had constantly in view—a city which hath foundations, whose maker and builder is God—came down to the disciples. They described and foretold in prophecy a better country, even a heavenly, in seeking which they were willing to be pilgrims and strangers upon this earth, with no desire to return to the associations they once had in the world.
(12LtMs, Lt 128, 1897, 14)
Christ brought the same attraction to view, saying, “In my Father’s house are many mansions (permanent abiding places). I go to prepare a place for you.” [John 14:2.] Let us prepare to move to that better country, even the heavenly.
(12LtMs, Lt 128, 1897, 15)
In much love.
(12LtMs, Lt 128, 1897, 16)
Lt 129, 1897
Wessels, Brother and Sister [John] “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia May 18, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 3SM 58-59; 6BC 1112. Dear Brother and Sister John Wessels:
I have read your letter, and I think we understand one another. I have no favor to ask of any one in regard to money. I have been using all that has come into my hands in the work of God. The present of a silk dress, which your mother gave me, she made me promise not to dispose of. I have kept my word. I have made the dress up, but the value of it I have put into the cause, that your mother shall not lose her reward. For myself, I do not desire one farthing from any one. But when, some two years ago, my attention was directed to Africa, when the Lord said to me, “I have entrusted my stewards in Africa with means which they will bestow to advance my work in Australia,” I felt the more thankful to mention that a work was to be done here in this country, hoping that you would come and wisely look the field over yourself, and see if you could help in establishing a sanitarium here, to be your own investment, to be your own steward.
(12LtMs, Lt 129, 1897, 1)
Now, if you have no light to do this, I shall not be tried by you or any one. I want you to move exactly as far as you can see the light. Both Brother Olsen and Dr. Kellogg asked me why I did not write to you and set the situation in Sydney and the surroundings before you. They stated that you were going to some place to build a sanitarium, and if I wrote, you might come here to Australia. Dr. Kellogg advised me to make no delay. I answered that I had written to Brother John Wessels one month before their letters came to me.
(12LtMs, Lt 129, 1897, 2)
If I was not your companion in the work of God, doing my very utmost in every line possible, I might have felt a delicacy in writing to you as I did. I supposed that you knew that. There is nought I call my own. [With] every talent the Lord has given me, I inquire diligently, not, What have I of my Lord? but, What do I with what I have? For all is the Lord’s. All is a loan from the Lord. He has paid the wages by His own self-denial, His humiliation, His self-sacrifice, His sufferings, and has given His life to save me, that I should not perish but should have eternal life. And shall He not have my willing service and obedience? Shall I not sense my responsibilities in regard to the committed trust, whatever that may be? I am a steward of His grace. I am trading on my Lord’s goods.
(12LtMs, Lt 129, 1897, 3)
The lowliest talent, the humblest service, may become a consecrated gift if exercised and employed with the high end in view of advancing God’s interest in our world, and promoting His glory. I have not been given the message, Send for Brother John Wessels to come to Australia. No; therefore I do not say, I know that this is the place for you. But it is my privilege to express my wishes, even though I say, I speak not by commandment. But I do not want you to come because of any persuasion of mine. I want you to seek the Lord most earnestly, and then follow where He shall lead you. I want you to come when God says, Come, not one moment before. Nevertheless, it is my privilege to present the wants of the work of God in Australia. Australia is not my country, only as it is the Lord’s province. The country is God’s; the people are His. A work is to be done here, and if you are not the one to do it, I shall feel perfectly resigned to hear that you have gone to some other locality.
(12LtMs, Lt 129, 1897, 4)
I have been shown that it were better for you and the other members of your mother’s family to be in some other locality, because where they are the companionship and associations are not the most favorable to their spiritual healthfulness. Of course you will individually carry yourselves wherever you may go, and if that self is near to God, your mother’s family will have plenty to do for the Master. They can be co-workers with God. Merely having qualities of mind, a disposition to do right, is not all that God requires. He asks for all that there is of any one of us. The more He has entrusted to us, the greater are our obligations and responsibilities.
(12LtMs, Lt 129, 1897, 5)
I know that if each member of your mother’s family possessed moral courage to put forth persevering efforts in devoted service, they would be a power for good just where they are. But if they have not that sanctified determination to be doers of the Word, they will in any place be dead branches. Their life will not have a vital connection with Jesus Christ. If they could sense the value of the human soul, as I do who have had these matters kept before me for more than half a century, they would individually make haste to redeem the time, and would be very thankful that they were not left to repose in security when the time is so short. But there is such a thing as being in a place where a certain kind of temptation will be constantly at work to destroy virtue and steadfast principles. If, by removing to where difficulties would be less pressing, you would place yourselves in the channel where the light was shining in clearer and more distinct rays, go there, for your souls’ sake, go there. But ask the Lord for wisdom.
(12LtMs, Lt 129, 1897, 6)
And work. What little probationary time is left to prepare for the eternal life which Christ would have you all receive! If you were sound in the faith and healthy in your piety, you would have placed yourself in the closest relation to Jesus Christ, and a great gulf would lie between you and the Christless world, because Christ would dwell in each of you, and you would dwell in Christ. The indwelling of Christ and the Spirit is made efficient by constant communion, activity, and prayer.
(12LtMs, Lt 129, 1897, 7)
The word of God came to Abraham, “Get thee out of thy country, and from thy kindred, and from thy father’s house, into a land that I will show thee; and I will make of thee a great nation.”“So Abraham departed as the Lord had spoken unto him.” [Genesis 12:1, 2, 4.] He was seventy-five years old when the word came. I write you this because I feel it my duty to write. If any member of your family were worth their weight in gold, I would not for your favor abate one word that the Lord gives me for you. All the gold and silver is the Lord’s. He has made some stewards of trust. But I can say of a truth, I covet no man’s silver or gold or apparel. All these riches will be of no avail in the great judgment day. The largest property could not pay the ransom for one soul.
(12LtMs, Lt 129, 1897, 8)
Behold in the cross of Christ the only sure guarantee for individual excellence and success. And the more the heart is wrapped up in Christ, the more secure is their treasure in the eternal world. As stewards you individually need an elevating, ennobling, inspiring motive to sustain you in the perilous conflict with foes within and foes without. Some have manifold infirmities, and they need Jesus as their Helper.
(12LtMs, Lt 129, 1897, 9)
The tastes are to be elevated, the appetites subdued, by everyone who is playing the game of life for an eternal inheritance, a life that measures with the life of God. Let no one bring impediments upon themselves that will hinder their growth in grace. The gospel demands of every member of the Lord’s redeemed family an unreserved consecration of body and soul, with all their energies and all their entrusted capabilities, throughout the round of their probation. The Lord claims all the services which any mortal being, aided and enriched by divine grace, can render. This is the claim of God upon every endowment He has given, every faculty which He has provided for the human being. He has a rightful dominion over all His subjects. To withhold from Him is robbery. Every talent, small or great, is confided to the human agent, to be improved in accordance with the will and design of the great Giver.
(12LtMs, Lt 129, 1897, 10)
I present these thoughts to you. May the Lord help you to see the necessity, wherever you go, instead of being influenced to pursue a wrong course, to be determined to influence every soul to obey God, with heart and soul, and with undivided affections.
(12LtMs, Lt 129, 1897, 11)
Now, my brother, moving to any place will not place any of you beyond the temptations of Satan. But it may do for you as it did for Abraham, place you in different associations, that you may break some of the nets Satan has laid for your feet. But do not move hastily, or in a haphazard way. Move understandingly, from the force of conviction, if you move at all. Be determined that you will win heaven at any cost. Imitate no one’s evil practices. The judgments of God are in the land in whirlwinds, in floods, in fires, in earthquakes, and in desolating pestilences. Man brings disease of every character upon himself because of his polluting, soul-destroying, corrupting habits. These wicked habits are doing more to destroy lives than all the calamities by land or sea.
(12LtMs, Lt 129, 1897, 12)
Will we put on the armor of righteousness? Warnings are given in the Word of God of the deceptions that will come in these last days. Speaking of the men who were working to destroy his influence, the great apostle to the Gentiles says, “For I am jealous over you with godly jealousy; for I have espoused you to one husband, that I may present you as a chaste virgin to Christ. But I fear, lest by any means, as the serpent beguiled Eve through his subtlety, so your minds should be corrupted from the simplicity that is in Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 129, 1897, 13)
“For if he that cometh preacheth another Jesus, whom we have not preached, or if ye receive another spirit, which ye have not received, or another gospel, which ye have not accepted, yet ye might well bear with him.... For such are false apostles, deceitful workers, transforming themselves into the apostles of Christ. And no marvel; for Satan himself is transformed into an angel of light. Therefore it is no light thing if his ministers also be transformed as the ministers of righteousness; whose end shall be according to their works.” [2 Corinthians 11:2-4, 13-15.] Let us look steadfastly to Jesus Christ, and not be turned away from the gospel of Christ, but show before the heavenly universe that we have no divided life, but that we are wholly on the Lord’s side.
(12LtMs, Lt 129, 1897, 14)
I say again, my dear brother and sister, know your duty for yourselves, and then, if you have difficulties and trials, you will understand that it is not because you are out of the path of duty.
(12LtMs, Lt 129, 1897, 15)
God bless your entire family. Give my best love to your dear mother.
(12LtMs, Lt 129, 1897, 16)
Lt 130, 1897
Wessels, John Summer Hill, Sydney, Australia February 17, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in TSA 54-55; 4Bio 291. Dear Brother John Wessels:
I feel sad that you do not feel impressed by the Spirit of God to come to New South Wales. I do not desire you to come unless you yourself have some burden. I do not believe in men depending upon the judgment and wisdom of other men, to know their duty in regard to going to any field upon the face of the earth. Men may make propositions, they may lay out the field and its necessity; and then they must leave the matter for the one who is ready to do God’s service unselfishly, to seek counsel of God, and obtain the counsel of heaven. Do we not read, “If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, and upbraideth not. But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering, for he that wavereth is like a wave of the sea, driven with the wind and tossed.” [James 1:5, 6.] You cannot get this wisdom by looking to Battle Creek, or to any other place. Too much dependence has been placed upon the advice of men. Men have been so willing to be directed by human judgment that God has been dishonored.
(12LtMs, Lt 130, 1897, 1)
“Come unto me,” Christ says, “all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart; and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.” [Matthew 11:28-30.] All who depend upon the Lord Jesus Christ, who seek Him with their whole heart, will find in Him a very present help in time of trouble, and will be shown their duty. The Lord is much nearer to those who desire to know His will than are those in Battle Creek, or in the next neighborhood. He Himself declares, “Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you.” [Matthew 7:7.] “All things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.” [Matthew 21:22.]
(12LtMs, Lt 130, 1897, 2)
If the Lord teaches you that He wants you in any place, to do His service, go to that place. We need some one here very much, some one who can devise and plan and execute, to forward the work of God. Dr. Kellogg writes that he thinks that you would come to Australia if you were requested to come. I have made the request, as it is my privilege to do, as one who co-operates with Christ in His work. But I would have you come only because you feel it to be your duty.
(12LtMs, Lt 130, 1897, 3)
I shall encourage none of our people to go to India, unless they have clear light from the Lord that it is their duty to go. A duty made by man, and laid upon another man, is not reliable. Our Lord would have every one of His servants use their reason, and take measures to preserve their lives, that they may do the work He has for them to do. There is an abundance of places where the work to be accomplished is great, and where the plague is not raging. Let God’s workers fill the need in these places. I have no light to bid any one now in India leave that field, but I have light to say that no one should move thoughtlessly, placing themselves in dangerous situations, unless they know they have the word of God to sustain them in so doing. We shall receive help from the Lord when doing His work; but if we go on a warfare at our own charges, the Lord does not sustain us.
(12LtMs, Lt 130, 1897, 4)
I will not say anything to balance you to come to this place, but if you have decided that it is best to devote the remnant of your God-given time to doing God’s will, we need you in this locality. If your desire to serve self is stronger than your desire to serve God, if you obey your own inclinations, and with the prospect of increasing your means bind it up in a napkin, and bury it in buildings, or in the earth, you will one day find that you have made a mistake. The end is near, and the work to be done is urgent. We are not now to do that which the Lord has told us we should not do. We should put all our talents in active exercise, that we may accumulate a heritage for God in the salvation of souls. Fishing for more money will not be one hundredth part as profitable as fishing for men.
(12LtMs, Lt 130, 1897, 5)
I have been devoting all my talents of money and of time, golden, God-given time, to the service of the Lord Jesus. I am building for time and for eternity. I study every pound which I invest in buildings for myself, lest I shall in any way limit the resources which I can invest in the upbuilding of the cause of God. I do not regret that I have done this. We have seen some trying times, but amid all we say, It pays. “They that be wise shall shine as the brightness of the firmament; and they that turn many to righteousness as the stars for ever and ever.” [Daniel 12:3.] Give me this as my reward, and I am satisfied. I hold myself, not as my own property. I am bought with a price, even the precious blood of the Son of God. I place myself under the molding of the Holy Spirit. And at sixty-nine years of age, I am still in the service of my Master.
(12LtMs, Lt 130, 1897, 6)
When I called for the loan of money from your mother, it came, and we are grateful to the Lord for this. In a vision of the night, I was directed to send to South Africa for money. Said the messenger of the Lord, “They have my money, and it is endangering the souls of those to whom it has been entrusted. They do not all see that the means in their hands is entrusted to them, that they may develop characters fit for the heavenly courts. They are being tested, to see whether they will honor and glorify me by doing my work and advancing my interests, or whether they will serve self. If they keep my glory in view, if they listen to my voice, if they heed my instruction, and do my work, according to my word, I can trust them with the eternal riches. They are mine; all that they have is mine; it has been bought with a price. If they are loyal to me, if they honor me as they have opportunity, I will honor them. But if they do not walk with me, if they walk in the ways of the world, if they choose their own way and not my way, they can never see my face. Their money will either prove their eternal ruin or a blessing. Its only value is the good they can do with it to glorify me.”
(12LtMs, Lt 130, 1897, 7)
I write you this because I have an interest in your soul. I would feel very delicate were I asking you for money for my own use, or for the use of my family. I ask not one penny for this. I only plead the necessities of a people, necessities which should awaken the interest of those who claim to be children of God. I ask not one dollar of your money for my own individual self. I am using my entrusted capital to advance the cause of God, which is dearer to me than life.
(12LtMs, Lt 130, 1897, 8)
One school building is finished, and another is advancing. We thank the Lord for this. The means which your good mother loaned me I loaned to the builders, to advance the work. Souls are being added to our numbers in the suburbs of Sydney. I wish you would come to this place, and see for yourself. Then you could do as you pleased.
(12LtMs, Lt 130, 1897, 10)
We are doing all we can. But not one pound will come to us from any source outside of those of our own faith; and those who believe are poor, with nothing to do with. Our motto has been, We will not fail nor be discouraged. But time is short; we have but little time in which to work. The cities must hear the proclamation of the truth. Melbourne has not been worked, neither has Sydney, nor have the cities of New Zealand. Can you co-operate with Jesus Christ by doing His work? The Lord is waiting for men who will be laborers together with Him, who will seek to save those that are in darkness and error.
(12LtMs, Lt 130, 1897, 11)
Our special interest should be in God’s work. Our whole soul should be full of zeal to work while the day lasts, for the night cometh in which no man can work. The message of warning must be given to the world. I dare not remain indifferent when there are souls to be saved for whom Christ has died. The leaven of truth must be introduced. We see that cities are becoming as they were in the days of Noah, and as were Sodom and Gomorrah. The inhabitants are planting and building. Their passions are stimulated to intense activity by games, horse racing, and intemperance of every description. The fever swells every vein, and the heart throbs with the restless tide of unhallowed emotion. Thousands upon thousands are sunk in a stupid lethargy. Their sleep is as deep as if they were under a powerful, poisonous drug. They are dead in trespasses and sins. And yet no work for God is being done in these cities. The entire tendency is toward corruption, and the end is a moral prostration which means death to the soul. Why should we not be alarmed?
(12LtMs, Lt 130, 1897, 12)
Nothing but the leaven of truth can reach the people of these cities. The aid of the great I AM must be relied on. The healing fountain must be proclaimed. “If any man thirst, let him come unto me, and drink.” [John 7:37.] The balm of a Saviour’s love must be presented, to heal the sin-bruised souls. The mighty energies of the Holy Spirit, with all its quickening, recuperative, transforming power must be applied to the palsy-stricken souls. I see no way that we can do this work than to engage in medical missionary work. I have prayed, and I have written for help for this work, but none comes.
(12LtMs, Lt 130, 1897, 13)
Last mail brought me £50 from Peter Wessels. I acknowledge it. It came exactly at the right time. We were at the Health Home, trying to get means to furnish some rooms in the humblest style. We had bought a few things, such as oil cloth for the floor, and a couple of bureaus, one of which, second hand, cost less than a pound. This was for the room I occupy in the Home, and for which I pay four shillings per week. When our means gave out, we had to wait; and when that money came, we rejoiced, and were glad. Now we can finish furnishing the rooms. We would engage in more of such work if we had the means.
(12LtMs, Lt 130, 1897, 14)
Full and free salvation must be presented to those who are perishing in their ignorance and sin, in order that a complete renovation may take place. A great work is to be done, and all heaven is waiting for human agencies through whom the divine instrumentalities can work. We hope that some one will feel a burden to step in and unite with the great firm as a partner, to carry forward the work.
(12LtMs, Lt 130, 1897, 15)
Those who have felt the cleansing efficacy of the blood of Christ on their own souls will realize that Christ values the souls that He has purchased with His own blood more than gold or silver or previous stones. Growth in grace and spiritual soundness must be maintained and perfected by exercising every capability, every talent of money or influence in the service of God, to uplift, to point out the remedy for sin and all moral defilement. Upon those who engage in this work will the Sun of Righteousness arise, with healing in his wings. And all the heavenly intelligences, looking upon the fresh beauty and the vigor of the newly implanted life in the soul will rejoice over them with singing.
(12LtMs, Lt 130, 1897, 16)
I must close this hastily written letter. My soul is wrestling in earnest prayer that a work may be done in our cities. I know that it should be done. I leave this matter, to me so full of eternal result, to your consideration. I could not forbear doing my duty, and now I leave the matter with you.
(12LtMs, Lt 130, 1897, 17)
Lt 131, 1897
Wessels, Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia June 24, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in 17MR 57-60. + Dear Sister Wessels:
I learn that you do not feel willing to have your son leave Africa. I heard that he was anxious to leave Africa, and establish himself elsewhere, engaging in some missionary work. I understood that he wanted to build a sanitarium in some country, where it was needed. We know that a sanitarium is much needed here in Sydney. We feel very sad to think that so much money has been piled up in buildings in Battle Creek. This outlay of means, unadvised by the Lord, has crippled every new missionary field, because the treasury in Battle Creek has been left destitute of means. They could not help us to start the work from the great center because the means was misappropriated. This warning has been given to them over and over again. We cannot obtain means from the center in Battle Creek to advance the work, because they have erected so many buildings that the means is not to be had.
(12LtMs, Lt 131, 1897, 1)
If your son John is anxious to establish a sanitarium, he could try it here, where it is so much needed. A start has already been made, but we cannot obtain suitable buildings by hiring them. From the light the Lord has given me, it is better for your sons to be in some other place than Africa. There are temptations constantly around them that have a tendency to lead them away from Bible principles. The souls of your children are precious to you, and much more precious are they to God, who gave His only begotten Son to redeem them to Himself, to bring them in connection with Himself, that they might obtain a sound, all-round experience, and as the Lord’s purchased possession, call into exercise the qualifications and endowments God has given them to be used, not merely for selfish purposes, but for His own name’s glory.
(12LtMs, Lt 131, 1897, 2)
The material world is under God’s control. The laws that govern all nature are obeyed by nature. Everything speaks and acts the will of the Creator. The clouds, the rain, the dew, the sunshine, the showers, the wind, the storm, all are under the supervision of God, and yield implicit obedience to Him who employs them. The tiny spear of grass bursts its way through the earth, first the blade, then the ear, and then the full corn in the ear. The Lord uses these, His obedient servants, to do His will. The fruit is first seen in the bud, enclosing the future pear, peach, or apple, and the Lord develops these in their proper season, because they do not resist His working. They do not oppose the order of His arrangements. His works, as seen in the natural world, are not one-half comprehended or appreciated. These silent preachers will teach human beings their lessons, if they will only be attentive hearers.
(12LtMs, Lt 131, 1897, 3)
Can it be that man, made after the image of God, endowed with the faculties of reason and speech, shall alone be unappreciative of the gifts God has bestowed upon him, and which, if improved, can be enlarged? Shall those who might be elevated and ennobled, fitted to be co-laborers with the greatest Teacher the world ever knew, be content to remain imperfect and incomplete in character, producing disorder when they might become vessels unto honor? Shall the bodies and souls of God’s purchased inheritance be so hampered with world-bound habits and unholy practices that they will never reflect the beauty of the character of Him who has done all things well, in order that imperfect man, through the grace of Christ, might do all things well, and hear at last Christ’s benediction, “Well done, thou good and faithful servant, enter thou into the joy of thy Lord”? [Matthew 25:21.]
(12LtMs, Lt 131, 1897, 4)
God spoke, and His words created His works in the natural world. God’s creation is but a reservoir of means made ready for Him to employ instantly to do His pleasure. Nothing is useless, but the curse has caused tares to be sown by the enemy. Shall rational beings alone cause confusion in our world? Shall we not live to God? Shall we not honor Him? Our God and Saviour is all-wise, all-sufficient. He came to our world that His perfection might be revealed in us.
(12LtMs, Lt 131, 1897, 5)
My dear sister, our faith must increase. We must be more like Jesus in conduct and disposition. The light that shines on our path, the truth that commands itself to our intelligence, if obeyed, will sanctify and transform the soul, but if disobeyed, it will consume us. I see that there is danger on every side. We now have altogether too little time left to use it unprofitably. The knowledge of truth, the heavenly wisdom, spiritual endowments, are heaven’s goods, committed to us for wise improvement. We have no time or strength or goods to use for selfish purposes. By using God’s gifts as sanctified and holy, to advance His cause in the world, we can lay up treasure in heaven.
(12LtMs, Lt 131, 1897, 6)
I shall not urge your son to come to Sydney, but he can ask wisdom of God, who says He will give liberally and upbraid not. “But let him ask in faith nothing doubting; for he that wavereth is like the waves of the sea, driven with the wind and tossed. For let not that man think he shall receive anything from the Lord. A double-minded man is unstable in all his ways.” [James 1:5-8.] If your son will hang his helpless soul on Jesus Christ, and believe in Christ as his personal Saviour, he will know the will of the Lord. Then let him do what the Lord says. If he feels inclined by the Spirit of the Lord to come to Australia, we will be glad and thankful. Not that we expect that he will invest all that he has here, to be any man’s property but his own. It is not the large gifts we desire.
(12LtMs, Lt 131, 1897, 7)
When the Lord gives your son light to go to any place, do not try to stay his steps. Let him hear the voice of the great Shepherd, and follow Him. I have not written to Peter, John, or Philip, to draw means from you, in all the letters you have received. But as Sister Harmon Lindsay, Brother Peter Wessels, and Mother Wessels have means invested here, some as donations, others as a loan, I have had a desire to keep you acquainted with our situation and advancement. If I supposed you thought my letters were written to draw means from you, I would stop my letter writing very decidedly. I do not write because I expect you to send us money, but because I wish to help you with the counsel and the light that God has given me. I do not want John to help us here in Australia if the Lord wants him in any other place. I want God’s will and God’s way to be my will and my way.
(12LtMs, Lt 131, 1897, 8)
May the Lord be your strength, my dear sister. May He be very near to comfort and bless you and your children, and may you be greatly blessed in your children, and be bound up in complete harmony with Jesus Christ, is the prayer of your sister.
(12LtMs, Lt 131, 1897, 9)
Lt 132, 1897
Wessels, Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales June 24, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 3MR 250, 274; 4Bio 314. Dear Sister Wessels:
We are pleased to report a school in full running order, with an attendance far beyond our expectations. We have sixty students, besides the teachers.
(12LtMs, Lt 132, 1897, 1)
There are many things of interest going on here. Willie now has a plain, simple cottage. We think this will be a great blessing to his family. For over a year they have occupied a house built for a washhouse. We hoped to get a building put up long before this, but all the means and power that could be commanded was put into the school buildings that the opening of the school should not be delayed one day beyond the stated time. When we said that school should open on the date advertised, some said, “It is impossible; it cannot be done.” But we declared that it must be done. I told the men employed on Willie’s house and in my orchard and vegetable garden to cease their work for me, and go on to the school buildings. A call was made for donations of labor. In this way the work was done as far as possible.
(12LtMs, Lt 132, 1897, 2)
It wanted only a few weeks to the date fixed for the opening of school, and the finished building had to be cleaned, a large cistern, fifteen feet deep, to be dug and bricked up, and the second building, which was to provide school rooms, to be built. But this work was accomplished; the school opened on time, and the students were all accommodated.
(12LtMs, Lt 132, 1897, 3)
For some time the country had been suffering from a drouth, but our cistern was only finished a few days when we had blessed showers from heaven, which filled the tanks, and half filled the large cistern. We felt that we could indeed offer thanksgiving to God for His merciful provision to us in this dry time. After a few weeks another downpour of rain came, which filled the cistern to overflowing. If there is no more rain during this term, the school has enough for all its needs. Thus the Lord has favored us. We are glad, and we praise His holy name for His mercy and His love.
(12LtMs, Lt 132, 1897, 4)
School opened April 28, and from then till now, students have been coming in till they number sixty. Others are preparing to come this term.
(12LtMs, Lt 132, 1897, 5)
Last Sabbath, June 19, I spoke from the first chapter of Ephesians. The Lord gave me strength and blessed me with freedom. We knew that the heavenly Guest was in our midst. The singing, led by Brother Herbert Lacey, was excellent. The voices, raised in melody of praise to God, were uplifting and encouraging. The room in which we hold our services was quite full. We shall soon have to arise and build a meetinghouse, for the room we occupy must be given to the students, as they are greatly cramped. But I shall be glad if the students crowd us out; for we greatly desire this school to be a success. We can say that it is thus far. Praise the Lord! We are willing to be crowded out of our room because of the increasing number of students.
(12LtMs, Lt 132, 1897, 6)
My sister, we thank you for the money you loaned us. It had done a good work here in erecting these buildings, which will serve us till the main buildings are put up. These will be built when means come in.
(12LtMs, Lt 132, 1897, 7)
Brethren Daniells and Palmer from Melbourne and Brother Baker from Sydney came to visit this place a few weeks ago. In the past Elder Daniells has had little faith that a school would ever be in successful operation here, but he has been thoroughly converted on this subject. Had it not been for his unbelief and dissatisfaction in regard to the location of the school in Cooranbong, we would now be two years in advance of what we are. But in the strength of God we have moved forward under every phase of perplexity and hindrance, saying by faith, “We will not fail, nor be discouraged.” [See Isaiah 42:4.]
(12LtMs, Lt 132, 1897, 8)
These brethren were overwhelmed with surprise at the advancement made. Everything pleased them. They thought the addition of the second story just as it should be. Although I took that responsibility on myself, I never had the slightest question regarding the matter. It was a satisfaction that my proposition was fully encouraged and sustained by Brother Metcalfe Hare. This improvement was not in the plan, but it met the minds of our brethren, and they said, “What could you have done without that upper storey? There would have been no place in which the gentlemen students could be accommodated, and even now the accommodations are altogether too small.”
(12LtMs, Lt 132, 1897, 9)
Brother _____ made a most thorough acknowledgement to me. He confessed that he had not helped at all, either by his faith or his influence, but had permitted Willie and me to drag the load up hill. He said he saw that he had been wrong, and he now had to confess that the Lord had been leading step by step, but that he had had no part in it. “I am now thoroughly convinced,” he said, “that this is the place for our school, and I am going to work with all my heart and strength to advance and build up the school interest, and I may repair, as far as possible, that harm I have done.” We thank the Lord for this acknowledgement.
(12LtMs, Lt 132, 1897, 10)
Lt 133, 1897
Wessels, Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia March 7, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Sister Wessels:
We were very grateful this morning to our heavenly Father to hear the rain coming down gently but steadily. We have been praying for rain, for there was no rain for the sawmill, and the second building could not advance until lumber was sawed.
(12LtMs, Lt 133, 1897, 1)
I arose at 11 p.m., for I could not sleep. I seemed to be in travail of soul for your family. I would say to you my sister, Have faith in God. Do not be disheartened. Watch and pray, and wait and trust. The Lord has thoughts of mercy upon them all if they will turn them unto the Lord, and hearken to His voice, and seek Him with the whole heart. Be of good courage. Things that you do not understand will come up, and the enemy will seek to perplex your mind and worry you; but bear in mind that the whole work of God is in the hands of One who is mighty to save, even to the uttermost all who come unto God by Him. The powers of evil will not have everything to themselves. They will be watched over by the angels of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 133, 1897, 2)
The Lord provides for every trial that we are called to pass through. In your position of mother of a large family, you have great responsibilities. You serve in things temporal and spiritual. But you are to have help. The Lord will move upon the hearts and minds of your children. When chastisement shall have done its work, He will bring them to repentance. There will be influences to counterwork the work of evil, and divine interpositions. Sorrow, sickness, affliction, loss and disappointment are hard to bear.
(12LtMs, Lt 133, 1897, 3)
Shame, temptation, and sin will bring their sure result. But God has provided agencies to meet these things. God can break the spell of evil and infatuation. He would have you trust and be patient. “For this purpose the Son of God was manifested, that he might destroy the works of the devil.” [1 John 3:8.]
(12LtMs, Lt 133, 1897, 4)
I speak to your children, who are dear to the heart of God. Will you not, Philip, Peter, and all the family, be molded by the Holy Spirit of God? Do not, I entreat of you, hurt and bruise the soul of your God-fearing mother. Do not diverge from the right track, and follow another leader than Jesus Christ. That which you sow, you will also reap. You may not realize at the time that you yield to temptation the pain that your wrong act has caused. Steps are taken under temptation which, when Satan’s spell is broken, you will give anything to have the power to recall. But you cannot do this, there is only One who can accomplish this work, even Jesus Christ, whose blood cleanseth from all sin.
(12LtMs, Lt 133, 1897, 5)
There is need of strict watchfulness and sobriety. It will not pay for one of you to live your life on the wrong side, for it only brings remorse and bitterness of soul. You are loved by your children, but you are so diverse in character, that there is little of that sweet harmony of spirit that the Lord would have cherished and cultivated.
(12LtMs, Lt 133, 1897, 6)
Jesus, whose purchased possession you are, is crucified afresh and put to open shame, because you do not represent Him in character, but follow your own will. Go to the great Physician. He knows exactly what is wrong with each one. He knows how to deal sympathizingly and pityingly with each soul. He has a balm for every wound that sin has made. He declares, “I came not to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance.” [Mark 2:17.] Then come just as you are. You will never have reason to turn away saying, “He does not understand my case.” Christ looks into our inmost soul; He knows everything about us. There are no secret chambers to which He has not free access. Every thought, every feeling is seen and read by Him. We need not wish to hide away from the only One who is able to deliver us.
(12LtMs, Lt 133, 1897, 7)
Probationary time still lingers for every member of your family. They still have opportunity to be reconciled to God. They are His purchased possession, bought with a price, even the precious blood of the Son of God. But what preparation, from the eldest to the youngest, have they made for eternity? Should the folding doors of eternity open before you, should you meet your judge who gave His life for you, what excuse could one member of your family offer why they have refused the heavenly Gift, and neglected the great salvation offered?
(12LtMs, Lt 133, 1897, 8)
I ask you as a family to let the life of folly and foolishness pass away. Awaken to a sense of your individual responsibility and accountability to God for your time, your privileges, your opportunities for doing God service, for being laborers together with Him. Let every thread of your influence be placed wholly and devotedly upon the Lord’s side. You have no moments to waste in self-serving. Souls are perishing in ignorance and sin. They know not God, nor Jesus Christ whom He has sent, whom He gave to die a cruel death for the life of the world.
(12LtMs, Lt 133, 1897, 9)
I make this appeal to you, for your peril as a family has been presented before me. Christ, the Majesty of heaven, came not to be ministered unto, but to minister. He is your example. Then live to work diligently and usefully, and be a blessing to the world. Christ came to take the sins of man, to bear his guilt, that man by faith might receive His righteousness, and stand innocent before God. O, how pleased Satan is to see men, not growing up into the full stature of men in Christ Jesus, but with all their powers devoted to self-pleasing and neglectful of the great salvation. Satan is playing a game of life for their souls, and winning away from them grace after grace. He is supplying the place with his own attributes. The fathers that are not patterns of piety are not teaching to their children what they know to be truth. So the evil of a divided and unconsecrated life is transmitted to the children.
(12LtMs, Lt 133, 1897, 10)
O, come to Jesus. Lay down the weapons of your rebellion against God, and put on Christ. Have courage to be just what you should be. The Lord reproved Israel because they did not keep the law which He had commanded them. Their present and eternal good was promised on condition of obedience. But the Lord was displeased because they “served not the Lord their God with joyfulness and gladness of heart.” [Deuteronomy 28:47.] This is a neglect that God will not permit to go unreproved or unpunished. He will not allow His name to be dishonored by the people He has separated from the world to serve Him. His own glory will He not give to another.
(12LtMs, Lt 133, 1897, 11)
The people who claim to know God are very much inclined to take glory to their individual selves. It is natural for us to be contented with the rich provision made for us in both temporal and spiritual things; but how many return their thank offering to God? How many inquire into the source of these favors enjoyed? So long as we have the good things of God so abundantly provided for us, we rest satisfied, unthankful, unholy.
(12LtMs, Lt 133, 1897, 12)
But one thing we must learn. God has declared, “Thou shalt have no other gods before me.” [Exodus 20:3.] He will never allow any people called by His name to bring reproach upon Him without punishing them. He is dishonored when they look to human agencies, and trust in and depend for counsel upon finite men. The Lord desires to be sought in council for the very things we need. He bears long with His purchased possession. He gives the ministration of angels to be their efficiency; but when men disregard His mercy and His love, and carry themselves proudly as if all things were their own, to do with as they will, He will remove the blessings and send adversity. He looks with abhorrence upon human pride.
(12LtMs, Lt 133, 1897, 13)
O how much misused material there is in our world. How few of the precious capabilities given us are used for our eternal welfare and for doing God service. It is not so much the great increase of capabilities that will qualify us for service for God as the consecration of the powers which we have, and the diligent application of our God-given talents. These with the use will increase the amount to use. If you had individually ten times the talent you now possess, it would not better you in the sight of God unless it is combined with a vital connection with God, who is Spirit and Life. Your souls need to be touched with the living principles of the being of Christ; your lips touched with the live coal from off His altar. You are wasting time and opportunities; you are neglecting your privileges. God must breathe into your heart and spirit His breath of life. He is ready to do it. He is ready to take you into partnership with Himself.
(12LtMs, Lt 133, 1897, 14)
The great transforming power of God is essential. Seek for it. Christ is standing at the door of your hearts, and knocking for admission. Will you let the heavenly Guest knock in vain? You need to take hold of the work in earnest. Do something, every soul of you, do it now. “While it is called today, if ye will hear his voice, harden not your hearts.” [Hebrews 3:13, 15.] Cry unto God with heart and soul and voice that you may have courage to receive Jesus. “For as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name: which were born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God. And the Word was made flesh and dwelt among us and we beheld his glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth.” [John 1:12-14.]
(12LtMs, Lt 133, 1897, 15)
There are useless people in our world today because they have not employed the powers they already have. These, if they would, might, through Jesus Christ, have become an efficiency and power. The Lord is speaking to you through His servants. He is calling for volunteers. He wants you to become efficient workers for Him. The Lord has given to every man his work. Your head, your hands, your feet, are His workmanship; but it is at the heart, the center of the being, where the work must begin. Then, and then only, will it work outward.
(12LtMs, Lt 133, 1897, 16)
I ask every member of Sister Wessels’ family to be all that God designs they shall be. Do you cultivate the thought that all you have is a loan from God? Do you make an effort to comprehend your God-given responsibilities? Do you realize that you are stewards of His grace? Your temporal advantages comprise but a small portion of His gifts. And these temporal things you may allow to become a snare to your souls. Do you take in what is comprehended in your stewardship? Do you realize that the Lord has entrusted you with His goods?
(12LtMs, Lt 133, 1897, 17)
God would have His precious treasure of truth accepted and appreciated. It is to be prized above silver and gold, above diamonds and earthly gain. “The Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us.”“In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.”“In him was life, and the life was the light of men. And the light shineth in darkness, and the darkness comprehendeth it not.” [Verses 14, 1, 4, 5.] Shall the people who call themselves God’s people be among those who do not comprehend the light?
(12LtMs, Lt 133, 1897, 18)
There is much you can all engage in doing. Gather up the divine rays of light in pamphlets and tracts, and put the Word of truth before thousands in their own language. Philip, in the place of feeling that he can only understand his duty by going round by Battle Creek, should have acted on the light given him by God—not in trying to run things after his order, but by taking up the work and consecrating himself to God; in using his energies in disseminating the precious saving truth to others.
(12LtMs, Lt 133, 1897, 19)
If men would not try to work the Holy Spirit, but let the Holy Spirit work them, the Lord would prepare them for the grand and solemn work of disseminating light to the world. The Lord had important work for Philip to do, and if he had in humility of mind trusted in God, if he had obtained his experience direct from God, if he had sought the Lord for the wisdom so essential for him and for every one of us, he would have had an experience that would have made him a steward of the manifold grace of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 133, 1897, 20)
But Philip was trying to fashion things altogether too much after the pattern of Battle Creek, and he has made a grievous mistake. The leaven that has been at work there for years is not good, and it has worked upon him as it has upon many others, until men have been placed where God should be. The idea prevails that Battle Creek should endorse every movement made in foreign fields. This is a mistake. It is not essential, and there must be an overturning of the plans and methods that are absorbing the minds of all who look to Battle Creek for an example.
(12LtMs, Lt 133, 1897, 21)
The Lord is just as accessible in South Africa as He is in Battle Creek. He has never told Philip, Peter, John Wessels, or any of His people to make Battle Creek their God. He would have His people in South Africa take hold of His efficiency. His word is, “Let him take hold of my strength, that he may make peace with me; and he shall make peace with me.” [Isaiah 27:5.] The vein of silver must be worked; the shaft sunk deeper and deeper into the mine of truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 133, 1897, 22)
We must bear in mind that there is an aggressive warfare to be waged. We shall be compelled to do work amid hindrances and contention. We shall have to battle against ignorance and cheap earthly conceptions. The common, earthly fire, that has no connection with the sacred fire of God’s own kindling, duplicity and pride of opinion, will stand to bar the way of advance in the divine warfare. There will be perils by land and by sea; but the greatest of all perils will be brought in by false brethren. Privations, trials, discord, and strife will meet us to confuse and discourage.
(12LtMs, Lt 133, 1897, 23)
But the Lord has an experience for us to obtain as He had for Moses. Moses had all his work planned out for him at forty years of age, and he commenced it after his own devising. But the Lord had other plans for him. The responsibility was to be placed upon him of leading God’s people in their journey in the wilderness. But before the experience was gained, fitting him for the work that was waiting for him, he had, for forty years, to do the work of a shepherd. Moses had deep and severe lessons to learn, but he was not left alone. The divine Teacher was with him, to help and instruct. It was not until Moses had learned the lessons God had for him that He could place him where he should be the emancipator of his people.
(12LtMs, Lt 133, 1897, 24)
And God has lessons for His people to learn today. He invites each of you, “Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart, and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.” [Matthew 11:28-30.]
(12LtMs, Lt 133, 1897, 25)
Lt 134, 1897
Wessels, Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia February 8, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Sister Wessels:
I feel a deep interest for you and for your children. Your heart is sad and very sore. I feel deeply over the case of your son Peter. He needs to draw nigh unto God. He needs His converting power upon the soul. There are circumstances that make it impossible at present to give him credentials. He knows why, and if he acts discreetly, it will be for his present and eternal good. But dear sister, do not separate your interest from the church of God. Walk carefully. It may be essential for you to know that your son Peter is not at present a safe man to be entrusted with the flock of God. He has a good wife and precious children; everything possible must be done to save them and him.
(12LtMs, Lt 134, 1897, 1)
If you will cling to your Saviour, and know that your brethren will not take any measures which are unkind and heartless, the Lord will enable you to stand correctly for the truth and for righteousness. It is a serious, solemn matter to bear the responsibility of preaching the Word, and Brother Wessels should feel that at present it is best for him to do all the good he can without credentials. The Lord is very merciful, of tender pity and loving kindness. Come now close to Peter Wessels. Do not stand afar off. Do not speak any condemnatory words. The Lord has reproved him. Now seek to help him. Instruct your brethren that now in this case is presented to them an opportunity to save a soul from death, hide a multitude of sins. Much wisdom is needed.
(12LtMs, Lt 134, 1897, 2)
If it is necessary to open this matter to Mother Wessels, let one of the sisters whom she has confidence in, one who has the true sympathy of Christ, talk with her, and let her understand the matter. First talk, my brother, with him, and come [as] close as possible with him. In one of his impassioned fits, he may end his own life. For Christ’s sake do your best, with prayer and tenderest love, to save the man for whom Christ has died. Do not be harsh, do not be imprudent. Be careful, work for the soul. Let him who is spiritual be a true physician to restore such an one in the spirit of meekness. It is not too late for wrongs to be righted. But this brother may end his own life, for this is not thought to be an enormity.
(12LtMs, Lt 134, 1897, 3)
I present this to you to present to all who understand this matter. Satan has laid his snares to separate the Family Wessels from the cause entirely. If all will move wisely, this need not be done. The Lord can make Peter Wessels a man of honor and truthful integrity. Let not one unwise movement be made. Trust in God, go forward in humility, and pray and work for every member of the Wessels family as you have not hitherto done. Melt your way into their hearts. Will you do your part? Will you, for me, urge your brethren to do their part, and act as Jesus would act, were He upon the earth? Souls are at stake, souls that have not been looked after and properly labored for. Work for them. Work for Christ’s sake, with the tenderness of a parent for a child.
(12LtMs, Lt 134, 1897, 4)
God help you is my prayer.
(12LtMs, Lt 134, 1897, 5)
Lt 135, 1897
Wessels, Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia February 8, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in SD 342; TMK 118; 1SM 117-118; CC 353. + Dear Sister Wessels:
I wish to tell you that one school building is finished. The work has been done well, but plainly. We cannot afford to enter into any extras. Money is needed for so many things. We shall bind about the edges, and make the loan of £1,000 extend as far as possible.
(12LtMs, Lt 135, 1897, 1)
When we can get the means, we mean to build a meetinghouse. This will not be extravagant, but plain, neat, and commodious. We greatly desire to meet for the worship of God in some other place than the loft of a sawmill, which is barricaded with school furniture. A room such as this does not suggest any sacred ideas. The heat of the sun, beating down on the tin roof, is very oppressive.
(12LtMs, Lt 135, 1897, 2)
The school building which is now going up will only be enclosed. It will not be sealed or plastered. This will serve for dining room and kitchen, and, according to the new plan, part of the upper story will be used as sleeping rooms for the students, and part for a meetinghouse, until we can raise funds to build a humble chapel.
(12LtMs, Lt 135, 1897, 3)
I hope that you, or I, or any who is co-operating in this, will not tie up our money, or use it only where it will make a show. The greatest show we can make with the means of which we are stewards is to place them where they will be in active circulation in God’s service, trading upon the talents entrusted to us, that they may be so invested and increased that they will bring the truth to many souls in the darkness of error,
(12LtMs, Lt 135, 1897, 4)
If we place our means where they will be wasted, even on our children, if we permit our children to use money without a thought of glorifying God, we are not clear in His sight. God has a work for our money to do, and He will call upon us to give an account of it.
(12LtMs, Lt 135, 1897, 5)
It seems exceedingly strange that more is not written on this subject, and that warnings, presenting “It is written,” are not going to all parts of the world. In Malachi, the serious consequences of robbing God are presented in plain language, and I wonder why this matter is not brought more distinctly before God’s people, that they may be kept from the presumptuous sin of robbery. This matter has not had sufficient weight with the professed people of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 135, 1897, 6)
This is no speculative theory, but a truth of the deepest interest, and of the most weighty importance. May the Lord so work upon the hearts and the understanding of men that they may clearly perceive their duty as it is written in the Word, so that none will have an excuse in the day of judgment for wasting the Lord’s goods upon themselves, or upon others.
(12LtMs, Lt 135, 1897, 7)
The means invested in the cause of God continually increase, because they are instrumental in bringing souls into the truth who do service for God, and in their turn lead others to God’s side. These become a part of the great firm, and invest their time and talents in it. As the matter is kept before them, the eyes of their understanding are enlightened, and they become more and more consecrated to God’s service. An increased capacity to press the triumphs of the gospel of Christ is gained.
(12LtMs, Lt 135, 1897, 8)
Facilities are greatly needed for the work of God. Those who name the name of Christ should enter unto no ambitious projects, binding up the Lord’s work by misappropriating His means. We are to behold Christ, that we may have a knowledge of His self-sacrificing life and character. By His life of self-denial, Christ has made a plain path for His followers. He lived not to please Himself: but He bore the guilt of the world. When the eyes of our understanding are anointed with the heavenly eyesalve, we shall not view things in the light that the world views them.
(12LtMs, Lt 135, 1897, 9)
If Brother Philip Wessels had taken up the work appointed him by God, he would now have been engaged in seeking to bring light and truth to thousands that are in darkness. A great work might have been done in South Africa, by all that have received the truth there, if they had divested themselves of their accusing spirit. If they had believed the words, “All ye are brethren” [Matthew 23:8], if they had realized that with God there is no caste, but that in His sight every soul is precious, God would have worked through them. But there is constant danger of losing the simplicity of the work, and of trying to forward it on lines which the Lord cannot approve. If those whom the Lord has appointed to do His work do not feel the necessity of manifesting Christlike humility at every step, God will entrust His work to other agencies. If these respond to the light, they will take the place of those who refused to go out into the highways and the hedges with the invitation, “Come for all things are now ready. The gospel feast is prepared; come to the royal feast.” [See Luke 14:17.]
(12LtMs, Lt 135, 1897, 10)
We are brought out of the darkness of the world into God’s marvelous light. If we receive the image of God, if our souls are cleansed from every moral defilement, the seal of God will be placed upon our foreheads, and we shall be prepared for the closing scenes of this earth’s history. But we have no time to lose. The more we study the life of Christ, with a heart to learn, the more Christlike we become. Into the heart of every true doer of the Word the Holy Spirit infuses clear understanding. The more we crucify selfish practices by imparting our blessings to others, and by exercising our God-given ability, the more the heavenly graces will be strengthened and increased in us. We will grow in spirituality, in patience, in fortitude, in meekness, in gentleness. Imbued with love to God and to our fellow men, we shall be “laborers together with God,” in seeking to save the lost. [1 Corinthians 3:9.] We are to work the works of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 135, 1897, 11)
The Lord permits circumstances to come that call for the exercise of the passive graces, which increase in purity and efficiency as we endeavor to give back to the Lord His own in tithe and offerings. You know something of what it means to pass through trials. These have given you the opportunity of trusting in God, of seeking Him in earnest prayer, that you may believe in Him, and reply upon Him with simple faith. It is by suffering that our virtues are tested, and our faith tried. It is in the day of trouble that we feel the preciousness of Jesus. You will be given opportunity to say, “Though he slay me, yet will I trust in him.” [Job 13:15.] O, it is so precious to think that opportunities are afforded us to confess our faith in the face of danger, and amid sorrow, sickness, pain, and death.
(12LtMs, Lt 135, 1897, 12)
For Christ’s sake, and for your souls’ sake, take heed, and let not your light grow dim. Mistrust your own wisdom; for it is nothing. “Without me,” said Christ, “ye can do nothing.” [John 15:5.] I wish I could make my voice heard across the broad waters, saying to you as dear children, and to every human being, “Walk carefully and humbly before God. Pray without ceasing. Though you cannot always be on your knees, your thoughts can continually ascend to God in silent, earnest supplication that His Spirit may attend you as you search His Word for directions. Flee from those who would fill your mind with the poisonous malaria of distrust and unbelief. Keep in the channel of light. Associate with those sound in the faith, those that have a deep experience in the things of God.”
(12LtMs, Lt 135, 1897, 13)
Outward obedience to the Word of God is thought by many to constitute them Christians; but it can never do this. The heart must be touched by the Spirit of God. No one should rest content unless he has the mind of Christ. He says, “I am the way, the truth, and the life.” [John 14:6.] Those who truly accept Him are covered with the robe of His righteousness. By eating His flesh, and drinking His blood, they become partakers of His divine nature. The blood of Christ washes away their sins, and they become true branches of the living vine.
(12LtMs, Lt 135, 1897, 14)
By her act of anointing Christ, according to His words, Mary will be associated with Him and with the gospel throughout all time, because her act was a demonstration of love for Christ. Religion itself, free and undefiled, is to know God, and Jesus Christ, whom He hath sent. “Yea, doubtless, and I count all things but loss,” writes Paul, “for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord; for whom I have suffered the loss of all things, and do count them but dung that I may win Christ, and be found in him, not having mine own righteousness but that which is through the faith of Christ, the righteousness which is of God by faith: that I may know him, and the power of his resurrection, and the fellowship of his sufferings, being made comformable unto his death.”“I count not myself to have apprehended: but this one thing I do, forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those things which are before, I press toward the mark of the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus.” [Philippians 3:8-10, 13, 14.]
(12LtMs, Lt 135, 1897, 15)
“This one thing I do.” [Verse 13.] Here is a decided statement of Paul’s unchangeable resolution. He could not be diverted from the steady purpose of his life. “This one thing I do.” Paul did many things. He was a wise teacher. His many letters are full of instructive lessons setting forth correct principles. He worked with his hands, for he was a tent maker, and in this way earned his daily bread. “These hands,” he said, “have ministered unto my necessity.” [Acts 20:34.] He carried a heavy burden for the churches. He strove most earnestly to present their errors before them, that they might correct them, and not be deceived and led away from God. He was always seeking to help them in their difficulties; and yet he declares, “One thing I do.” In the busy activity of his life he had one great purpose. The responsibilities of his life were many, yet he kept always before him this “one thing.” The constant sense of the presence of God constrained him to keep his eye ever looking unto Jesus, the Author and Finisher of his faith.
(12LtMs, Lt 135, 1897, 16)
There are obligations resting upon every soul, and there are conditions to be met in regard to the salvation of the soul. With us, everything depends on how we accept the Lord’s terms. As is our spirit, so will be the moral result upon our future life and character. Each individual soul has victories to gain, but he must realize that he cannot have things just as he wants them. We are to observe carefully every lesson Christ has given throughout His life and teaching. He does not destroy; He improves whatever He touches.
(12LtMs, Lt 135, 1897, 17)
The truth of God is not guesswork, but an experience [by which] divine influences co-operate with human agents. It is to be tested by practical results. There is an actual, vital relation between fallen man and the divine intelligences, between the sinner and his divine Saviour. The Lord Jesus, the great Center, takes men into partnership with Himself. Then, I inquire, why are there so many strings of leadership from man and his fellow man? Why does man look to his fellow man for help and knowledge and understanding as to what [he] must be and what [he] must do? His Word has given special directions that men are to look to Jesus, to work as laborers together with God. “Come unto me, all ye that labor, and are heavy laden,” Christ says, “and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly of heart, and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.” [Matthew 11:28-30.]
(12LtMs, Lt 135, 1897, 18)
The one great evidence of spiritual growth is that we love to obey Christ, and come into sweet union with Him who makes us sit together in heavenly places with Christ. God requires us to be doers of His Word, and not hearers only. In order to attain a high standard in religious experience, we must cultivate the meekness and lowliness of Christ. We must love obedience; we must love righteousness because it is of heavenly extraction.
(12LtMs, Lt 135, 1897, 19)
Christ never flattered any one. He has never promised us smooth water; but he has said, “In the world ye shall have tribulation, but in me ye shall have peace.” [John 16:33.] He made an infinite sacrifice that we might become one with Him and one with each other. Every son and daughter of God must work out their own salvation. We have a personal religious experience to gain; they have an individual responsibility resting upon us. If we will avail ourselves of the grace provided for us, God will co-operate with us, and will work in and through us to will and to do of His good pleasure.
(12LtMs, Lt 135, 1897, 20)
Man cannot be towed to heaven; he cannot go as a passive passenger. He must himself use the oars, and work as a laborer together with God. There are many who profess to be Christ’s followers, and yet are not doers of His Word. They do not relish this Word, because it presents service which is not agreeable to them. They do not relish the wholesome reproofs and close, earnest appeals. They do not love righteousness, but are mastered and tyrannized over by their own erratic, human impulses.
(12LtMs, Lt 135, 1897, 21)
It makes every difference how we do service for God. The boy who drudges through his lessons, because he must learn, will never become a real student. The man who claims to keep the commandments of God, because he thinks he must do it, will never enter into the enjoyment of obedience. The essence and flavor of all obedience is the outworking of a principle within—the love of righteousness, the love of the law of God. The essence of all righteousness is loyalty to our Redeemer, doing right because it is right. When the Word of God is a burden because it cuts directly across human inclinations, then the religious life is not a Christian life, but a tug and a strain, an enforced obedience. All the purity and godliness of religion is set aside. But adoption into the family of God makes us children, not slaves.
(12LtMs, Lt 135, 1897, 22)
When the love of Christ enters the heart, we strive to imitate the character of Christ. A Christian is a follower of Christ when he acts the mind and will of Christ. A train of cars is not merely attached to the engine; they follow on the same track as the engine. Who are we following? “The Lord looketh from the heaven; he beholdeth all the sons of men. From the place of his habitation, he looketh upon all the inhabitants of the earth. He fashioneth all their hearts alike; he considereth all their works.” [Psalm 33:13-15.] He is our Father; we are His children. As Governor of the universe, He is not far from any one of us; “for in him we live, and move, and have our being.” [Acts 17:28.] “Neither is there any creature that is not manifest in his sight; but all things are naked and open unto the eyes of him with whom we have to do.” [Hebrews 4:13.]
(12LtMs, Lt 135, 1897, 23)
Lt 136, 1897
Winslow, Brother and Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia November 7, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 4Bio 335-338. Dear Brother and Sister Winslow:
We were much pleased to see W. C. White again. He is looking better healthwise than when he left us, ten months since. He did not come to his home in Cooranbong until after the Sydney camp meeting closed. Mrs. May White, Ella and Mabel, James Henry and Herbert, all went to Sydney to meet W. C. White. I remained in Cooranbong until a place could be made ready for me. For the accommodation of our two families on the campground, we had a large square tent, floored, which was partitioned off as parlor and sleeping room for our family. We had a dining tent, W. C. White had a dining tent, and both families used the cooking tent. Ella and Mabel White slept in W. C. White’s dining tent. They had a bedroom partitioned off with curtains. We also hired three rooms in a house near the ground. W. C. White, May, and the two boys occupied one room. I slept in a good room upstairs, opening on to a piazza, and a member of my family, an old gentleman seventy-seven years old, who boards with us, and is a devoted servant of God, slept in the room below.
(12LtMs, Lt 136, 1897, 1)
Stanmore is only a few stations from Sydney. It is a thickly settled suburb, and is a very popular place. Here we found a most beautiful, grassy plot of ground, so thickly carpeted with grass that we needed no board floors.
(12LtMs, Lt 136, 1897, 2)
The camp meeting just held in this place is the best camp meeting we have held in this country in this respect. So thick was the grass that the dust troubled us very little. Only two camp meetings have been held in New South Wales. Of this one, no notice was given in the papers. The village of tents was speedily erected, and seemed to be a surprise to the inhabitants of Stanmore.
(12LtMs, Lt 136, 1897, 3)
Thursday evening was appointed for the first meeting. Small paper notices had been distributed by diligent workers, and we were pleased to see the people flocking to the ground, and quietly taking their seats in the large tent, until it could hold no more. A crowded wall of people stood outside the tent. All listened with interest to Elder Daniells, who spoke with clearness and power.
(12LtMs, Lt 136, 1897, 4)
Friday morning at 6 a.m. a meeting was held in the tent, and the largest number assembled that we have yet seen at our early morning meetings in Australia. A season of prayer was held, and testimony meeting followed. There was no dragging. All seemed to have come prepared to witness for God. Short, spirited testimonies of praise and thanksgiving was the order of the meeting. I had something to say, and had freedom in speaking words of encouragement, hope, and thanksgiving to God.
(12LtMs, Lt 136, 1897, 5)
Thus our meeting opened well. Most of the students were present. Before the school closed twenty of them had been baptized.
(12LtMs, Lt 136, 1897, 6)
But I have not strength to tell you of all the good things that I might in the history of this meeting. The meetings continued over two Sabbaths. I spoke Sabbath, Sunday, and Wednesday afternoons. At each meeting the large tent was crowded. To the very last of the meeting there was no falling off in numbers. On Sunday, in order that the crowd might be seated, the children were called into a forty foot tent to a meeting of their own under the charge of good workers. Then our own people were invited to give the outside people room. I believe the angels of God were upon the ground. There was complete order, with the exception of one or two who asked questions.
(12LtMs, Lt 136, 1897, 7)
On the last Sunday afternoon and evening the largest crowd was out. Everything was as quiet as in a meetinghouse. You may depend that there had been much praying in regard to this meeting. I do not see how it could have been improved. We had most excellent ministerial help in Elders Farnsworth, Robinson, Daniells, Hare, Starr, W. C. White, and your humble servant E. G. White. But I almost forgot to mention Brethren Hughes, Wilson, Colcord, and Crothers. The people had an opportunity to hear for themselves before the ministers could get their congregations together and warn them not to come and hear.
(12LtMs, Lt 136, 1897, 8)
As the time appointed for the close of the meetings came, the interest seemed to be at the very highest, and the question was asked, Shall the meetings be continued one week longer? The outsiders voted decidedly for it, with upraised hands. Although it was decided not to prolong the camp meeting, as some had to go to Melbourne to prepare for the meeting to be held there in two weeks, Elders Haskell, Starr, Baker, Farnsworth, and Robinson remained over Sabbath and Sunday, and will remain until the following Thursday to follow up the interest.
(12LtMs, Lt 136, 1897, 9)
I spoke six times to large crowds, besides five times at the early morning meetings. I left the camp last Monday, to return home for rest, preparatory to uniting with our people who remain in Sydney to carry on the interest there, or to go to Melbourne if not too much exhausted.
(12LtMs, Lt 136, 1897, 10)
The interest has extended to the suburbs all round Sydney. Several kept the Sabbath for the first time last Sabbath. Several have been baptized, and many are deeply convicted.
(12LtMs, Lt 136, 1897, 11)
A house has been hired as a home for the workers, and in which to hold a Bible school to teach them how to work. They will sell Echoes and get into the homes to give Bible readings. We are seeking the Lord most earnestly for wisdom to manage this interest wisely. We need the angels of God in the home and in the tent and with every worker. We have not seen an interest that has been so great as this since coming to this country. This work will require means to carry it forward. We need the Holy Spirit every day to work with human agents.
(12LtMs, Lt 136, 1897, 12)
If the Lord strengthens me, I expect to leave Cooranbong for Sydney next Thursday, and wait there for light as to where I am most needed, in Stanmore where there is a most important work to be carried forward, or in Melbourne. May the Lord direct me. For one week I have been in a suffering, exhausted condition. I have been home one week tomorrow, but have not yet been able to sit at table with the family.
(12LtMs, Lt 136, 1897, 13)
The goods came today, and I was much pleased to receive the token you sent me. Thank you, my sisters. There were several tokens of regard from my friends in Battle Creek. I fear I shall not be able to write to them all personally this time, for I was not able to write during the camp meeting, and have been very ill for most of the time since I returned home. But I have felt that I must write to you, for we were once so closely bound together, your father and mother, Fannie and yourself, James White, Henry White, and Ellen G. White.
(12LtMs, Lt 136, 1897, 14)
Time has wrought great changes. In a few weeks I shall be seventy years old. Only think of it. Yet we are still here to work for the dear Lord, whose service is dearer to me than my life. I love the Lord Jesus. I love the souls for whom He has died, that they might not perish but believe in Him and have eternal life. Thank the Lord that His power can save to the uttermost all who believe in Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 136, 1897, 15)
Willie lives on the other side of the road, in a comfortable cottage. He is much pleased with the house I have built for him. It has two broad piazzas, where the boys can run and play. They are fine healthy, sturdy boys. The father and mother think much of them, and we are all in no way behind in this.
(12LtMs, Lt 136, 1897, 16)
I would be so pleased to see you, and have a long talk with you. In much love to yourselves and family.
(12LtMs, Lt 136, 1897, 17)
Lt 137, 1897
White, W. C. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia December 14, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 5MR 190. Dear Son Willie:
Brother Haskell has kindly sent me your letter to him, and his letter to you. You know I did not plaster my kitchen, and the result was that we were infested with armies of cockroaches. We could not possibly get rid of them. We had to tear out all the ceiling in the pantry and bath room, for every crevice and seam was full of these creatures. Hundreds upon thousands were swarming us. We dreaded the expense, and plastered as our only remedy. We are making riddance of them in this way.
(12LtMs, Lt 137, 1897, 1)
Our chambers over the storeroom have been a terrible annoyance. The rats and mice have come in armies, and have done a great deal of damage to books, boots, and clothing of every description. Nothing was safe. At last we have decided to plaster, and already have one coat on.
(12LtMs, Lt 137, 1897, 2)
I could not advise you to try any experiments, lest they should prove a penny wise and pound foolish. Let the buildings be plastered. I believe it would cost less in the end, and will be more satisfactory, and other plans might retard and delay the work.
(12LtMs, Lt 137, 1897, 3)
I send you this because we have had a very disagreeable experience ourselves, and do not wish you to experiment, but do the very best thing at the first trial. We investigated the matter when building your house, and we found that it would cost more to ceil than to plaster. We (Brother Haskell, the carpenter, May, Sara and myself) puzzled over the matter until we made our decision.
(12LtMs, Lt 137, 1897, 4)
I sent you letters this morning. May is well; the boys also are in good health. I have carried them each a peach at their meals for the last three days. They enjoy them very much, and smack their lips as if they took great satisfaction in eating them.
(12LtMs, Lt 137, 1897, 5)
I am going to send a letter to Sister James in the morning. If nothing prevents, we will go to Sydney on Thursday. Elder Haskell wants me to come down as soon as I can conveniently do so. He wants me to see the lots under consideration. I think it may be in the providence of God that we get a little nearer Sydney, but the God of Israel will direct us. I hope they will pitch their tabernacle where we shall not be troubled with the almost constant passing of trains. This detracts somewhat from the usefulness of our meetings on the Sabbath. We must have a retired place, where we shall not hear the passing of carts, carriages and trains. The Lord, I believe, will give us a quiet, restful place where we will have no hubbub and confusion.
(12LtMs, Lt 137, 1897, 6)
I will send a copy of this to Brother Haskell.
(12LtMs, Lt 137, 1897, 7)
Lt 138, 1897
White, W. C. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia June 10, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in 20MR 213-218. + Dear Son Willie:
I am able to report sixty students in the school, besides the six teachers. We shall have to have more room. The school needs all the rooms. If we could now build a chapel, then the students could get along for the present with the room that is now used for Sabbath meetings. As it is, they have to be crowded. We have no funds with which to erect a second building, or to build a chapel, but we do not feel discouraged. We are determined to work in faith. The Lord will help His people if they put their trust in Him. I send you copies of the letters which I am sending by the Vancouver boat. I do not know what you will think of them. I am certain that God has funds for us somewhere, and they must come to us here. I am trusting and praying for help and guidance.
(12LtMs, Lt 138, 1897, 1)
I am gaining some strength, and I am thankful to our heavenly Father. I have still some weakness in my head, but I hope it will pass away, and strength take the place of weakness.
(12LtMs, Lt 138, 1897, 2)
Your family are all well as usual. The boys are trotting now. Herbert is not as strong and firm on his feet as Henry, but they have high times. They scramble up the chamber stairs exultingly and in a big hurry, fearing some one will take them down. But be assured that some one is behind them all the time.
(12LtMs, Lt 138, 1897, 3)
Today the plasterers are here, and they are to begin work tomorrow. Sand, water, and everything is on hand now. We have plenty of water. We will think things quite advanced when the plastering is done. Brother Hare’s building is advancing slowly.
(12LtMs, Lt 138, 1897, 4)
There are little things that will come up in school matters that are not of just the right order. Fun and frolic, will be entered into that to be checked. Brother Hughes is the man for the place. We need so much the presence of God to guide us in all wisdom. I know that the Lord is a present help in every time of trouble.
(12LtMs, Lt 138, 1897, 5)
The work must be entered upon in Newcastle and Maitland. I have just been reading the words of the great apostle to the Gentiles: “For we dare not make ourselves of the number, or compare ourselves with some that commend themselves: but they measuring themselves by themselves, and comparing themselves among themselves, are not wise. But we will not boast of things without our measure, but according to the measure of the rule which God hath distributed to us, a measure to reach even unto you.
(12LtMs, Lt 138, 1897, 6)
“For we stretch not ourselves beyond our measure, as though we reached not unto you: for we are come as far to you also in preaching the gospel of Christ: not boasting of things without our measure, that is, of other man’s labors, but having hope, when your faith is increased, that we shall be enlarged by you according to our rule abundantly, to speak the gospel in the regions beyond you, and not to boast in another man’s line of things made ready to our hand. But he that glorieth, let him glory in the Lord. For not he that commendeth himself is approved, but whom the Lord commendeth.” [2 Corinthians 10:12-18.]
(12LtMs, Lt 138, 1897, 7)
We need to walk more humbly with God. Time is short, and we need to labor most earnestly to extend the truth to regions beyond us, right in the shadow of where our school is located.
(12LtMs, Lt 138, 1897, 8)
We shall have to draw from the Pacific Press all the means that is coming to me. Let there be no delay in this matter. I understand that I have five hundred dollars which the conference in New South W[ales] is using, besides the thirty-eight pounds loaned to Brother Semmens. There is not a very flattering prospect in that direction of me getting my money back in a hurry. Brother Semmens wanted additional money, but I told him that I could go no farther in that line, for I am as stretching myself beyond my measure. My workers must be paid. But everything in this line is waiting to ascertain how we are coming out.
(12LtMs, Lt 138, 1897, 9)
I have been so utterly exhausted that I have not had matters brought to me. Sara has had to carry my burdens as far as outside thing go, and the work inside also. But I am now able to have matters again brought before me, and can give directions. We have gone ahead to build your house, and if any one wants to grumble, you will be out of it altogether. Those who are now on the ground will take the blame. But I meant that everything should be done that could be done, in a plain, wholesome way, for your family. The house may look unnecessarily large, but I have looked it over and over and could not bring my mind to diminish one foot in any direction. I have never been required before to do so much thinking and planning in so many lines, especially in reference to this house.
(12LtMs, Lt 138, 1897, 10)
I want your house to be a comfortable home, and there is not a thing I would detach from the building. We invest means here, but we must bear in mind that we would have to invest means to hire a house that would not be in all respects comfortable. And the money paid for rent might just as well be paid out for interest to obtain money to get the very things we need to have in the building to make it as we desire for comfort and convenience.
(12LtMs, Lt 138, 1897, 11)
As soon as the plastering is dry, we shall move your family into the now-almost-finished house.
(12LtMs, Lt 138, 1897, 12)
The means from Battle Creek and Pacific Press are needed here. I have not been able to learn how I stand. I have drawn all but thirty pounds from the Echo Office. [First] get your family settled, and then, if you desire, and it seems to be duty, you can visit the churches. There is need of your being here soon. The Lord will guide you. We want all the means that we can obtain now, to help in putting up the buildings that are essential for the school and chapel. I shall do all that I can in this enterprise. Unless we begin, we will never finish. We will do what we can. The Lord is here. He knows what we need. He can do everything.
(12LtMs, Lt 138, 1897, 13)
I have no conscience-stricken feelings in regard to the money invested in your house. It is not any too large, and it is, I think, plenty good enough. I shall now feel that my duty in this respect is done. I can present this to the Lord, and give it over to Him in perfect faith, for I have done my best. It may be that you would have made some changes, but as you were not here, we have done the best we could.
(12LtMs, Lt 138, 1897, 14)
I want you to collect all the means that you can to help just now on these grounds, that this may be a rallying point for our little flock, God’s own heritage. The poor struggling souls will have trials in abundance wherever they may be, and as numbers increase in the faith, and students come in, we must be in a position to assist them.
(12LtMs, Lt 138, 1897, 15)
I believe that in Brother Hughes the Lord has sent the right man. We must all work earnestly and intelligently to do the utmost to make this school as God would have it. No man’s notions are to be brought in here. No breezes from Battle Creek are to be wafted in. I see I must watch before and behind and on every side to permit nothing to find entrance that has been presented before me as injuring our schools in America. Believe, hope, pray; watch with all diligence, and be afraid of men. I am in more fear of professed believers who are not consecrated to God than of outside influence. We must hold this important position by prayer and watching and working. We must wrestle with God, and pray and work, and work and pray.
(12LtMs, Lt 138, 1897, 16)
As the Lord presents before me the selfish indulgence, the spirit of worldliness, that seem to be introduced into families and is pervading the church, I am in an agony of fear. The departure from Christlike simplicity makes me afraid. There is little appreciation of that which the Lord has done. When the Holy Spirit moves the hearts of believers, when the truth is appreciated, the servants of God will not labor in vain. Christ is an abiding presence in the heart, and we have sense of the great mercy and loving kindness of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 138, 1897, 17)
While we review, not the dark chapters in our experience, to complain, but the manifestations of His great mercy and unfailing mercy and love and power revealed in our deliverance, we will praise far more than complain. We will talk of the loving faithfulness of God, as the true, tender, compassionate Shepherd of His flock, which He has declared none shall pluck out of His hand. The language of the heart will not be selfish murmuring and repining, but praise, like clear flowing streams, will come from God’s truly believing ones. “Goodness and mercy have followed me all the days of my life, and I will dwell in the house of the Lord forever.” [Psalm 23:6.] “Thou shall guide me with thy counsel, and afterward receive me to glory.”“Whom have I in heaven but thee, and there is none upon earth that I desire beside thee.” [Psalm 73:24, 25.]
(12LtMs, Lt 138, 1897, 18)
Why not awaken the voice of our spiritual songs in the travels of our pilgrimage? Why not come back to our simplicity and life of fervor? The reason is that we have lost our first love. Let us then be zealous and repent, lest the candlestick will be moved out of its place. The thoughts of meditation are cheap thoughts, the visions are confused and earthly.
(12LtMs, Lt 138, 1897, 19)
The temple of God is opened in heaven, and the threshold is flushed with the glory that is for every church that will love God and keep His commandments. We need to study, to meditate, and to pray. Then we shall have spiritual eyesight to discern the inner courts of the celestial temple. We shall catch the themes of song and thanksgiving of the heavenly choir round about the throne. When Zion shall arise and shine, her light will be most penetrating, and precious songs of praise and thanksgiving will be heard in the assembly of the saints. Murmurings, complainings, and lamentations over little disappointments and difficulties will be lost sight of. As we apply the golden eyesalve, we shall see the glories beyond. Faith will cut through the hellish shadow of Satan, and we shall see our Advocate offering up the incense of His own merits in our behalf. When we see this as it is, and as the Lord would have us, we will be filled with a sense of the immensity and diversity of the love of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 138, 1897, 20)
The appreciation of God’s love and character will quicken insensible hearts, and light will shine into the soul. Our short vision will pass away, and we shall discern wonderful things out of the Word.
(12LtMs, Lt 138, 1897, 21)
Just as long as those who profess the truth are serving Satan, his hellish shadow will cut off their views of God and heaven. They will be as those who have lost their first love. They cannot view eternal realities. That which God has prepared for us is represented in Zechariah, chapters three and four, and 4:12-14: “Then answered I, again, and said unto him, What be these two olive branches, which through the two golden pipes empty the golden oil out of themselves? And he answered me, and said, Knowest thou not what these be? And I said, No, my Lord. Then said he, These are the two anointed ones, that stand by the Lord of the whole earth.”
(12LtMs, Lt 138, 1897, 22)
The Lord is full of resources. He has no lack of facilities. It is because of our lack of faith, our earthliness, our cheap talk, our unbelief, manifested in our conversation, that dark shadows gather about us. Christ is not revealed in word or character as the One altogether lovely, and the chiefest among ten thousand. When the soul is content to lift itself up unto vanity, the Spirit of the Lord can do little for it. Our shortsighted vision beholds the shadow, but cannot see the glory beyond. Angels are holding the four winds, represented as an angry horse seeking to break loose and rush over the face of the whole earth, bearing destruction and death in its path.
(12LtMs, Lt 138, 1897, 23)
Shall we sleep on the very verge of the eternal world? Shall we be dull and cold and dead? O that we might have in our churches the Spirit and breath of God breathed into His people, that they might stand upon their feet and live. We need to see that the way is narrow, and the gate strait. But as we pass through the strait gate, its wideness is without limit.
(12LtMs, Lt 138, 1897, 24)
We need now to arise and shine, for our light has come, and the glory of the Lord has risen upon us. We have no time to talk of self, no time to become like the sensitive plant, that cannot be touched without shrinking. In Jesus Christ is our sufficiency. Will we talk faith? Will we talk of the glorious hope, of the full and abundant righteousness of Jesus Christ, provided for every soul? I tell you in the name of the Lord God of Israel that all injurious, discouraging influences are held in control by unseen angel hands, until every one that works in the fear and love of God is sealed in his forehead.
(12LtMs, Lt 138, 1897, 25)
The whole heavenly universe is interested, and the law of God is exercised in behalf of His faithful, commandment-keeping people. It is God in whom we must trust. It is only a narrow-minded government that legislates for the suppression of God’s law. God has the world in His hand. We have God on our side. All heaven is waiting and longing for our co-operation. The Lord is supreme. Why should we fear? The Lord is almighty; why should we tremble? In the past God has delivered His people, and He will be our Helper if we will arise in His strength and go forward.
(12LtMs, Lt 138, 1897, 26)
The Bible, and the Bible only, is to be our refuge. God is in His Word. “He shall see of the travail of his soul, and shall be satisfied.” That is enough for us. “By the knowledge of him shall my righteous servant justify many; for he shall bear their iniquities.” [Isaiah 53:11.] If the great and loving heart of God is satisfied with the result of His mission in the souls saved, let us rejoice. Let us work as we have never done before. Let us put self aside, and lay hold of Jesus Christ by faith. Let us reveal Him to the world as the One altogether lovely, and the chiefest among ten thousand. “And after this, I beheld, and lo, a great multitude which no man could number, of all nations, and kindreds and peoples and tongues, clothed with white robes, and palms in their hands. And they cried with a loud voice, saying, Salvation to our God which sitteth upon the throne, and to the Lamb.” [Revelation 7:9, 10.] Let us take up the praise of God here below. Let us unite with the heavenly company above. Then we shall represent the truth as it is, a power to all who believe.
(12LtMs, Lt 138, 1897, 27)
Mother.
Lt 139, 1897
White, W. C. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales April 11, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Willie:
I hope you will have time to attend to my business personally. I do not think that my business matters should be neglected. I have lost from Sister Scott, and I do not think that the Pacific Press should allow me to stand that loss all myself. Why should I? Then again, why should I stand the loss in consequence of Brother _____ of Healdsburg? Where did he help with his money? If it is in the Pacific Press, let them, in his time of necessity, relieve him. This has always been presented to me as the right thing to do. When men have helped liberally, help should come from the source that has been helped by their means, when adverse circumstances come upon them, and they are brought to want. I cannot see why I should stand under all these losses.
(12LtMs, Lt 139, 1897, 1)
I have not received anything at all of Sister Scott’s money. The gifts were made to the college. I want our brethren in California to look at this matter as it is, and consider what they will do in sharing this burden with me. Those who have had the use of Brother L_____’s money should be the ones to show themselves compassionate and help him, and not allow me to stand under this whole load.
(12LtMs, Lt 139, 1897, 2)
I call upon C. H. Jones and Willie White to consider this matter as I have set it before you. I want the brethren in California to arouse to a sense of their responsibility and to their duty, and to relieve me of the large draughts made upon me. The money in my Healdsburg place belongs to Brother Lockwood. He needs the interest on the money loaned me, and he shall have it. But I ask that this matter shall not come upon me, and I be deprived of means to advance the work in this field that is so destitute of facilities.
(12LtMs, Lt 139, 1897, 3)
I shall send this to several, and I want them to make a copy of it and send it to those who ought not allow me to carry this burden.
(12LtMs, Lt 139, 1897, 4)
Lt 140, 1897
White, W. C. Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia June 6, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 4Bio 306-307. Dear Son Willie:
Today the Vancouver mail brought me several letters. I was glad to hear from you; but I cannot write many letters for the mail, for my head has become too weary to do much. At first it was my heart that I suffered from; now it is my head. I am improving; in some respects I am much better. My heart is suffering less; but my head—I cannot think; I cannot tax my brain at all without much perplexity and bewilderment. I have to give up. I have written quite a letter to Edson, and will send you a copy. Your house is going forward as fast as we can have it move. Brother Hare’s house is likewise going forward. Your house has been hindered because of the rain. The first boat was delayed, and now the second boat is behind time. This is bringing the lathe and other fixings. Today, Sunday, they are driving matters. The chimneys will be finished today.
(12LtMs, Lt 140, 1897, 1)
We have only one man, a steady hard worker, who is paid by the hour for his work. We board him, for there is no other place where he can board. He is to build an oven for the school building, and I shall also have an oven built for my house; then May can use it whenever we are not baking in it. The floors of your piazza are laid and painted their first coat. The kitchen floor is laid down; the house is enclosed and roofed. We had feared rain today. We will let you build the cistern for your place just as you want it. I expect the floors will be laid today; but they cannot lathe the house ready for plastering until the boat comes in.
(12LtMs, Lt 140, 1897, 2)
On Thursday Sara and I went down to the post office, and we took the children seated before us in the bottom of the Israel carriage. They slept all the time. We first went to the school, then the post office, then to the school again, and home. They are stirring little fellows. They have occupied our parlor now for some time; but we are anxious to have the house completed, and May and the children well settled in it before you come back.
(12LtMs, Lt 140, 1897, 3)
We have just experienced the heaviest rain we have had in this country. All our garden was a lake. The high ridge where corn was planted last year, we had planted with potatoes; and everything—beans, peas, potatoes, etc., were all covered. The water has now gone down, and we can look across and see the red potatoes out of the high ground. We shall have to replant. Otherwise the rain has done no damage.
(12LtMs, Lt 140, 1897, 4)
The people in this country, as they have read of the terrible cyclones and tornadoes, such as had been represented as taking place in St. Louis, have said that they could not credit the representation of the power of these storms; but now they have no question on this point. (See paper.) We have had some strong winds which take branches as tall as a man and long as my arm, and break them off as you would break a pipe stem, hurling them to a distance.
(12LtMs, Lt 140, 1897, 5)
Brethren Martin and James said that our orchard would be greatly injured by those trees whose tops were cut off, that the roots would absorb the moisture and richness of the soil. They advised us to take them down, and we followed their advice. Not one is now standing in the flower garden. I wish you could see their massive roots. Many of them are as large as the tree itself, and running along underground as long as the tree before the tops were cut off. We have them now cut out by the roots as deep as the plough will ever go. I am pleased to see them uprooted. Brother Martin says he will put in their place some evergreens that will not be such hungry, thirsty trees. He will come the last of the week and make my garden. We have courage now to have this done.
(12LtMs, Lt 140, 1897, 6)
The school is moving along excellently. There are now about sixty students attending. They are intelligent, I think, and far superior to those in George’s Terrace. We are pleased, and everybody is pleased, with the location and buildings. Elder Daniells says he is going to work for the school with all his power. The Melbourne church have sent several students, and are paying their way. I have been too sick to go over at all for three weeks.
(12LtMs, Lt 140, 1897, 7)
Brother Haskell is the Lord’s servant, a man of opportunity. We appreciate his experience, his judgment, his thoughtful care and caution. He is indeed a mighty man in the Scriptures. He opens the Word of God in such a simple manner, making every subject reveal its true importance. He urges home practical godliness.
(12LtMs, Lt 140, 1897, 8)
Yesterday I ventured to attend meeting, and the room, which is between fifty and sixty feet long, was full. We were thankful for a decent place in which to assemble to worship God. One young man has taken his position. His name is Piper. He is from Petone, and brother to the girl who was working for Sister Tuxford.
(12LtMs, Lt 140, 1897, 9)
I spoke from (John 6) upon the words of Christ: “Except ye eat the flesh of the Son of man and drink his blood, ye have no life in you. Whoso eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood hath eternal life; and I will raise him up at the last day; for my flesh is meat and my blood is drink indeed. He that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood, dwelleth in me and I in him.” [Verses 53-56.]
(12LtMs, Lt 140, 1897, 10)
I have not seen much of Brother and Sister Haskell. They have all the work they can well carry, and there is no show about them. I understand that the children in the primary division are highly pleased with their teacher, Lillian. Herbert and Brother Hughes get along nicely together. The board, a very incapable and ignorant one, elected Brother Herbert Lacey as principal without counselling with me. This brought me to the front to speak. Brother Hughes is principal, and he will, I think, do well in this position. He has had experience in managing. I think there will be no trouble. But I have had to speak plainly, and keep out the breezes coming from Battle Creek.
(12LtMs, Lt 140, 1897, 11)
Lt 141, 1897
White, W. C. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia May 5, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 5MR 186; 8MR 365-367; 11MR 206-207; 4Bio 295-296, 301-302. + Dear Son Willie:
April 28 our school opened. At the opening exercises, the upper room of the second building above the dining room, was quite full. Brother Haskell opened the meeting by reading a portion of Scripture. He then prayed, and made a few remarks. I then followed. My subject principally was that the smaller children should not be neglected. This work is fully as essential as the work for the older pupils. For many years my attention has been called to this phase of the work. Schools should be established where children can receive the proper education. From the teachers in the public schools they receive ideas that are opposed to truth. But farther than this, they receive a wrong education by associating with children that have no training, that are left to obtain a street education. Satan uses these children to educate children that are more carefully brought up. Before Sabbath-keeping parents know what evil is being done, the lessons of depravity are learned. The souls of their children are corrupted.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 1)
This subject has long been neglected. The first seven or ten years of a child’s life is the time when lasting impressions for good or for evil are made. What is education? The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom. The child should be educated to receive the truth in the heart. It should be given instruction which will lead it to see what constitutes sin. It should be taught to see that all sin is an offense toward God. The heart should be carefully guarded, for by giving the life of His dear Son, God has purchased the soul of every child. He would have the precious life that has been redeemed by Jesus Christ molded and fashioned after the similitude of a palace, that Christ may be enshrined as the King of the soul.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 2)
Is obedience to all the commandments of God taught the children in their very first lessons? Is sin presented as an offense toward God? I would rather children grew up in a degree of ignorance of school education as it is today, and employ some other means to teach them. But in this country parents are compelled to send their children to school. Therefore, in localities where there is a church, schools should be established if there are no more than six children to attend. A teacher should be employed who will educate the children in the truths of the Word of God, which are so essential to these last days, and which it is so important for them to understand. A great test is coming; it will be upon obedience or disobedience to the commandments of God. Intemperance is seen everywhere; disregard for the law of God, rioting, and drunkenness prevail.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 3)
“The word of the Lord was unto them precept upon precept, precept upon precept; line upon line, line upon line; here a little, and there a little; that they might go, and fall backward, and be broken, and snared, and taken.” [Isaiah 28:13.] When should education commence? “Whom shall he teach knowledge, and whom shall he make to understand doctrine? Them that are weaned from the milk, and drawn from the breasts.” [Verse 9.] It is then that the education of children in Bible principles should commence. There is a work to be done for the children. “Precept must be upon precept, precept upon precept; line upon line, line upon line; here a little, and there a little.” [Verse 10.]
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 4)
“Now these are the commandments, the statutes, and the judgments, which the Lord your God commanded to teach you, that ye might do them in the land whither ye go to possess it: that thou mightest fear the Lord thy God, to keep all His statutes and His commandments, which I command thee, thou, and thy son, and thy son’s son, all the days of thy life; and that thy days may be prolonged. Hear, therefore, O Israel, and observe to do it; that it may be well with thee, and that ye may increase mightily, as the Lord God of thy fathers hath promised thee, in the land which floweth with milk and honey.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 5)
“Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God is one God: and thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thine heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy might. And these words, which I command thee this day, shall be in thine heart; and thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy children, and shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thine house, and when thou walkest by the way, and when thou liest down, and when thou risest up. And thou shalt bind them for a sign upon thine hand, and they shall be as frontlets between thine eyes. And thou shalt write them upon the posts of thine house, and on thy gates.” [Deuteronomy 6:1-9.]
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 6)
But I will not attempt to complete my writing on this matter. We now have a primary school, and there are ten in attendance. I understand that Brother Parcells will send his children. When it is known that the primary department is established, we will see parents moving into Cooranbong, that their children may be educated.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 7)
Before school opened, Sara went to each family round about here, and raised a collection for a bell. This bell is now set up. It is an excellent sounding bell, and cost about six pounds. The organ is here, and is in position in our meeting room.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 8)
Brother James is doing excellently well. He is a faithful worker, and we are pleased with his qualities.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 9)
Yesterday a telegram came to us from Elder Daniells, saying that he would send Sister Anna Somerville over to school if we could give her employment after that time. I wrote for her to come, for I am confident that she will find work. They did not want to spare her from the office, but those whom they do not want to spare are the ones who will serve us. We wrote for Sister Graham to give Sister Somerville more lessons in bookkeeping than she had had. They have now decided to send her here. I would not say “No” to their proposition, but told them to send her. She has better health than she had, and will improve in this climate.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 10)
All our family think this an excellent climate. For two mornings we had a slight fog, but we can see that we have a choice location. We see some fog in Cooranbong when we have none here.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 11)
May 3 we had to go down to Morisset. We took the two White boys with us. They had been rather worrisome that day. Mabel took one, and I the other. We drove over to the school ground, and took in Elder Haskell and his wife. We had a pleasant drive. The weather has been fine ever since the heavy showers. But the two boys did not view the scenery much; for they went fast asleep and did not wake till the carriage stopped at Morisset. Then Henry awoke. I set him between Elder Haskell and me. He looked up at Elder Haskell, and his under lip was thrown out until it was quite prominent. Then he looked at his grandmother, cuddled himself down, and went to sleep again, and slept until we arrived at home. Their mother was waiting at my door for them.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 12)
I have given up my parlor to May and the babies. In the cool forenoons it is safer for them. She occupies this room as her own. We have good fires in the broad fireplace. Ella has this room in which to study in the evening. She is not disturbed with any noise here, and can do better than at home. Mabel attends the primary school, and is delighted with it. It is going to make every difference with her to have other children in the class with her. I am sure she will come on. When Brother Lacey made the statement that there would be no primary school this term, Brother Hare felt much disappointed; for he wanted both of his children in school. The officers are on his track, telling him that his children must attend the public school. Mabel also felt sick over it. But in the first Sabbath meeting we held in the upper room, I presented this matter and called for a response; and you should have heard Brother Gambril’s remarks. He came forward to the front seat, so that I could hear him. He spoke of the influence of the public schools on his children, of the education they were receiving. He lives so far away that he does not know how to get his children to our school. He is troubled over it, and is trying to devise some plan to send them. I am sure we have done right in starting a primary school.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 13)
We sent Brother Connell to inquire what the convent could be rented for, and we find that it is offered for five shillings per week. I think we will take it. Brother Colcord is going to send his wife and children over here. Her health is not good. Where they will stay is the question. I think the convent should be secured. I know it will be needed. I will see Brother James in regard to this matter this morning.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 14)
Yesterday your house was taken hold of in earnest. Lamplough has the job. Brother Hare’s house is going up. He secured Matthews and a man from Sydney, an unbeliever, I think, but a good workman. For some reason he delays his building, so for a few weeks we will have both these men on your house. We are not going to put up two rooms. Every stroke made is to tell. If you come home before it is done, you may make all the alterations you choose, but we shall put up the building now. All say that this should be done.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 15)
Brother James proposes to build himself a humble house of four rooms. Or I will build it for him, and give him the privilege of buying it if he chooses. This is to cost £40, and is to be put up near the barn, on the land at which you and I looked, on the road leading to the school.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 16)
Sister Carswell has come home, and occupies the lean-to of her cottage. She is about to set up a drapery shop near Hansen’s store. She will buy land from the school. She is not able to canvass. Her husband will not return for about three months.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 17)
Brother Hare is my adviser. He thinks your house well situated, that you have the best location you could have. He felt a little hurt to think you supposed he would not work for my interest. Willie, Brother Hare is the only one located on the school ground that I can rely upon. I do not exclude Brother James, for he is sound, firm, and true everywhere. There was no water to run the mill. Brother Hare had no funds with which to run it, for it costs £10 a week to do this. So he closed the mill. He supposed that he had sufficient lumber for my house. He is now obliged to buy logs in order to get straight timber. I told him to use all the timber he could from the place, and then if he needed logs to buy them. Today, Wednesday, May 5, the mill starts again, to get out the remaining timber for my house, and also some for Brother Hare’s house. Brother Hare is as staunch and true a friend as I could have. We talk everything over together, and harmonize in all our plans.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 18)
The last rains nearly half-filled the large school cistern, and also the tanks, I think. Our cistern was running over, and the tanks, which had previously been thoroughly cleaned, were all filled.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 19)
Our white cow is now fresh. We are raising her calf. For three weeks she gave twelve quarts in the morning, and about one quart less at night. We have had no rain for some weeks, and the feed is not the best. The school cows are now under the school care. A young man from New Zealand has willingly taken the care of them as his part of the work. He understands the dairying business. This is a great relief to Brother Hare. We are milking only two cows, the red one from Healy’s and the white one. The red cow gives only four quarts a day. Before long she will be dry. The white cow now gives twenty-two quarts a day. She gives more milk than all the school cows, for several of them are nearly dry. We shall buy no more cows at present, but will feed the two we have, and keep them in good condition. We get about twenty-six quarts a day. I am astonished at the yield of milk from the white cow. You know that when we first got her, she gave only about ten quarts a day. It is now more than doubled. I thank the Lord for this.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 20)
May has all the milk she wants. The boys are hearty fellows. I think it will cost you something to feed them. They are full of life. They can take a few steps now, and are in good health. Today Herbert put his finger in Henry’s mouth, and Henry bit it. And how Herbert did cry. For some time he would not look at Henry without crying. But they seldom cry when they hurt themselves. Now that the cold weather has come, we have given up the parlor to May and the children. They go and come as it pleases them. I do not like to have the children crawling on the cold oilcloth in the house where they live.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 21)
The mail brought me the enclosed letter. Decided efforts are being made in different localities to send students to school. We feel much encouraged. Before the school opened, every one was in doubt. You cannot open the school, they said. But we determined to do our best some time before I was requested to visit the school, which I did. I passed through the building which was then nearly completed. We were much pleased with this building, but could see where the aftersight was in some respects better than the foresight. The rooms planned for a couple of beds are not as large as they ought to be. But we will not make one word of complaint. We are glad to have the rooms, if they are not as perfect as we might make them on second trial.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 22)
Then we went to see the foundation of a large building laid, in which there is to be a brick cistern, I began to feel wonderfully stirred up in my mind. “What place have you prepared for the boys to room in?” I asked. “The chamber above the sawmill,” they answered, “Many students can sleep there, and we will also secure tents.”“Is that the best plan you have?”“It is the best we can do. When this building is enclosed, our money will be expended.”“Have you thought of how much money it would take to run this building up another story?” Several were present. “We can not do that,” Brother Hare said, “But I wish we could.”“You must do it, Brother Hare,” I said. “What would the cost be?”“Not less than one hundred pounds,” he answered. “Then I advise you to put up the second story, and so provide sleeping rooms for the boys, and a meeting room for the church.” This idea became fastened in their minds.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 23)
“What shall we do?” they asked. “Why,” I said, “am I too late with my suggestion? Have the preparations gone so far that it would be a sacrifice to change now?”“As to the matter of that,” was the answer, “had your suggestions been a day later, we would have been at some loss, but now we will require only taller timber. The shorter cuts can be used on the building you wish to put up.” I said, “I will be responsible for the change made. If any censure comes, let it fall on me. You will be to the expense of getting tents, and to the labor of pitching them. The students should not be put in the room over the mill. The influence would be demoralizing.”
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 24)
Now we have this two-story building nicely enclosed. The room designed for a dining room has been temporarily partitioned off into three rooms, which serve as primary class room, boys’ study, and dining room. By removing a few studs, we turned the portion designed as a storeroom into a bedroom for Brother Skinner and his wife, Maud Camp Skinner.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 25)
Mary has just come in with the boys, and we have had to give these little gentlemen some attention. They put down their playthings, and then scramble to catch them.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 26)
But I must resume my narrative. Everything at the school is fixed up satisfactorily, conveniently, pleasantly, and healthfully. We shall more thoroughly finish the meeting room. After the frame of this building was up, the work moved slowly; but this was cured. We had a meeting in which we called for free work, and we had all the help we could use.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 27)
It seems pleasant to meet for worship in a place where everything is respectable. When this room is finished, it will be a splendid room for students’ chapel, study room, and recitation room, until larger buildings go up. It will provide ample room for all. We will not incur one unnecessary expense.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 28)
The students that have come are a good class of young people. As yet they are all pleased and delighted with the buildings and the surroundings. Everything pleases them. Brother Hare cold not see that it was possible for the school to commence on time, but now it is fully in operation, primary school and higher grades. All who come are glad to make themselves useful. Brother Blunden’s son is here. Six students came from Melbourne by way of Sunday evening after the Sabbath. Five of these were from different parts of Australia. Tuesday night one came from New Zealand. One had come before, and others are expected. All are of good courage, and are doing all they can to help, out of school hours.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 29)
A letter just received from Brother Daniells states that Sister Colcord and her two children, Miss Somerville, and some others, will leave Melbourne Wednesday, May 5, for the school. After they arrive, I will write you full particulars.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 30)
If the Lord blesses us, we shall be encouraged at every step. School has been delayed so long that we knew that no matter what our condition was in the way of preparation, we should start on time. But no one believed that we would. Now, when they see that we are in earnest, they will have some confidence and interest in the school. Now that there is a school in Cooranbong in genuine earnest, many students will come. Many want to come, but they have no means. They are begging for help, and we know not what to do. I cannot ever ever do again as I have done in the past—let those have means to attend school who will never return one penny. Martha Brown has returned the money invested in her schooling. This will come in to help others. But we must be more careful in choosing, that those whom we send may answer our expectations.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 31)
All who see the upper story of the second building say, What ever could you do without it? Brother Hare says he would not have taken the responsibility of changing anything, if Sister White had not been right on the ground, to say what was most needed. But that added story does Brother Hare a lot of good. Then the women, with the nails in their aprons, put down the first floor of this building; they inspired the men with zeal. Everything moved with dispatch. We are all pleased and thankful to God, for His prospering hand has been with us.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 32)
Be sure that Brother Hare is consulted in everything. And he will not move out in anything without consulting me. We move harmoniously in all our plans. Brother Haskell says it will not do for any one to speak questioningly of anything I propose, for Brother Hare raises his right arm and says, “What Sister White advises to be done shall be done, without any ifs or ands about it.” The Board met, and Brother Herbert Lacey and some others decided that for this term there would be no primary school. On the next Sabbath morning, I told them that the primary school would commence when the other school did, and no one dared to say, Nay, for Brother Hare would not allow it.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 33)
May 9
Last Friday six students came to the school. Sister Somerville and Brother Goodheart, the son of Sister Goodheart, were among them. Both Sister Goodheart and her son are united in the faith. These are the ones to whom I sent my books, Patriarchs and Prophets and Great Controversy. This Brother and his mother are the fruits of the camp meeting at Adelaide. Both were deceived by the false statements of McCullagh and his wife, but since they have understood the true version of the matter, they with most of the church, have been reclaimed.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 34)
I do not know the names of all who came on Friday. Brother John Bell has been sent by the Tract Society. Some time this week Sister Colcord and her children will be here. Next week Brother Daniells will come. I understand that more students are coming this week or next. We are very glad to see them coming in. We have now, I think, about forty students. Brother Gambril’s three children and two of Sister Hutchins’ children are coming this week. Brother Gambril’s daughter, who is about fifteen years old, brings the others up in a boat. She will be in the higher grades, the others in the primary department.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 35)
Yesterday, Sabbath, I could not attend meeting. I have been troubled with heart difficulty, and sat up but little yesterday. Report states that the meeting was excellent. Brother Haskell spoke, taking for his subject the Sanctuary question, which is present truth. McCullagh makes derision of this subject, thus showing that the counsel given him to seek to know more of present truth, and stating that he had only a superficial knowledge of it, was correct. He knows very little of the precious truth for this time, because he has not sunk the shaft deep into the mine of truth, to discover the precious ore.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 36)
God’s Spirit has illuminated every page of Holy Writ, but there are those upon whom it makes little impression, because it is imperfectly understood. When the shaking comes, by the introduction of false theories, these surface readers, anchored no where, are like shifting sand. They slide into any position to suit the tenor of their feelings of bitterness. This is the way McCullagh has done. He has indulged his feelings against me without intimating to me one word in regard to his difficulty.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 37)
I am so grateful that the Word of God is plain and clear when our hearts are in harmony with it. Without the Word, what a starving people we would be in this world, which is as desolate as a wilderness to the soul. But now springs of water break out in the desert. We may drink of the living streams which proceed from the throne of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 38)
Daniel and Revelation must be studied, as well as the other prophecies of the Old and New Testament. Let there be light, yes, light in your dwellings. For this we need to pray. The Holy Spirit, shining upon the sacred page, will open our understanding, that we may know what is truth. We can appropriately say, as said the disciples, when Jesus walked with them on their way to Emmaus after He had risen from the dead. Then opened He their understanding, that they might understand the Scriptures. And “they said one to another, Did not our hearts burn within us while he talked with us by the way, and while he opened to us the Scriptures?” [Luke 24:32.]
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 39)
Less talk about things of no profit, and much more talk of Jesus, and of the Word of life, would give spiritual enlightenment and great joy in the soul. Then we would be steadfast, unmovable, always abounding in the word of the Lord.
(12LtMs, Lt 141, 1897, 40)
Lt 142, 1897
White, W. C. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia December 9, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Son Willie:
I received your letter, and thank you for it. May and Ella came in with the two boys to hear the letter read. We all feel a little surprised that you do not say when you are coming home.
(12LtMs, Lt 142, 1897, 1)
We are glad the tracts have come just now. One brother who is convinced of the Sabbath in Stanmore is a printer. He thought he could use the type to work out of his pay hours, but he was not permitted, so we are glad for these just now. I will send you another to put in tract form for New Year. We ought to have a printing press, where we can get our own printing done. I have any amount of choice matter, which I would like to get printed. I will send to the Echo office to get some of this matter printed. I would like to understand the cost of this work. I hope the type will not be distributed until more copies are struck off. Shall we distribute these tracts free, and not sell them? I think that would be the best thing to do.
(12LtMs, Lt 142, 1897, 2)
I have to leave here tomorrow for Stanmore, unless Elder Haskell thinks we had best not come down. It has been very rainy. The rain commenced Monday in Sydney, on Friday in Cooranbong. We came home Monday night, and it rained all the way. It rained all day Tuesday, and has rained in showers today. The ground is well refreshed now.
(12LtMs, Lt 142, 1897, 3)
After reading your letter, May said, I do not want to disappoint Sister Walker. If she really wants to come, let her come. Brother Starr said he wished to have her stay with the mission in Stanmore, and not do anything to tire her. She could be a little help in instructing others by relating her own experience. He told me this before he knew that you had asked her to come here. I withdraw my objection, but the facts remain the same. We will do our best.
(12LtMs, Lt 142, 1897, 4)
Lt 143, 1897
White, W. C. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia May 6, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 7MR 175-177; 9MR 366. Dear Son Willie:
We do not feel discouraged. Many unpleasant things have occurred, but we would have this anywhere. We have concluded that McCullagh and Hawkins are thorough apostates. McCullagh says that he will never give up the Sabbath, but it will soon go. The most false statements are being made of me and my work. The most senseless lies that can be manufactured are being circulated. Some of these have been written out, with the names of those to whom they were told attached.
(12LtMs, Lt 143, 1897, 1)
Brother and Sister Starr are now in Adelaide. Brother Wilson was sent for, but was not able to go on account of his health. He has been spitting blood. He was down three weeks, got better, attempted to do some work, and has been down again. I think the climate of Tasmania is too severe for him. I hope he will soon go to the mild, warm atmosphere of Adelaide. All wish him to go. In connection with Brother Starr he could do good work in holding our people together. Even if he did not preach one discourse, he could establish, strengthen, and settle them. But we have no recent news from Adelaide or Tasmania.
(12LtMs, Lt 143, 1897, 2)
We may expect trials and disappointments. The apostle Paul warned his disciples, “Take heed therefore unto yourselves, and to all the flock, over the which the Holy Ghost hath made you overseers, to feed the flock of God, which he hath purchased with his own blood. For I know this, that after my departing shall grievous wolves enter in among you, not sparing the flock. Also of your own selves shall men arise, speaking perverse things, to draw away disciples after them.” [Acts 20:28-30.] This experience, so disagreeable, we have gone over again and again. This recent apostasy has been a great trial to us, and has largely increased my burdens and writing. It has hurt my soul. But having done all, we must stand.
(12LtMs, Lt 143, 1897, 3)
Paul wrote to Timothy, “As I besought thee to abide still at Ephesus, when I went into Macedonia, that thou mightest charge some that they teach no other doctrine, neither give heed to fables and endless genealogies, which minister questions, rather than godly edifying which is in faith; so do. Now the end of the commandment is charity out of a pure heart, and of a good conscience, and of faith unfeigned; from which some have swerved, have turned aside unto vain jangling; desiring to be teachers of the law; understanding neither what they say, nor whereof they affirm.... Now unto the king eternal, immortal, invisible, the only wise God, be honor and glory for ever and ever. This charge I commit unto thee, son Timothy, according to the prophecies which went before on thee, that thou by them mightest war a good warfare; holding faith and a good conscience; which some having put away, concerning faith have made shipwreck.” [1 Timothy 1:3-7, 17-19.]
(12LtMs, Lt 143, 1897, 4)
If these men who have gone out from us, had, as faithful stewards, searched deep into the Word of God, and heeded Paul’s words in the sixth chapter of Ephesians, they would now have been standing more and still more firmly in the faith. Paul says, “Stand therefore, having your loins girt about with truth, and having on the breastplate of righteousness.” [Verse 14.] But these men have yielded up the Bible truth which has made us what we are, Seventh-day Adventists. They have thought to wrap themselves up in a spurious sanctification, which will accord with any false theories that men may choose to accept. They have not added to their faith, but have detracted from it.
(12LtMs, Lt 143, 1897, 5)
“And beside this,” writes Peter, “giving all diligence, add to your faith virtue.” [2 Peter 1:5.] That which Christ means by virtue is purity of character, purity of words, purity of perception, purity of doctrine. “By thy words thou shalt be justified,” said Christ, “and by thy words thou shalt be condemned.” [Matthew 12:37.] By their words men show what is the treasure of their soul. “A good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringest forth good things, an evil man out of the evil treasure of his heart bringeth forth evil things.” [Verse 35.] There is no middle ground. The heart is either given to God, to be purified, refined, and sanctified, or it is the sport of Satan’s temptations.
(12LtMs, Lt 143, 1897, 6)
The words of Christ are, “That servant which knew his lord’s will, and prepared not himself, neither did according to his will, shall be beaten with many stripes, But he that knew not, and did commit things worthy of stripes, shall be beaten with few stripes. For unto whomsoever much is given, of him shall much be required; and to whom men have committed much, of him will they ask the more.” [Luke 12:47, 48.] The number of talents which each has received will determine the returns which the Lord requires. He will ask for principal and interest. This matter will be closely investigated.
(12LtMs, Lt 143, 1897, 7)
Those who have known the truth, who have been blessed by the influence of the Holy Spirit, who have appreciated the truth, but have turned from it, will not be treated merely as impenitent sinners. Their guilt is aggravated, because they have had a knowledge of the truth. They have a knowledge of the defections of church members, and of the difficulty which those in the faith have experienced because of the weak, sinful characters of those in the church militant. They can misrepresent the words and actions of the faithful servants of God, who strive to place the straying feet of the erring in the path of holiness. They can put the worst construction on the words and actions of those who labor for the erring. If they are not converted, if they do not choose to put away their evil speaking, if they corrupt their ways before the Lord, they will misinterpret the words of God’s servants, and the whole world will rise up in the day of judgment against them. These accusers say, “I tell you, I know. I have been with them. I know the ins and outs of the matter,” and many will think that they speak the truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 143, 1897, 8)
It is not merely the apostasy of these men that we regret; it is their power to hurt, and to make a lie appear as truth. This will be the aggravation of Brother McCullagh’s impenitence. He will find himself confronted with Sodom and Gomorrah, because he has had the example of these cities, and the Lord’s visitation of wrath upon them, to warn him not to do as they did.
(12LtMs, Lt 143, 1897, 9)
Brother McCullagh and Brother Hawkins have had before them the case of Korah, Dathan, and Abiram. These things are written for our admonition, upon whom the ends of the world are come. But how hopeless is genuine rebellion. We see this in the case of Korah, Dathan, and Abiram. These men worked upon the minds of certain of the children of Israel, and through their deceptive reasoning, two hundred and fifty princes of the assembly, men of renown, gathered themselves together against Moses and Aaron, and said to them, “Ye take too much upon you, seeing all the congregation are holy, every one of them, and the Lord is among them: wherefore then lift ye up yourselves above the congregation of the Lord?” [Numbers 16:3.] The very same one who led them, Satan clothed with angel robes, stands ready today to take any number of disaffected ones, and start a rebellion. He is watching his chance, and he will work with minds with all deceivableness of unrighteousness in them that perish.
(12LtMs, Lt 143, 1897, 10)
The circumstances that have occurred in Adelaide so nearly resemble the outbreak in the camp of Israel that we can see that it is of the same piece. The men who have worked in the same lines, and the evil leaven has drawn to itself many who were displeased with something that had occurred in their experience with us as a people. They were prepared to be influenced by the leaven of sinful murmuring, as were the children of Israel. I do not think McCullagh or Hawkins will ever again come into harmony with the people of God who will pass through trials, and be partakers with Christ of His sufferings.
(12LtMs, Lt 143, 1897, 11)
This rebellion has hurt my soul terribly. It has made me feel that the teachers of the truth must be guarded, even against their brethren in the ministry. It will not do for them to be too communicative. God’s servants had disagreeable elements of character to deal with, and in their great anxiety to help every one they can, they take them into close companionship; but that which should be a blessing proves to be a curse if those whom they try to help fall under the temptations of Satan.
(12LtMs, Lt 143, 1897, 12)
Nothing is sacred with apostates. They add so much to that they think they know, that there is scarcely a semblance of truth in their reports. These false witnesses would just as readily swear to their fabricated lies as to the truth itself. Satan is the father of lies, and the accuser of the brethren. God’s people must, if faithful, be on their guard. None of us can occupy middle ground. We are either decided believers in the truth, the subjects of faith, and holding the truth in righteousness, or we are the guiltiest and the most inexcusable of those who profess godliness. We are deserving of the wrath of the Lamb.
(12LtMs, Lt 143, 1897, 13)
O, that those who can so readily enter into by and forbidden paths, who can contradict and cast away their former experience, could see what awaits those who deny the Holy Spirit’s leading, but are willing to be led by some unseen agency of evil. To what pass will they come? They made light of the Holy Spirit; they blasphemed God, and called the working of His Spirit a delusion. Transfer them with all their boasted freedom from reproof and correction, to the judgment. Such a scene the universe has never before beheld. Sentence of death is passed on all who have had light, and evidence, but have refused the light, as did the Jews, who would not come to the light, lest their deeds should be reproved.
(12LtMs, Lt 143, 1897, 14)
“While ye have light, believe in the light, that ye may be the children of light. These things spake Jesus, and departed, and did hide himself from them.” [John 12:36.] Again we read, “Then took they up stones to cast at him, but Jesus hid himself, and went out of the temple, going through the midst of them, and so passed by.” [John 8:59.] “Though he had done so many miracles before them, yet believed they not on him: that the saying of Esaias the prophet might be fulfilled, which he spake, Lord, who hath believed our report, and to whom is the arm of the Lord revealed? Therefore they could not believe, because that Esaias saith again, He hath blinded their eyes, and hardened their heart; that they should not see with their eyes, nor understand with their heart, and be converted, and I should heal them.” [John 12:37-40.]
(12LtMs, Lt 143, 1897, 15)
How had he blinded their eyes by the light given them? If they had received and cherished the light, would their hearts have been hardened? No; their hearts were hardened because of light refused. They would not be convinced, but chose darkness rather than light. They chose to stand under satanic influences, rather than see and be convinced.
(12LtMs, Lt 143, 1897, 16)
Lt 144, 1897
White, W. C. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia December 1, 1897 Previously unpublished. + Dear Willie:
Your one-page letter is received and its contents read. We are rejoiced that the interest is so great in Melbourne. May the Lord educate those who are proclaiming the truth to give personal labor and, if possible, urge the necessity of decision. Personal labor, given under the deep moving of the Spirit of God, will lead to decisions. I hope there will be workers who are able to discern who are interested, and [who will] make personal efforts on their behalf, conversing with them, praying with them, finding out their personal difficulties, and removing them. The Holy Spirit will work all who will be worked. Gather in the sheaves, gather in the sheaves. Everyone who will make a decision will work for some other soul and bring him to Christ. Please consider this matter again. It is better to begin to draw strongly from the very commencement of the meeting.
(12LtMs, Lt 144, 1897, 1)
God is working now in two places, in two large, important cities. It is not wise to begin now to scatter the workers to Queensland. From the light given me by God before these meetings commenced, I know that there should be abundance of strength, of ministerial labor, in every camp meeting held in or near the large cities. The interest of the minister should not be divided to go into the suburbs or to speak to the small churches. Every jot of influence should be used where the effort is being made.
(12LtMs, Lt 144, 1897, 2)
The workers should keep in the very atmosphere of the meetings, watching the people as they go out and come in, showing the utmost courtesy and kindness and tender regard for their souls, speaking words to them in season and out of season, watching to catch souls if possible. Show one half the vigilance of Satan, who is on the track, wide awake, ready to lay some gin or net to catch souls.
(12LtMs, Lt 144, 1897, 3)
Make every day the most important day of labor. That day or evening may be the only opportunity that some souls may have to hear the truth. Keep this in view. Give opportunity for any who may be concerned or convicted to come away from the crowd to the tent. Have someone appointed who can give the very best and wisest instruction to those whom the Holy Spirit convinces.
(12LtMs, Lt 144, 1897, 4)
If the ministers are required to be absent to visit little churches, they exhaust their strength and have no time themselves for careful study, for silence before God in self-examination, and they do not accomplish the work where and when it is needed to be done. There is need of proving the practical importance of Christians communing with God. They need to prove by their daily lives that they have peace and rest in God. This inward adorning will shine forth in the countenance. There will be that in the voice that will have a telling influence of persuasion. This has as great an influence upon the people as has the ministry of the Word. The expression that reveals that Christ is formed within the hope of glory tells wonderfully, even with worldly people. Let them see that those who believe unpopular truth have an abiding sense of what they possess in God. This communion with God imparts a moral elevation to the entire course of action and character.
(12LtMs, Lt 144, 1897, 5)
This burden that is now upon the working forces is not to be divided or scattered, to give labor where there is no special indication that the Lord is dealing with sinners who need to be enlightened and converted. Queensland will have its time to be worked. But it is evident that there are two very important centers just now; and the conviction of the Spirit of God is doing its work. I know this, for the matter was presented to me before the meetings were entered upon. Work should be done in getting the truth before the people. No expense in the payment of the laborers in the Master’s vineyard is to be spared. The force of workers should not be lessened because more places are calling for laborers to visit the people and explain the Scriptures than the present number of workers can handle.
(12LtMs, Lt 144, 1897, 6)
These ministers must have some periods of rest. They have not had it yet in Sydney. Elder Haskell works unceasingly, also Elder Starr; and Sister Haskell and Sister Starr have their work to do. Opportunities for visiting families are constantly increasing. It would be a very poor policy for the ministers to use up the strength they need by going out to hold meetings in the little churches. The little churches, if they desire, can come where the interest is. Or let some come on one Sunday and Sabbath, and others the next.
(12LtMs, Lt 144, 1897, 7)
“I came not to call the righteous,” said Christ, “but sinners to repentance.” [Mark 2:17.] All are carrying a heavy burden, which must wear upon them. It cannot be avoided. From the light given me by the Lord, the interest is too largely centered where the Spirit of God is evidently working, to be neglected. No time is to be lost; no labor or money spared in making this effort a success, both in Melbourne and in Sydney. Pray; watch for souls as they that must give an account.
(12LtMs, Lt 144, 1897, 8)
We can help the churches best by bringing souls to the knowledge of the truth. In nearly every effort, the influence of the workers has been scattered, when it should have been centered where the Lord is at work. The workers should co-operate with God in well-directed labor, praying much and working diligently, but not without periods of rest. Work in faith, believing that the Lord will water the seed sown.
(12LtMs, Lt 144, 1897, 9)
In regard to Brother Wilson, from the light I have had I can only say, Give the man time to recover. I thought it a venture to have him leave here at all. But I thought that in Sydney there were those that would carry the responsibilities, while he could engage in some kind of work, giving Bible readings, and in giving instruction in the truth. Thus he would not feel compelled to preach to the people. He can do every bit as valuable labor right where he is now as in Tasmania or Queensland, where there would be hard and trying experiences in creating an outside interest. In doing this, we would place Elder Wilson where his life would be endangered. Let him work with the brethren with whom he can consult. He can co-operate with God in this work, if he will strictly guard his habits in speaking and voice exposure. Now no one is to be drawn from their field of labor.
(12LtMs, Lt 144, 1897, 10)
God has been ready to work when He could find proper channels through whom He could work. Our camp meeting is closed. The light given me was that all the money and labor expended in educating and training canvassers to work in Sydney before the camp meeting would be wanted at its close; for God was about to work in and through those who were vessels fitted for the work. Not one should be drawn from the field in order to create a new interest, until they feel that the work is completed in this field. Everything has been done to prepare the way for the work of God in Sydney, and that work should not be left to languish until it is apparent that by remaining we can bring no more souls to the truth. Before the work closes, there should be most earnest efforts made in other localities, but that time has not yet come.
(12LtMs, Lt 144, 1897, 11)
Now, I have told you this in short order. Perhaps it is not presented in the very best manner. I would say, Just as long as there are people coming out to hear in Melbourne, do not cut off their opportunities. Watch for souls as they that must give account. There is labor to be done in these two large cities, and now is God’s time, now is the people’s opportunity. We intend to build a house of worship before we give up the effort here. I send you the letter written by Elder Haskell. Sister Lucas goes to join the workers. If May White were not filling her place as a mother, I should put her in the field.
(12LtMs, Lt 144, 1897, 12)
Good bye,
(12LtMs, Lt 144, 1897, 13)
Mother.
Lt 145, 1897
White, W. C. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia August 15, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in PC 88-90; 2MR 177; 11MR 174. + Dear Son Willie:
I do not know how or where to write to you. I hoped that the steamer would reach Sydney in time for us to get the mail evening after the Sabbath, but no letters came. I will now try to write a little, but my head is not really fit to write at all. It needs perfect quietude and rest. I am up this morning at half past two o’clock, and I will write you as best I can.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 1)
Last week Sara and I went to Sydney. We had some things to buy, and I thought it time for me to speak to our people. We took care of ourselves in my hired room at the Health Home. I had not been able to write for something more than a week, and I could not write while in Sydney. Sabbath I spoke to the church at Ashfield. It was a rainy day, but Brother Jannett took me to the church in his conveyance. The congregation was not as large as it would have been had the weather been fair; but the Spirit of the Lord was in our midst, and good testimonies were borne. I am sure the church is doing much better since McCullagh and his wife are not there to visit from family to family, reporting, and encouraging reports of doubt, unbelief, and false witness. They have manufactured falsehoods, and the people’s eyes have been opened to see how the conference has been taxed by those who have drained the treasury.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 2)
Sister Jannett was not at the meeting. She was sick in bed. Brother Jannett and his daughter were present, and I believe that they are improving. They have no sympathy with McCullagh. He wrote to them, offering to come to Sydney if the church would pay his expenses, and sustain him. Brother Jannett answered his letter, and he says that he will let me have a copy of the letter. He has not heard from McCullagh since. McCullagh has accepted a position in a Baptist church at a little distance from Adelaide.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 3)
All our people in Ashfield seemed glad to see me again. Our brethren were very anxious that I should attend the service in Newtown in the afternoon. It had been raining all day, and I thought there would not be many out. But Brother Baker told me that he had written to the people, telling them that I would speak to them in the afternoon, and he was very anxious that I should go. The rain was pouring down, and Sara said, “They will not expect you.” But I did not feel free to remain in my room. We walked to the station, and when we got to Newtown, Brother Jannett’s son was there with the carriage to take us to the hall. We were favored, for the rain ceased until we were safely indoors, so we did not get wet. I was surprised to see the hall full of people. I had great freedom in speaking to them. The Lord gave us His Holy Spirit, and we had an excellent meeting. The social meeting was very good. I was so glad that I did not allow the rain to stop me from going. I returned to Summer Hill refreshed in spirit and strengthened in body.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 4)
That night I had a long talk with Brother Baker after he had read me a letter that he had received from Brother Daniells in reference to camp meetings for this season. The plans laid down in this letter did not in some respects suit us. We thought that it had been decided to hold a camp meeting in Sydney at the close of the school term, thus binding off the school work by giving the students an opportunity to attend the meeting. We have worked with might and main to have the school what it ought to be, but if Brother Daniells’ plan were followed, the school would have to be cut short four weeks sooner than was calculated, to enable the students to enter the canvassing field before the holidays. I cannot at present coincide with this, although the object is a very good one. They desire the students to earn enough means by canvassing to partly pay for their next term of school, but I cannot yet take in the plan as right.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 5)
We have labored hard to keep in check everything in the school like favoritism, attachments, and courting. We have told the students that we would not allow the first thread of this to be interwoven with their school work. On this point we were as firm as a rock. I told them that they must dismiss all idea of forming attachments while at school. The young ladies must keep themselves to themselves, and the young gentlemen must do the same. The school was established at a great expense, both of time and labor, to enable students to obtain an all-round education, that they might gain a knowledge of agriculture, a knowledge of the common branches of education, and above all, a knowledge of the Word of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 6)
Previous to the opening of the school, the burden laid upon me in regard to the school, was so heavy that I could not sleep. I knew that Brother Herbert Lacey was not in any way prepared, even as a teacher, much less as a principal. The committee, deficient in knowledge, and without saying a word to me in regard to the matter, voted that he should be principal. We let this matter stand till Brother Hughes arrived. But the Lord showed me that in Elder Haskell and Hetty Hurd, now the wife of Elder Haskell, he had help prepared for us. I then felt relieved.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 7)
Brother Haskell was very loath to take the responsibility of teaching Bible in the school, but said that in this emergency he would take the place, and as soon as persons were educated to do the work, they would step out. I did not mean to tell Brother Haskell what the Lord had revealed to me, but circumstances occurring as they did, I was obliged to make known to him the way of the Lord in the matter. I told him that the Lord had said that He would provide help in Brother Haskell, and that he would be mouthpiece for Him, and give him His Spirit.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 8)
When Brother Hughes came, he was made principal. Knowing the Word of God, Elder Haskell has taken hold of the work with courage, zeal, and energy. There seems to be plenty for him to do. He brings treasures from the Word in new and fresh lines, and all pronounce his lessons to be intensely interesting.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 9)
Sister Haskell is matron, and she is the best in that line that I have ever seen. She is as firm as a rock to principle, and yet is wise and tender. She links love and Christlike sympathy with discipline.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 10)
I am so glad that we have not had the experience we had in Melbourne in young people forming attachments, girls with young men, and young men with girls. We have told the students that this cannot be. Some of the leading ones in disorder thought the restraint in this line too hard, but we have called all these things by their right name. We have told them plainly what we would have, and what we would not have. Again and again I stood before the school with messages from the Lord in regard to the deleterious influence of free and easy association between young men and young women.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 11)
I told the students that if they did not keep themselves to themselves and make the most of their time, serving the Lord with mind, heart, soul, and strength, the school would not benefit them, and those who had paid their expenses would be disappointed. I told them that no frivolity would be tolerated, and that if they were determined to have their own will and their own way, it would be better for them to return to their homes, that they might be under the guardianship of their parents. They could return to their homes at any time, if they decided not to stand under the yoke of obedience, for we did not design to have a few leading spirits demoralizing the other students.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 12)
I told them that I would not call them by name, but that I knew the unruly ones, for this has been revealed to me. When they found the yoke of perfect obedience too much of a restraint, they were at liberty to leave; but while in the school, they must conform to the discipline of the school. We would have no larriking connected with the school. Those who would not be Christian gentlemen, could not be benefited by the instruction, and were at liberty to leave.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 13)
I turned to the principal and teachers, and addressed them. I told them that God had laid upon them the responsibility of watching for souls as they that must give account. The wrong course pursued by some of the students would mislead other students if it were continued, and God would hold the teachers responsible. I told them that some will attend the school who have not been disciplined at home. Their ideas of proper education and its value are perverted. If these were allowed to carry things their own way, the object of establishing a school in Cooranbong would be defeated, and the sin would be charged against the guardians of the school, as though they had committed it themselves.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 14)
Those whom the Lord has presented to me as not being properly trained in the home life, who have not thought it necessary to use the powers of their mind and their physical strength and ingenuity as members of the home firm, will always look upon order and discipline as needless restraint and severity. Again and again the Lord has presented this matter before me in clear lines. The teachers must be carefully picked. No haphazard work must be done in the appointment of teachers. Those who have devoted years to study, and yet have not gained the education essential to fit them to teach others in the lines the Lord has marked out, should not be connected with our schools as educators. They need to be taught the first principles of true, all-round education.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 15)
We are living in solemn times, and the reason why there are so many failures in our schools is because teachers neglect to keep the way of the Lord. Some teachers feel the burden and carry the load of responsibility. Others do surface work. They fail to see that the woeful influence of this deficiency is seen in the words and deportment of their students. This influence counterworks the influence that God-fearing teachers, who aim to meet the high standard of Christian education, seek to exert.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 16)
I would that the teachers in our schools could be of God’s selection and appointment. Souls will be lost because of the careless work of professedly Christian teachers, who need to be taught of God day by day, else they are unfit for the position of trust.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 17)
Teachers are needed who will strive to weed out their inherited and cultivated tendencies to wrong, who will come into line, wearing themselves the yoke of obedience, and thus giving an example to the students. The sense of duty to their God, and to their fellow beings, with whom they associate, will lead such teachers to become doers of the Word, and to heed counsel as to how they should conduct themselves.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 18)
God holds every one responsible for the influence that surrounds his soul, on his own account, and on the account of others. He calls upon young men and young women to be strictly temperate and conscientious in the use of their faculties of mind and body. Their capabilities can be developed only by the diligent use and wise appropriation of their powers to the glory of God and the benefit of their fellow men.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 19)
To know what constitutes purity of mind, soul, and body is the highest class of education. Paul the apostle sums up in his letter to Timothy the attainments possible for him, by saying, “Keep thyself pure.” [1 Timothy 5:22.] Impurity of thought or action will never be seen in the child of God. The body is represented as the temple of the Holy Spirit. Every encouragement and the richest blessings are held up before the overcomers of evil practices, but the most fearful penalties are laid upon those who profane the body and defile the soul.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 20)
Students and teachers, blessed are the pure in heart—now; not, Blessed will be the pure in heart. “Blessed are the pure in heart; for they shall see God.” [Matthew 5:8.] Yes; as did Moses, they shall endure the seeing of Him who is invisible. They have the assurance of the richest blessings, both in this life and in the life that is to come.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 21)
Avoid exciting the brain. Too much study stimulates the brain and increases the flow of blood to it. The sure result of this is depravity. The brain cannot be unduly excited without producing impure thoughts and actions. The whole nervous system is affected, and this leads to impurity. The physical and mental powers are depraved, and the temple of the Holy Spirit is defiled. The evil practices are communicated, and the consequences cannot be estimated. I am compelled to speak plainly on this subject.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 22)
The proportionate taxation of the powers of mind and body will prevent the tendency to impure thoughts and actions. Teachers should understand this. They should teach students that pure thoughts and actions are dependent on the way in which they conduct their studies. Conscientious actions are dependent on conscientious thinking. Exercise in agricultural pursuits, and in the various branches of labor is a wonderful safeguard against undue brain taxation. No man, woman, or child who fails to use all the powers God has given him can retain his health. He cannot conscientiously keep the commandments of God. He cannot love God supremely and his neighbor as himself.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 23)
Many whom God has qualified to do excellent work by giving them powers to use to His glory, accomplish little because they attempt little. Thousands who come into the world pass through life as though they had no definite object for which to live, no standard to reach. Such will obtain a reward proportionate to their works. Health and a clear conscience will attend those who work faithfully, keeping the glory of God in view.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 24)
There are many who are mere fragments of men. In Christ is seen the perfection of Christian character. He is our Pattern. His life was not a life of indolence or ease. He lived not to please Himself. He was the Son of the infinite God, yet He worked at the carpenter’s trade with His father. As a member of the home firm, He faithfully acted His part in helping to support the family.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 25)
All are capable of using their talents in God’s service. God asks them only to do their best. Those who study the life of Christ and yoke up with Him, will not use the brain only, but will reason from cause to effect, and will use every part of the human machinery. The Lord designs that useful labor shall be part of every man’s life.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 26)
The flood of corruption that is sweeping over our world is the result of the misuse and abuse of the human machinery. Men, women, and children should be educated to labor with their hands. Then the brain will not be overtaxed, to the detriment of the whole organism. Time is a talent, to be wisely employed. The voice is a talent, to be used in communicating knowledge that will make men pure, holy, and refined. The tongue should be educated to speak in such a manner that God will be magnified. “Lord, increase my faith,” will be the prayer of the true child of God. [Luke 17:5.] “Deliver me from evil thoughts and perverse actions.” Thus he is enabled to say with boldness, “Behold, God is my salvation: I will trust and not be afraid. For the Lord Jehovah is my strength and my song; he also is become my salvation.” [Isaiah 12:2.] Completeness of Christian character is possible. How? “Ye are complete in him.” [Colossians 2:10.]
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 27)
Well, it is now half past twelve p.m. I commenced writing this early this morning, and before breakfast I had written over eleven pages. While writing the twelfth and so much of the thirteenth, word was sent from the school for me to go over and meet with them in consultation. Brethren Daniells and Baker have been in Cooranbong since Wednesday. I have been in counsel with the board since early morning. The rest of the time they will spend in considering matters that need attention. I have talked much in regard to the importance of agricultural work. I did not intend to write you more than a few lines, but the Lord gave me something to write on this subject, and I have written it.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 28)
Brother Daniells came up here with a proposition that the camp meeting be held in Melbourne as soon as the school closed, and that to this end, the school would better close one month sooner than appointed, and that after the Melbourne meeting, the Sydney meeting be held. Our brethren in New South Wales could not see matters in this light. Brother Daniells talked it over, and was at first quite decided that his plan was right, but he saw that the minds of the brethren were not inclined to accept his proposition.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 29)
Our plan was to have the school continue till the time appointed for it to close, that the delegates to the camp meeting might come up and visit it, and see what has been done, so that they might use their influence in behalf of the school. From here, they could go right to the camp meeting. The students could attend this meeting; and then the camp meeting in Melbourne could follow. Brother Daniells felt much disappointed that the Melbourne camp meeting would have to be held in December, for then, as we experienced at Brighton, the pest of flies is so severe. Those in Victoria could not bear to think of having their camp meeting in December.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 30)
I suggested the advisability of cutting the school short two weeks, and commencing the Sydney camp meeting two weeks earlier than the time proposed. Brother Daniells thought a few moments, and heartily accepted the plan. This will bring the Melbourne camp meeting in November. Instead of continuing the school until October 27, it will close on the 13th. This plan will improve the situation. The students will fill up their time on the camp meeting, and will be under the control of their teachers. They will be provided for by the school.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 31)
This camp meeting will close in time for the delegates to go to Melbourne by the Cook’s excursion, which will save a large amount in fares. Brother Hughes suggested that the teachers hold school six days in the week in the place of having Sunday as a holiday. The time they spend at the camp meeting will fully complete their term, and will give them every advantage, so there will be no complaints. All are in harmony with this plan, so that matter is decided. Elder Daniells and Elder Baker will do their best to work to the point. They must, they say, commence at once to make preparation for the camp-meeting in Sydney.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 32)
We hope you will reach home before the school closes, October 13. The camp meeting will commence Thursday, October 16. The delegates should be here as early as possible before school closes, that they may have time to get a view of the situation, and know what has been done on the school land, that they may report the result. We do so much want you to come home.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 33)
We decided in our council meeting to commence the third building, making it two stories, instead of three. As long as we have room enough, we will make the building larger on the ground. We will not have a third story, but will let the roof of the building extend higher, and make it strong enough, so that rooms can be made if desired. We will let this remain without putting in rooms until there is necessity for more room. There will be a laundry, and such conveniences as are essential, connected with the second building. We will be pleased to lay our plans before you, if you reach here in season.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 34)
We shall begin at once to plan for the meetinghouse. We must have a house that will be an honor to the cause we profess to love. We want no extras, but we want a house that will bear the divine signature. We cannot plan for a house as small as the Ashfield church; for we have the students to accommodate, and we want the auditorium to be of good size. We should have help from all our churches in this.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 35)
This is all the business I shall send you now. We are all well. May is anxiously expecting a letter from you, that will tell her when you will arrive at home. Will you please let us know something definite. If you have not yet started homeward, let us know when we may look for you. I shall speak to Brother Connell, telling him that I have no need of him longer. Your house is built now. I have held him to use the horses in drawing brick and sand and various things. Brother James is now able to do all we have to do. Therefore I shall tell Brother Connell that we have no need of another hired man.
(12LtMs, Lt 145, 1897, 36)
Lt 145a, 1897
White, W. C. Duplicate of Lt 141, 1897.
Lt 146, 1897
White, J. E. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia June 21, 1897 Previously unpublished. + Dear Son Edson:
The American mail arrived yesterday, July 20. We were much pleased to receive a letter from you. Some of the letters I receive in the mail, I read at the table, while the others are eating a simple supper. I do not eat the third meal. I find that it is much better for me to live on two meals, and I feel no necessity for the third.
(12LtMs, Lt 146, 1897, 1)
I am pleased with the plan upon which you are working. It is the correct plan. You will observe in the teaching of Christ that this was His method. Clear, plain, and simple were His parables, conveying truth to the hearers.
(12LtMs, Lt 146, 1897, 2)
If, under the guidance of the Spirit of God, you can work up books and pamphlets, it is well. I have thought, that as soon as The Life of Christ is off my hands, I shall undertake the same kind of work that you are doing—get out small books one after another, and then, it if is thought best, bind them together in small volumes. And the more simple the books are, the better will be their effect on the people. It is getting above the simplicity of the work that has been our weakness. Our strength is in God.
(12LtMs, Lt 146, 1897, 3)
Let me tell you, Edson, I am glad to hear you say that you will keep out of temporal business matters. You know that from time to time flattering prospects have been placed before you, making it appear that by investing a small amount, you would reap a harvest. But when have your expectations been realized? Or your harvest garnered? Too often it has seemed like sowing to the wind, and reaping the whirlwind. As a people, we are being severely tried with empty treasures.
(12LtMs, Lt 146, 1897, 4)
Economy can now be made as interesting as a mathematical problem. But I cannot but see that in our institutions, the cause has been followed by the effect. The temptation to invest means in building in Battle Creek has been readily entered into. Of these buildings, the Lord says, “I take no pleasure in them, because the money invested in every additional improvement robs destitute fields, where the standard of truth has been raised, of the buildings so much needed to advance the work of God.”
(12LtMs, Lt 146, 1897, 5)
More means should not be invested in Battle Creek. Let those who believe that we are living in the very last days of this earth’s history learn that a man’s life consisteth not in the abundance of the things he possesseth. “Thus saith the Lord, Let not the wise man glory in his wisdom, neither let the mighty man glory in his might, let not the rich man glory in his riches. But let him glory in this, that he understandeth and knoweth me, that I am the Lord which exercise lovingkindness, judgment, and righteousness in the earth; for in these things I delight, saith the Lord.” [Jeremiah 9:23, 24.] There is a great treasure in these words. Beams of light from the Sun of Righteousness are shining forth. Let us grasp them, my son; let us appreciate them, let us live them and practice them.
(12LtMs, Lt 146, 1897, 6)
I was much pleased with the copies of your letters to Lane and others. Your reasoning is correct. The past neglect of the Southern field is not corrected by the course of action being followed. I felt sorry that means were laid out on the boat, for all such things furnish men excuses for not following the light that God has given in clear, plain lines. Walk in the light, and you will not walk alone. The heavenly Watcher observes all things, and when His people walk in accordance with the light given, God will turn His face toward them in love, and bless them.
(12LtMs, Lt 146, 1897, 7)
Be sure to give your brethren no occasion to cherish feelings of distrust and suspicion, and justify the course taken toward you and others in methods of dealing. Walk with your eye fixed on Jesus. I would be glad to have you connect with the work in Australia if it is God’s will; but if not, I will say, “Thy will, O Lord, not mine, be done.” [See Luke 22:42.] Let your soul be stayed upon God, and whenever the light shines directing you here, come, and we will welcome you. But, my children, keep fast hold of Christ’s hand, and walk in the light as He is in the light. He has a work for you to do, and He has told you what it is—“preach the Word; be instant in season, and out of season.” [2 Timothy 4:2.]
(12LtMs, Lt 146, 1897, 8)
Remember that your failures in the past have given to those who have wished to justify their own course of action a plaster to cover the work that God has condemned in them. This will just as surely be repeated if you give them reason. Question your own judgment in taking hold of any line of temporal business. Keep to your appointed work, searching the Scriptures and teaching the Word of God, and doing the very work that you say you are doing—simplifying everything you write to use in your teaching. We must not give our mind up to model and re-model when means are so much needed to advance the work of God. This work must be first and last to us. It must be our center. We must bind about all our necessary desires.
(12LtMs, Lt 146, 1897, 9)
But it will be a very poor policy to endanger and sacrifice life and health, even supposing that by so doing you could prevent evil speech or evil supposition. Keep your own council. Be swift to hear, slow to speak, slow to wrath.
(12LtMs, Lt 146, 1897, 10)
There is need of perfect unity in the church of God. All kinds of calamity are trying the nations that have so long trampled the law of God; and this is only the beginning of the end. Those who claim to be Seventh-day Adventists will be tried as by fire. There are tares among the wheat, and the untrue will be separated from the true. They will go out from us because they are not of us.
(12LtMs, Lt 146, 1897, 11)
“To try” often means to weary, to perplex, to harass, to provoke; but it is the inspiration of Satan that leads those who claim to know and believe the truth to do this work.
(12LtMs, Lt 146, 1897, 12)
To “try” also means to test. All things are to be shaken that can be shaken, that those who cannot be shaken may remain. But the test and trial brought upon us must not lead to much talk. “Be still, and know that I am God.” [Psalm 46:10.] The Lord is seeking to draw men to Himself by the cords of love. Ever be kind, patient, and self-respectful, whatever may be the opinions of others. Draw nigh to God, and He will draw nigh to you. Your trials will then become blessings.
(12LtMs, Lt 146, 1897, 13)
We are now living in perilous times. There is suffering in our world that is not dreamed of, bloodshed and revolt and crimes. We are living in times that try men’s souls. We are in the crucible, and the dross will either be separated from us, or we will be consumed with the dross. The way in which we bear ourselves when the pruning of God is upon us will show what manner of people we are of. Bear your test and trial my children, that you may come forth as gold seven times purified.
(12LtMs, Lt 146, 1897, 14)
Satan’s eye is upon us as intensely as is the eye of the Heavenly Watcher. He watches to see if he cannot stir up the passions of the soul and make him who is striving for the crown of life, run uncertainly, and become weak, impatient, complaining, now exalting, then desponding, lamenting and regretful. We can be hopeful, trustful, patient, knowing how to wait as well as labor, drawing consolation, even from apparent defeat, having caution in judgment, and industry in a large way.
(12LtMs, Lt 146, 1897, 15)
Edson and Emma, your souls must be riveted to the eternal Rock. You will see men who have advocated the truth, and who ran well for a season, making not straight but crooked paths for their feet; and by these crooked paths, the weak are led out of the way. Men who have thought to attain to the fullness of Christian perfection have fallen over some stumbling block. They are weighed in the balance and found wanting. Their aspiring hopes have sunk into the shadow of darkness.
(12LtMs, Lt 146, 1897, 16)
The church has been, and will be, tried by the incapacities of men who have been entrusted with responsibility they know not how to carry. Failing to seek wisdom of God, they lead others into false ways. They present to the flock of God food that tastes strongly of self. Your part of the work you know. Let not Satan blind your spiritual perceptions. Cling to the source of your strength. God alone, through His grace, can make you complete in Him. Fear not. God will decide the issue. Work faithfully and prayerfully in Bible lines. Keep the standard uplifted to the height that God requires.
(12LtMs, Lt 146, 1897, 17)
We are not to wait for great men to do the work. Do what you have been told to do by the Lord, and He will take care of the results. With earnest prayer and watching, you must work with such material as you have. Show your faith in God as the great Master worker. Christ prayed with strong crying and tears. He was a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief. Beseech the Lord to take the leadership of your every enterprise. He will hear every heartfelt petition that the work you undertake may be His work, the cause you undertake His cause.
(12LtMs, Lt 146, 1897, 18)
Let your feet be shod with the preparation of the gospel of peace. There are those who will not engage in self-sacrificing missionary work, who occupy their minds in imparting low, cheap, insinuations. They have no practical experience in any line of earnest work. They are under Satan’s training, and they only understand the art he teaches them. Walk humbly with God, remembering that you are only the feeble instrument by which He does the work. Marshal every physical, mental and moral power to the Lord’s side, walking in Christ’s footsteps, and saying, “In God we trust.”
(12LtMs, Lt 146, 1897, 19)
I believe I have answered your question in reference to getting out books, pamphlets, and tracts. Just as long as God gives you mental capability to search the Scriptures for yourself, do not cease your study. Sink the shafts deep into the mine of truth for precious ore, and present to others every jot and tittle of the heavenly treasure. Make it shine in its native simplicity.
(12LtMs, Lt 146, 1897, 20)
I here close for the present. The mail goes again one week from next Monday. You will then have a few lines from me.
(12LtMs, Lt 146, 1897, 21)
Lt 147, 1897
White, J. E. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia September 12, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 1MR 41; 4MR 361. Dear Son Edson:
I learn that the Vancouver mail leaves Sydney next Monday, and I have no letter written specially for you.
(12LtMs, Lt 147, 1897, 1)
Yesterday I spoke to the people assembled in the upper room of the school building. There are now quite a number of students—seventy-five enrolled, and no less than eight more have just moved into Cooranbong. The school has done excellent spiritual work. The Bible lessons have been fresh and interesting. We have all felt that we have been highly favored in having the help of Brother and Sister Haskell. The Lord sent them to us in our time of great necessity, and all appreciate their help. They have been, under the guidance of our heavenly Father, a strength and great blessing to our school. We will consider it a great blessing if we can possibly keep them through our next term of school. The conviction of the Spirit of God is upon every one who came here unconverted and undisciplined.
(12LtMs, Lt 147, 1897, 2)
The son of a prince from Tahiti is here. He knew nothing about religion, but now seems under conviction. He knew nothing in regard to the Sabbath. He has been here about six weeks, and his heart is touched. He hears the Bible lessons given in the school, and is learning the English language. He cannot speak this very well yet. Sister Haskell and Sister Wilson take turns in educating him, giving him private lessons.
(12LtMs, Lt 147, 1897, 3)
He comes to them as a child to his mother, and they answer his questions. He shows that he has discernment and perception. He catches ideas quickly, and then repeats the lesson given him, that they may correct him if he misconstrues, for he says he must have everything correctly, and must understand our reasons from the Scriptures, for this alone will convince his people.
(12LtMs, Lt 147, 1897, 4)
He is a strong, well-proportioned man. In feeding a machine, he got too near the sharp machinery, and lost his right arm above the elbow. Therefore he feels that he must obtain all the knowledge possible, that he can be an instructor. His ways are pleasant. He has come under the discipline of all the rules. He has used the pipe, but not since he came to the school, and he is perfectly respectful and kind.
(12LtMs, Lt 147, 1897, 5)
We expect this young man will be converted, and baptized at our camp meeting, to be held in Sydney commencing the 13th of October. This young prince, as we call him, is now seeking the Lord. He is often found in prayer in some out-of-the-way place, and a great change has taken place in him.
(12LtMs, Lt 147, 1897, 6)
Sister Nicholas is a half-caste and a Christian. She has been a missionary in Tahiti, and has received the Sabbath, but no farther light. She is now studying the sleep of the dead, baptism, and all the points of doctrine we hold.
(12LtMs, Lt 147, 1897, 7)
We have three other young men who came here with a knowledge of the principles of our faith, but were unconverted. We have carried through a straight line of discipline, and these three young men threatened to leave if they could not have more liberty to mix with the girls and have all kinds of fun and frolic and pranks. But I would go into the school, and read the articles I have written on education. Then the Bible lessons were presented in a simple, humble style so that all could understand them.
(12LtMs, Lt 147, 1897, 8)
We told these youth plainly that if they decided that they could not behave like Christian gentlemen, they could go; and more than that, we would not keep them in the school. We would give their friends and parents the reasons for our doing this, for we would not have two or three students demoralizing the school. We would have perfect submission from men and women, and youth and children. We told them that they were not here to educate others in their frivolity, and cheap, low, common nonsense. They had had enough of this all their life time to spoil their characters for usefulness, and we would not have them educating the students. They could make their decision whether they would be on the right side or the wrong side. If they expected that fun and frolic and cheapness of character was to be developed here, they made a great mistake, and had better take themselves to some school that would tolerate their misbehavior.
(12LtMs, Lt 147, 1897, 9)
This is the line we have drawn. There are fifty students in the home, and at the table there is no cheap talk or laughter allowed. We determined, we told them, to keep ever before them that there was a Witness to all their transactions. Their words, their thoughts, their actions, were all open before that all-seeing eye. And the teachers were made accountable for the misdeeds of the students. This was their work. The students if they chose, could make the work much lighter, by seeking individually to be Christian ladies and gentlemen. But as soon as they decided that it was not agreeable to them to exercise Christian deference and respect and politeness to the teachers and their fellow students, they were at liberty to leave the school and return from whence they came. If they had never felt and respected the principles of control and submission, it was high time, for their individual interests, to learn these essential lessons. We determined that we would not, while at the expense of putting up buildings, and opening a school at low prices for room, board, and tuition, while having the students highly favored with the most precious instruction, have a few tolerated, who would counteract the work which we were exercising every power to accomplish, and make the school such as God should approve.
(12LtMs, Lt 147, 1897, 10)
We must have the Holy Spirit; we must co-operate with the Holy Spirit’s teaching. Then the students will be educated to turn from the cheap, foolish talking, from fun and pranks. They will learn to resist the suggestions of Satan which keeps them on a low level. When they have a hunger for Bible studies, and a love and fear for God; when they shall bring themselves into subjection to the requirements of God, bringing even their thoughts into captivity to the will of Jesus Christ, they will advance to a higher education which is highly essential for them if they would have a knowledge of God, and of Jesus Christ whom He has sent. And they will find themselves in a pure and fragrant atmosphere, ready to hear the voice of God, and to say, “Here am I, Lord; send me.” [Isaiah 6:8.] They will have something more worthy to communicate than the interchange of cheap, common nonsensical things, such as unbelievers entertain and dwell upon.
(12LtMs, Lt 147, 1897, 11)
We want to impress upon the students that there is a most earnest work to be done in the schools. We are living at a time when we should realize that a moment lost is lost for all eternity. And we want every word and action to tell to our personal acquiring of knowledge and sound principles, that we may not have to leave them behind when we are promoted to the higher grade. We are to make all the use possible of our talents and capabilities in this life of probation, for this will decide our future eternal destiny in the higher grade. If we misuse our time and are reckless of these our present opportunities, if we will not appreciate the present blessings granted us, to learn the will and mind and ways of God in regard to us in this life, we will not have a desire and will to know His will concerning us in the future immortal life. This present life, day by day, hour by hour, is granted us to try, to prove, to test us whether we will be true and obedient to all God’s requirements in the future life.
(12LtMs, Lt 147, 1897, 12)
When so much is at stake, should we not tread carefully? Should we not, young and old, be sober and watch unto prayer? There are obscurities that we do not understand in regard to the common things of life. Grave blunders are made. Even minds that are supposed to be capable of judging carefully and prudently make strange movements because the attributes of self which are not precious and agreeable to the will of our heavenly Father, have been carried along with us. There are special communications which the Lord makes through His word and His Spirit which always agree; but some peculiar bias of mind, some cultivated traits of character, make it impossible for the Lord to work us by His Holy Spirit because we think we know how to work ourselves.
(12LtMs, Lt 147, 1897, 13)
We have had, at this term of school, precious opportunities and privileges that are of great value to every soul who has been willing to learn and apply his perceptive powers to understand. But all who have misconceived opinions and principles because they have entertained them, hold them fast as too precious to yield in order to obtain the most precious knowledge of the true bearing of the Word of God upon all the movements of their daily life. These will lose much which they might have obtained, and that loss will prevent them from advancing in the light which God has given them opportunities to obtain. They have not mental or spiritual appetite to eat and digest; therefore the second advance steps could not be made in following the Lamb whithersoever He goeth.
(12LtMs, Lt 147, 1897, 14)
The more closely and studiously we search for the truth as for hidden treasure—for there are bright and important truths of which we now only discern the shadows—the more surely shall we advance in the light as He is in the light. We shall discern the brightness and value of truth to be as precious jewels. The voice of God is heard, but we may be so far away from Him that we can only hear the echo. There are words of instruction coming from God day by day, and in an hour that we know not He may give words to His chosen messengers for us which we lose for want of discernment and appreciation. Then we go stumbling along in the uncertainty of night, and know not at what we stumble. There is a brightening glory for us as we advance, but which we shall never see unless we do advance. We may catch a few sparks, but that is all. The brightness of the heavenly glory we do not see. Therefore we cannot talk of it, or pray about it.
(12LtMs, Lt 147, 1897, 15)
But our school has been blessed of the Lord. We are very thankful to our heavenly Father that it has advanced, and we see the students working with a determination to success. The unruly elements have come into submission to rules and order, and we now have the satisfaction of knowing that the ones most ignorant of practical religion are now under the conviction of the Spirit of God. Their testimony yesterday was, “The last week has been the happiest week of my life.” I hope this week of prayer will close with their decisions fully made to be on the right side, and no longer on the wrong.
(12LtMs, Lt 147, 1897, 16)
Lt 147a, 1897
White, J. E.; White, Emma “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong September 26, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in Ev 646. Dear Edson and Emma:
I wish to speak of the book Christian Temperance. Dr. Kellogg writes me that some chapters were placed in Emily Campbell’s hands to copy, and that when these come in, they can go right ahead with the book. Willie sent me several chapters, saying that if they were not correct, to telegraph. In the place of telegraphing, I wrote to him. He said they would not wait for a letter, but I sent a letter correcting one point, a half-justification of drug medication, which I could not conscientiously put in the book now. Matters have been laid open before me in reference to the use of drugs. Many have been treated with drugs, and the result has been death. Experimenting in drugs is a very expensive business. Paralysis of the brain and the tongue is often the result, and the victims die an unnatural death, when, if they had been treated perseveringly, with unwearied, unrelaxed diligence, with cold and hot water, hot compresses, packs, dripping sheet, they would be alive today.
(12LtMs, Lt 147a, 1897, 1)
I want to say that with the exception of a few sentences in the manuscript favoring drug medication, the articles were accepted. I wrote this long ago, and now the doctor writes of chapters given to Emily Campbell to copy. This is hindering the book. Why should this be so? Please find out what it all means. Willie did not tell me to send back the chapters he sent me, for he said that before a letter could reach him, the book would be completed. Will you find out why the book hangs? Why does it not appear? We need this book here very much, and I am disappointed. Willie has not mentioned the matter since he wrote. I cannot account for these mysteries, which mean delay.
(12LtMs, Lt 147a, 1897, 2)
I do not desire this book, Christian Education, to come out in little driblets; this does not answer my purpose. I want to handle the book myself, and I want every jot and tittle of means that I can obtain to invest in this field. I am handicapped in every way, but will try not to worry if means are taken from me, as in the case of Healdsburg. Fifteen hundred dollars was used to settle a mortgage on my home and in Brother Leininger’s home, or else he would have been left homeless. Fifteen hundred dollars was used in the Walling case, and one thousand dollars was owed me by Mrs. Scott. It was thought that she might make trouble in regard to the gift she made the school, and that if I settled the debt by taking shares in the Healdsburg school, it might keep her quiet. This I agreed to do, and the matter is now settled. But will my friends in California allow me to bear this loss without any return?
(12LtMs, Lt 147a, 1897, 3)
My donations must be given to this country. We are on missionary soil, and the want of means to carry the work into new territories is a grief to my soul. I want to advance the work, and I must do this. I cannot possibly feel at rest. The end of all things is at hand, and we have no time to delay. Light must go forth as a lamp that burneth. A great work is to be done, and the King’s business requireth haste. Night after night in my dreams I am making efforts to arouse the people by saying, “Arise, shine; for thy light is come, and the glory of the Lord is risen upon thee.” [Isaiah 60:1.] A great work is to be done. We have no time to lose. I have carried great burdens since Willie left us, and I suppose he is now upon the broad waters. Our prayer is that our God, who never slumbers or sleeps, will preserve him and those that accompany him.
(12LtMs, Lt 147a, 1897, 4)
May Lacey White and all the family are well. The twin boys, James Henry and Herbert have clear white skins, and their cheeks are as red as a rose. They have high times together amusing one another. Where one is, the other is sure to be. When we ride out to get oranges and lemons, six miles, we take the boys with us. They enjoy riding, and frequently sleep most of the way. When we go to Morisset Station, four miles, making eight miles there and back, we take them with us. They are sturdy, healthy boys, full of fun and frolic. I am pleased that Willie will have a home when he returns. The house is furnished with a large cistern and two water tanks, which supply the house with water through pipes.
(12LtMs, Lt 147a, 1897, 5)
We have had no rain this month, and we were glad because of the church building, which was ceiled within before the weather boarding was put on. A driving rain on the weather side would have wet the ceiling, and damaged it. The rain came. For three days we had showers. But there was no wind. The rain came straight from the heavens, and as the building was roofed, it received no harm. I was thankful to the Lord for the rain. Our trees and garden and orchard needed it. The Lord gave us the rain in gentle showers and heavy downpours, but straight. We no longer felt a burden of prayer for God to withhold the storm until the church was sided up.
(12LtMs, Lt 147a, 1897, 6)
The siding on the church goes in tomorrow, and in two weeks the building will be completed. It would have been done in two weeks from the time the first work was done on the building if our brethren had moved by faith. The hand of the Lord was with the builders, and calculation was made for the lumber to come by boat, leaving a week between the loads. They did not think it possible to advance so well with the work in one week’s time as the fourteen carpenters did. The workers were all filled with enthusiasm, and the Lord’s angels were present. We have the very best carpenters we could obtain.
(12LtMs, Lt 147a, 1897, 7)
O, how glad I am that we shall now have a meetinghouse. I felt condemned when we met in the large open room above the sawmill. The room was filled with the school furniture and a mass of rubbish, but the worst was, we were filling our new house with bedbugs. We could see them crawling on the outside garments of the people. I felt that I could scarcely ask the blessing of the Lord in such a place. Since the opening of the school, we have occupied a neat room above the dining room. Oh, how pleased we were with this improvement, although it was only enclosed, unceiled and unplastered. But in one or two weeks, we shall have a good meetinghouse. Everything has moved like a charm. The people have done nobly. They have shown what can be done if workmen will do their best. Those who are fully acquainted with the slow, monotonous movements of the manner of work in this country declared that the work could not be done.
(12LtMs, Lt 147a, 1897, 8)
For ten days the lumber was delayed, and we had to dismiss the workmen. But the boat came at last. I wished to understand this matter, and I do; for light was given. When the contract was made, two boats should have been employed instead of one. The unbelief continually reiterated, “It cannot be done, it cannot be done,” made its impression on minds. There was a sprinkling of unbelief in the minds of those who should have had faith. Therefore the human agencies did not do everything that it was possible for them to do, leaving the Lord to do that which they could not accomplish.
(12LtMs, Lt 147a, 1897, 9)
Our ears must always be open to hear the voice of God. Our hearts must be ready to obey His Word without stopping to reason how it can be. The Lord knows how it can be. This will teach us a lesson. When the Lord said, “Arise and build a house for the Lord,” and that without delay, we must obey, and when in His providence workmen were ready in this very place to take up the work and go on with it, every soul should have been prepared to do his part. Then the house would have been done, and would have stood as an object lesson.
(12LtMs, Lt 147a, 1897, 10)
The boat should have been secured and the lumber brought on to the ground. Every stick of timber should have been brought, before it was supposed to be needed. In waiting, a mistake was made. In obeying the word given, “Let there be no delay,” they would have been following the directions of the Lord. There was delay on the part of the human agencies, not divine power. The Lord inspired the workmen, and everything went forward like clock work, until they came to the deficiency caused by our lack of faith at the idea of finishing the building in so short a time. This has prevented the work from being done.
(12LtMs, Lt 147a, 1897, 11)
When men work interestedly and with fidelity, there will be expedition. The Lord would have all in His service educate themselves to do this. Whether it is to till the soil, to fell trees, to clear the land, plant trees, sow the seed, or garner the harvest, the command is given, “Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might.” [Ecclesiastes 9:10.] Time is golden, and the Lord is not pleased with indolence and negligence in any one. “Ye are bought with a price,” He said, “therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit, which are God’s.” [1 Corinthians 6:20.] All who will seek to be faithful in that which is least will be faithful in that which is much.
(12LtMs, Lt 147a, 1897, 12)
We need to learn our duty, which is clearly defined in the Word of God. The Lord is not pleased to have His work poorly and cheaply done, or to have it dragged along as though it were a wearisome task. We have no time to squander in dilatory, unwilling movements. The interest we should take in everything that we do will make our work interesting and educating. We are to constantly improve in the thought and word and action. O, if we would only individually be determined that the Lord shall not say of us, “Thou wicked and slothful servant;”“take the talent from him, and give it to him that hath ten talents.” [Matthew 25:26, 28.]
(12LtMs, Lt 147a, 1897, 13)
Why are we not more faithful in our service in every line? Why do we not make everything of our present opportunities and privileges? We must heed the words, “Improve until I come.” [Luke 19:13.] In view of this coming there must be vigilant working combined with prayerful waiting and watching, lest the day of the Lord come upon us as a thief in the night.
(12LtMs, Lt 147a, 1897, 14)
I would not urge you to come to Australia, yet if the Lord says “Come,” we shall be most pleased to receive you. I want you, my son, to look to your Captain for your orders. He will never mislead you. Trust Him. Your faith will increase by exercise. Take every matter, small or great, to the Lord in prayer. What riches of grace He has for all who will appreciate their value. Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God.
(12LtMs, Lt 147a, 1897, 15)
It is considered a great favor and honor to stand in the presence of an earthly king, and to see his face, which means to be in favor with him. But all who love and serve God will be favored by Him. The king of righteousness admits the contrite and humble soul into His audience chamber, where they can converse with Him. The throne of His grace is laid open, and may be approached by all who are meek and lowly in heart. The Prince of light and righteousness says of all such, “Son, thou art ever with me, and all that I have is thine.” [Luke 15:31.] To be blessed, to see God, means that we shall always abide in His love.
(12LtMs, Lt 147a, 1897, 16)
Lt 148, 1897
White, J. E.; White, Emma Campground, Stanmore, Sydney, Australia October 23, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 7ABC 468; 4Bio 336-337. Dear Children Edson and Emma:
We are now in Sydney, a suburb of Sydney. We published no notice of the meeting. We did not think it best to create any special excitement aside from distributing notices. I was cautioned not to create any special excitement by notifying everybody of the meeting, thus giving the ministers an opportunity to spread their false reports, and hinder the people from coming out to hear.
(12LtMs, Lt 148, 1897, 1)
The light given me has been followed to the letter. The first meeting was held Thursday night, and the big tent was crowded. A wall of people several feet deep stood around the tent. Elder Daniells spoke with excellent freedom. Friday morning there was an early meeting at six o’clock, and a good representation of our people was present. After a season of prayer, many good testimonies were borne.
(12LtMs, Lt 148, 1897, 2)
The meetings have opened well. Friday evening several of our ministers spoke for a short time each. The tent was again full, and some were standing on the outside. Good order was observed. Sabbath morning the congregation of believers was large. The tent was nearly filled and everything went off nicely. The Spirit of the Lord was in the meeting. Three and four were often on their feet at once. The Lord’s name was glorified in the testimonies borne.
(12LtMs, Lt 148, 1897, 3)
The first part of Sabbath forenoon was occupied by Sabbath School, and at eleven o’clock the bell rang for service. Elder Haskell spoke with freedom to a tent well filled. In the afternoon I spoke to a crowded tent. Many were standing on the outside like a wall. There is to be meeting in the evening. Dr. Caro speaks on the health question, I hear.
(12LtMs, Lt 148, 1897, 4)
Well, Edson and Emma, we can send but little mail this week. I have been having an ill turn, and could not write much. Many things of interest are being pressed upon us. Last Wednesday morning the steamer from America arrived with its passengers, and your brother, W. C. White, was a passenger. I met Willie Thursday on the campground. I was very glad to meet him after a ten months’ absence. He is looking well. He says that he was not at all sick during the passage, but was able to take care of his companions that were sick. The twins soon became acquainted with their father. May feels very well indeed over the arrival of her husband. She has behaved excellently well. We have taken her under our family wing, and built her a house almost opposite our home, within calling distance. I shall now give up the family to the one who owns them under the Lord. The babies are two sturdy boys, full of health and activity. They look so nearly alike that we can hardly tell them apart. James Henry is stronger than Herbert, and more full of sport. Herbert carries a more sober-looking face, pensive I might call it.
(12LtMs, Lt 148, 1897, 5)
We have a nice encampment. Sara, Maggie Hare, and Minnie Hawkins accompanied May down on Tuesday. They prepared the tents, as I was not able to go with them. I came down on Thursday with Sister Haskell, and Sister Robinson and daughter. Several others came with us. Sister Haskell, Sister Robinson and daughter, and I were allowed to occupy one compartment alone, so I rested all the way, and was refreshed.
(12LtMs, Lt 148, 1897, 6)
Sara had engaged three rooms, one for me with two doors opening on to a porch. This makes the room always well aired, and I can walk on the piazza. Willie and May have a room below the same size. Brother Tucker, an aged servant of God, who gave all his property to the cause with the provision that he was to be cared for while he lived, also has a room below. He is seventy nine years old. He is neat and exact in caring for his room, and never has any troubles to express. He is the excellent of the earth.
(12LtMs, Lt 148, 1897, 7)
I have just come from the six o’clock morning meeting. We have had breakfast. The tent was well filled with believers. Some of the neighbors also were present. One lady brought me a large bouquet of flowers from her garden. The meeting at first seemed to be rather depressed, but the Lord gave me the spirit of prayer, and the Holy Spirit did come into our midst. Or rather I should say that the Lord Jesus quickened our senses to recognize His presence in the blessings of heaven. The Lord is very nigh us, but we do not always recognize His presence, His comfort, and His grace. But we were blessed this very morning. Praise ye the Lord.
(12LtMs, Lt 148, 1897, 8)
After the praying season, the testimonies began. At times six were on their feet at once. I felt it my duty to bear my testimony in urging my brethren to have faith. The glory of God is in the praise and thanksgiving of His people. The glory of the gospel does not consist in our making void the law of God, and entering upon a new and easier way to be saved, but in having the way and the truth more firmly revealed in the unalterable law of Jehovah, established forever, in all its spirituality and completeness, to all them that believe.
(12LtMs, Lt 148, 1897, 9)
I told the people that the Lord was not glorified in their deficiency and dwarfed spirituality. The Lord would have every soul complete—in himself?—no: complete in Jesus Christ. “Ye are complete in him.” [Colossians 2:10.] It was the whole sacrifice that our Redeemer made for us, and it is an entire, whole offering that is made in our behalf. As it was a whole spotless offering that was given to save the fallen race, it was a whole and full salvation procured for my soul. This was done that every human being might render soul, spirit, heart, and affections to God. God will not accept a divided heart. Ye cannot serve God and mammon.
(12LtMs, Lt 148, 1897, 10)
The Lord made a full and complete sacrifice upon the cross, the shameful cross, that men might be complete in the great and precious gift of His righteousness. We have God’s pledge that He will bind men closely to His great heart of infinite love in the bonds of the new covenant of grace. All who will give up their hope of paying for their salvation, or earning it, and will come to Jesus just as they are, unworthy, sinful, and fall upon His merits, holding in their plea the pledged Word of God to pardon the transgressor of His law, confessing their sins and seeking pardon, will find full and free salvation. His promise is not yea and nay, but yea and Amen in Christ. We must look away from ourselves.
(12LtMs, Lt 148, 1897, 11)
I entreated my brethren to ever keep gratitude to God cherished in the heart. Then His praise will come forth from sanctified lips of perfect obedience. The Holy Spirit by the mouth of Zechariah describes the gospel as salvation by pardon through the tender mercies of our God. [Luke 1:77, 78.]
(12LtMs, Lt 148, 1897, 12)
Lt 148a, 1897
White, J. E.; White, Emma Stanmore, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia October 25, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Children:
Yesterday was an important day for us. The morning six o’clock meeting was excellent. Six were upon their feet at once waiting for their opportunity. I tried to present the necessity of hopefulness and courage in times of difficulty, and what a willing, gracious heavenly Father we have to respond to all who call upon Him. The meeting was obliged to close with Elder Daniells upon his feet waiting. Finally he requested that no more should arise, for the time had already been prolonged beyond its closing period.
(12LtMs, Lt 148a, 1897, 1)
Then Brother Haskell spoke excellently well. He was interrupted by questions being asked. He showed courtesy and tact in his answers. The tent was well filled. Those who were present called it an excellent meeting. The old servant of Christ was full of the matter, presenting clear and forcible truth to the people, and all listened with intense interest. Our brother seems to have a deep insight into the Scriptures, and he is happy in communicating the truth to others.
(12LtMs, Lt 148a, 1897, 2)
In the afternoon at three I stood before a tent crowded to its uttermost capacity and then there were more than one hundred on the outside. I spoke slowly and distinctly and know not whether all heard or not. All under the tent say they heard.
(12LtMs, Lt 148a, 1897, 3)
I took up the subject of temperance, just leading out on the first portion of the subject—Christ in the wilderness of temptation and His victory, passing over the ground where Adam fell and redeeming Adam’s disgraceful failure and fall, and placing the human family on vantage ground with God, making it possible for them to overcome in their own behalf through the merits of the crucified and risen Saviour. That large audience gave excellent attention. I shall continue the subject in another discourse.
(12LtMs, Lt 148a, 1897, 4)
In the evening Elder Farnsworth spoke to a still larger audience and there was no confusion, no interruption by the rabble; all passed off in order and peace. This was indeed an excellent meeting. The Lord is at work on the hearts of the people.
(12LtMs, Lt 148a, 1897, 5)
This morning at six o’clock a large audience assembled for prayer and conference meeting. Brother Starr led the meeting and then after a season of prayer Brother Robert Hare, who has been at work in Western Australia, spoke about one half hour, and he made some confession, after his remarks in regard to “Take heed how ye hear.” [Luke 8:18.] He was deeply affected. The quivering lip and the tearful utterance gave impression to his words. He spoke of his labors in Sydney and suburbs about five years ago. Impressions were received by him and Brother Steed that where one or two ministers obtained an interest they were the only ones who should be enlisted in this meeting. Elders Daniells and White came into the meeting, but were not invited to act a part. He wished to say that it was not the right course for them to pursue. They should have invited these brethren to act a part with them, and the work would have had a very different showing had they done this. There was much tenderness in the meeting. I had a few words to say, and the meeting closed.
(12LtMs, Lt 148a, 1897, 6)
I am now in my room tracing these lines. Time for morning meeting of the union conference session has come and I am requested to be present, so this must close my epistle for this time. I have never seen a better influence in the suburbs of Sydney than we are now having. Brother Haskell said there were two men [here to make trouble] Sabbath afternoon. One said to the other while I was speaking, “Now is our time to commence.” The other, who had been listening, said, “I cannot make a disturbance. They are a respectable people and I will not do as we calculated.”
(12LtMs, Lt 148a, 1897, 7)
The Lord has certainly wrought in this meeting thus far. There seems to be an inspiring influence vivifying the whole encampment. The meeting has been carried out in a different way than any of our camp meetings. I was warned and directed to take the people by surprise. There were no notices given weeks ahead, giving Satan every opportunity to stir up and rally his forces. The people came out to hear from the first appointed meeting. The Lord has taught us that not one, monotonous routine is to be preserved. We must follow the Lord’s direction, and this will be in ways and customs being broken up.
(12LtMs, Lt 148a, 1897, 8)
Sara has come. Says the meeting has opened. I must go. God bless you. This letter must go now.
(12LtMs, Lt 148a, 1897, 9)
Mother.
Lt 149, 1897
White, J. E.; White, Emma Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia May 30, 1897 See variant Lt 149a, 1897. This letter is published in entirety in 20MR 228-237. Dear Children Edson and Emma:
Next Monday the American mail leaves here, to be taken to Sydney on the morning mail train. It is taken from the Sydney Post Office to the boat, and thence across the broad waters of the Pacific to San Francisco.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 1)
I have little mail to send on this boat. I have been suffering from great exhaustion. My heart is the seat of the principal difficulty. I have studied seriously where I could find a place to which I could retire from the work and rest a while, but I fail to imagine such a place. For three weeks I have taken no part in active labor. During this time I have not been present at family prayers or at the table.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 2)
I am very grateful to my heavenly Father for keeping me by His power, when I have stood so long carrying the heavy load. Brother Metcalfe Hare has united with me in all the interests connected with our school. Two school buildings are now erected. They are wholesome, convenient, neat, and well-proportioned buildings. There is nothing ornamental about them, for we have not one penny to spend in needless extras. One building is only enclosed. We had no money to pay for plastering. But we are full of gratitude to God. All here who are of the faith worked with a will in helping to finish the buildings. They are poor, but they did what they could, and went beyond our expectations; and we know that they realized the blessing of the Lord.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 3)
We decided that it was not safe to depend for water upon iron tanks, but that we must have an underground cistern. We made provision to have this decision carried out at once. A cistern twelve feet deep was dug between the two buildings. We sent for bricklayers from Sydney, and these two men worked with dispatch. We were passing through a drought which has lasted for weeks, yes, months; but the work was carried forward. The cistern was bricked up with two tiers of brick, and built above the ground in a dome shape, that no water should enter from the top. The brick sides were plastered, the cistern was connected with the buildings, and everything was done that human agents could do.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 4)
We had only to wait a few days before our heavenly Father sent us rain from the heavens. The tanks, which had been empty for weeks, were filled, and the immense cistern was about one-third filled. I feel to praise the Lord every time I think of His great goodness in thus helping us in our necessity. Surely we have had a remarkable blessing, for in regions not far from here, the cattle and sheep are dying from hunger and thirst.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 5)
We are now having a quiet rain. All Sabbath and Sunday it rained in showers, and has been raining all through today. I understand that the school tanks and cistern are full. I pray that as our cisterns and tanks are full to overflowing, so our hearts may be filled with the fullness of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 6)
The provision made for us by the Lord is too wonderful for us to comprehend. But it is not too rich for us to enjoy. It was the enjoyment of this great love that the apostle Paul attempted to describe. He speaks of the height, the depth, and the breadth of the love of God, which is beyond the power of human expression, but which it is our privilege to enjoy.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 7)
“Filled with all the fulness of God.” [Ephesians 3:19.] I wish that now every empty human vessel might be receiving the showers of Christ’s grace. The love of God is an inexhaustible fountain. This great love is for us. We may enjoy it. You have had the privilege, dear children, of tasting that love, and knowing that the Lord is good. His is a reservoir that is continually supplied with abundant grace and goodness and love. Our hearts may be filled and expand and overflow with the love of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 8)
Children, have faith in God. If you make mistakes, turn your defeats into victories. Test and trial comes to every child of God. The intensity of your love and fidelity will be tested by difficulties, disappointments, and trials. These your faith must overcome. The burden you bear for Christ’s sake, the service you render to Him in the complete surrender of your will to God’s will, is the measure of your love for Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 9)
“Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, which according to his abundant mercy hath begotten us again to a lively hope by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, to an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled, and that fadeth not away, reserved in heaven for you, who are kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation, ready to be revealed in the last time, wherein ye greatly rejoice, though now, for a season, if need be, ye are in heaviness, through manifold temptations; that the trial of your faith, being much more precious than gold that perisheth, though it be tried with fire, might be found unto praise and glory and honor at the appearing of Jesus Christ; whom having not seen, ye love; in whom, though now ye see him not, yet believing, ye rejoice with joy unspeakable and full of glory.” [1 Peter 1:3-8.]
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 10)
Encourage faith, talk faith. Do not look on the dark side. I am pleased that you do not talk of that which is objectionable in the course others take. Talk of Jesus. The transformation of heart and character concerns us more than anything else.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 11)
In the night season I was conversing with you, as I stated to you in my letter of two or three months since. Before that letter could have reached you, I received one from you, stating in substance the things I was talking over with you. You said that you had decided to heed the instruction given you by the Lord not to mingle temporal, financial enterprises with your work. This, I know, has ever been your danger. Press close to the side of Jesus. Put your trust in Him, and never doubt that wisdom will be given you to pursue a plain, straightforward path. God is waiting to speak to you from His Word, that you may voice His words in messages of warning and encouragement to others.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 12)
Lay aside every weight, and run the race with patience; for there is a crown of life for each of you to win. Those who are almost wholly engrossed in the things of time and sense lose the sense of the importance of the work they should do for the Master.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 13)
You may have inducements of a temporal nature placed before you. You have had this experience before, and you know what the outcome has been. I fully believe that the Lord will teach you; and if you have any light that your duty is elsewhere, it may be that the Lord will turn your face this way. Do not hesitate to consult us in regard to any plans you may have. Serious times, I know, are before us, and my work must ere long be closed. While mind and strength are yet granted me, I desire to do all that the Lord has given me to do. You say there are things you do not understand. There are things I do not understand. I do not understand why I have had so little suitable help in getting out my books. It is a problem hard for me to comprehend. You could help me in this work. I have tugged and wrestled under great difficulties; now I am exhausted. It is a mystery to me why we cannot connect in our labors.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 14)
Last Monday Elder Daniells, Brother Palmer, and Brother Baker, with two students from Victoria, came to Cooranbong. We were pleased to have them with us over the Sabbath. On that day the meetinghouse was full. Brother Hughes and his wife, from America, came also. We were very glad to meet them. I was not able to attend any of the meetings, but the brethren came to me to consult over school matters. I was so feeble that I could scarcely talk with them, but my interest in the school led me to brace up as much as possible.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 15)
I am very glad that these brethren came up. All who had not before seen the grounds were delighted with the situation. Elder Daniells was surprised at the improvement that had been made in the buildings and on the land. All were free to acknowledge that this was the place where the school should be located.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 16)
When the buildings were in progress, there were some who thought that the second building could not be completed in time to commence school April 28. But we said, There must not be one day’s postponement. The students may come in. And if there is but one student present, we will begin the school at the appointed time, even though the second building may not be completed.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 17)
We held our opening exercises in the new building. The Spirit of the Lord was present. We felt pleased and grateful to God that Brother Herbert Lacey had been raised up from his sickness, and was able to be with us and take a part in the opening of the school. Brother and Sister Haskell, as experienced laborers, were a great help to us in the work of preparation, in devising and planning to get things in order, that there should be no delay.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 18)
All the students that have come have expressed themselves as being happily disappointed in the location and the buildings. Not a murmur, not a word of dissatisfaction, has been heard. The students are a good class of intelligent youth.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 19)
Elder Haskell conducts the Bible study, and he makes everything so plain and simple that every mind can take it in. How many times I have wished that you were here to listen to the precious words from the lips of the servants of God. All who listen to his presentation of the Word, as he places before their minds the truth in its simplicity, are conscious that they are favored. They are learning the “It is written,” and how to use the Word of God. “All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness, that the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good works.” [2 Timothy 3:16, 17.]
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 20)
How important then that we appreciate the study of the Scriptures as calculated to make the student wise unto salvation. Precious Word! We are safe only as we eat and digest it. The charge of the apostle Paul to Timothy is appropriate for all who claim to know the truth. “I charge thee therefore,” he writes, “before God and the Lord Jesus Christ, who shall judge the quick and the dead at his appearing in his kingdom; preach the word, be instant in season, out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort with all longsuffering and doctrine. For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine; but after their own lusts shall they heap to themselves teachers, having itching ears; and they shall turn away their ears from the truth, and shall be turned unto fables. But watch thou in all things, endure afflictions, do the work of an evangelist, make full proof of thy ministry.” [2 Timothy 4:1-5.]
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 21)
I am so thankful to God for the prosperity that has marked the work done on the school ground. We are surprised at the number of students already here, and others are coming.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 22)
If we can preserve the peace and grace of Jesus Christ, we shall go through trial and difficulty without discord, distraction, or division. We should continually cultivate love, love for God, giving Him our supreme devotion, and love for one another, which will bring sunshine into the heart. We will have trials, for we cannot control circumstances, but we have One in whom our hopes of eternal life are centered. We are undeserving of God’s great goodness and compassion and love, but notwithstanding our failures and mistakes, we must not mar our experience by unbelief. Make it a point in your life never to forget God’s love.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 23)
Throughout His entire earthly life the Lord Jesus Christ was seeking to impress His divine image upon man. He is our sin-bearer. He desires to help you carry His cross in service. In trial He is close beside you, trying to lead you to realize how sorry He is when you make mistakes. He is always ready to reach out for the hand that is stretched out for help. Remember always that it is not a human heart, a human sympathy, that draws us to Christ; it is a love that is divine, that blends with the love of the human agents. “Surely he hath borne our griefs and carried our sorrows.” [Isaiah 53:4.] How? By making them His own. Set Christ ever before you as your Saviour and Friend. By beholding Him you catch His divine likeness, imbibe His attributes, and are imbued with His love.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 24)
Be of good cheer, my son and my daughter. I said I would not seek to influence you in any way to come to this country to help us. I would be very much pleased to see you both. If the Lord saw fit to direct your course this way, I would welcome you gladly. But I do not want my desire and affection for my children to draw them away from the work that the Lord has appointed them to do. If you felt that the Lord would be pleased to have you in this country, I would rejoice. I have had a very heavy burden to carry, and you could have been a great help to me. I have needed just the help that you could give. But if the Lord sees that it is not for your good and His name’s glory, I would not have you leave the work you have been engaged in.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 25)
I have been so very much alone in my experience, alone, with many around me but still alone. I sometimes have a chance to realize the truth of the words, “Be still, and know that I am God.” [Psalm 46:10.] But I will not dwell upon myself. The Lord is my Helper. He is your Helper. Upon Christian principles, upon a Christian basis, we have pledged ourselves to the service of the Master. It is an honor for us to have any connection with God. Then consider, too, that to us are addressed the words, “We are laborers together with God; ye are God’s husbandry, ye are God’s building.” [1 Corinthians 3:9.] By the mighty cleaver of truth we have been quarried out of the world.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 26)
We are now in the workshop of God to be fitted, hewed, and squared. Axe, hammer, and chisel will act their part upon the rough material, and then comes the polishing process. All this hurts the natural temperament, but no other process will give the model the impression of the likeness of Christ. If we have His meekness and lowliness, we will not become rebellious under the process of being fitted for His temple. We want no weak links in the chain of character that binds us to Christ. A whole Saviour was offered for us on Calvary’s cross, that we might have a complete salvation, perfecting a character after the divine similitude. We are to labor earnestly to strengthen every principle of right in the character, that we may be hid with Christ in God.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 27)
My son, you will never be placed where you will have no provocation from the strife of tongues. I am suffering this continually, and, more recently, especially, from one, McCullagh by name, whom I have treated as tenderly as though it has been you, my son, in his place. In all our relations with each other in the past, no word or action has been unpleasant. He has been treated as a son, in regard to careful tenderness. He and his wife have been made as welcome to my table as yourself and Emma. He claimed to have perfect faith in the work the Lord has given me to do.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 28)
He was ever seeking my counsel, for often all the churches in New South Wales were left to our care. In three newly erected meetinghouses he insisted that I should give the dedicatory discourse. And on those occasions the Lord manifested His special presence and power among us.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 29)
In tent meetings Brother McCullagh has been urgent for my labor. Knowing his physical weakness I went at every call. Again and again I have ridden in my phaeton from Granville nine, ten, and twelve miles, to speak in the evening, and there being no place where I could be accommodated, I have ridden back, getting to bed about midnight. Brother McCullagh’s plea was, “Come; I know what your speaking does for the people. I am speaking understandingly; come.” I went, and the Lord helped me and gave me perfect victory.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 30)
When we first came to Cooranbong to see this ground, that we might know whether it was best to purchase, Brother McCullagh came. He was sick with inflammation of throat and lungs. He could do no speaking, and he brought with him his spring cot and blankets, intending to spend two or three weeks in Cooranbong and enjoy the nice atmosphere, hoping that it would be a blessing to him. We went up Dora Creek in a boat to Avondale, our tract of land. From the light given me in the night season before I came, I was sure that here the school should be located. When we returned to the humble cottage Brother and Sister Lawrence were occupying, the brethren, about eight in number, had a meeting by themselves and decided to purchase the land.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 31)
The next morning at family worship the Spirit of the Lord indited prayer for Brother McCullagh. I felt a deep burden of prayer. It seemed that the room was full of unseen heavenly beings. Brother McCullagh was healed there and then. He said that every particle of inflammation left him. He was very happy, declaring that the Lord had wrought a miracle in his behalf. The next morning he returned to his labor, saying that he was never more free from any difficulty.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 32)
He came to us one morning and told us that his harness had been stolen from the stable. I felt sorry for him, and gave him three pounds fifteen shillings to purchase a harness. I had purchased boxes of peaches and other fruit and sent [them to] him without charge. These cost me four and five shillings a box. Thus I felt toward him.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 33)
He had a severe sickness last summer, and his life was supposed to be in a very precarious condition. He was advised to go to Adelaide, for the weather there was mild. After the camp meeting Elder Hawkins and Elder McCullagh, who seemed to be earnest in the work, were left to bind off the camp meeting effort. For a time, Wilson and his wife were with them. But they returned to Tasmania, and unfortunately these two men were left with the work.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 34)
The first news that came to Melbourne was that both of these ministers sent in their resignation, professedly saying that they could no longer be conscientiously connected with Seventh-day Adventists. Brethren Colcord and Daniells immediately went to Adelaide and found that these men, while under the pay of the conference, had been working in a most subtle, deceiving manner until the whole church was being carried away with them. Their entrancing hobby was, “the Holy Spirit,”“sanctification,”“nothing but Christ.” All doctrines, they said, were of no value. They presented these deceptive theories, working as the great apostate worked in heaven in that first rebellion. Their work seemed a repetition on a small scale of the working of the first great rebel.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 35)
These men would have no intercourse with our brethren who worked to help them. They had each received £3:5 ($16.25) per week. While receiving this sum from the conference they were acting out Satan’s deception. They visited from house to house, and the most wicked falsehoods came from the lips of Mr. and Mrs. McCullagh. They had not intimated to me one word of any difficulty. They had not laid their complaints before me, or given me an opportunity to speak for myself; but they went from family to family, telling the most tremendous falsehoods concerning me. And yet they claimed to be inspired by the Holy Spirit. We do not for a moment doubt that they were inspired exactly as was Lucifer in the heavenly courts in his rebellion. The Holy Spirit never leads men to act entirely contrary to the Word. The directions here given are plain. We are bound by all the holy motives which the Word of God recognizes to be true, and steadfast to principle.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 36)
In all our experience we have never met with such deep-laid plottings. They gave no intimation of their purposes until they had everything prepared to make a break and carry the whole church. And then what? These two men expected to be supported and establish a school in Adelaide and preach against Adventists, opposing the third angel’s message, and carrying out their rebellion to perfection.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 37)
The sin in this raid against me is mostly of McCullagh’s devising. For two years he has been finding fault with every minister in the work here, and he has been serving the enemy of God by uniting with him in his work of accusing the brethren. The first step in this direction is dangerous ground for any human being to enter upon.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 38)
I am sorry, so sorry for McCullagh. I was distressed at the thought that the man was doing despite to the Spirit of God, and placing himself beyond recovery, and I did all I could to save him. I wrote to both men. But nothing we could say had the least influence to change their purpose. Nearly all the church members saw their error in listening to the words of these men, and they are now standing in a good position. But the lies which were told from house to house and from place to place, deceived and came near ruining the church. Why did not these men come to me, who had been their friend, and tell me? But no; they did not do this. Instead they reported things that they knew were entirely false.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 39)
The eternal Word is reliable, but the word of man is not reliable. I have felt very deeply over this treacherous work. It has been as a sword in my heart. Now where are these men? McCullagh is still in Adelaide. He reported that he was going to Sydney, but he has not yet come. He wrote a letter to Mrs. Hextall in Sydney, who was his special admirer, saying that he wished her to get up a subscription paper and raise money to get his family back to Sydney. This one woman and her son put their names to the paper, and that was all. We feared that the churches in New South Wales would be tried and shaken, because they are new in the faith. McCullagh has sent letters to different ones appealing to them for sympathy and bemoaning his poverty. But these letters contained the most bitter spirit against me and were a list of lies.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 40)
Shannon, our house builder, has done a similar work. It seemed that he and Brother Lawrence united, and poor, deceived, deluded men manufactured the most absurd lies about Avondale and the workers on the school premises. These men united because work was not given them at a price which we could not afford to pay. Thus every step we have advanced toward the completion of the school buildings, we have worked at great odds.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 41)
Brother Haskell and his wife, Sister Hurd Haskell, have been a great blessing to us; but Brother Haskell was called to Adelaide, and I stood alone with Brother Metcalfe Hare to take the meetings on the Sabbath. Brother Herbert Lacey was sick with the fever in Sydney, and we tried to do our best. But as soon as Brother Haskell returned, I dropped the burdens of buildings and church and have been in a state of great exhaustion ever since. I was able to be at the opening of the school. Elder Haskell and his wife, and Brother Herbert Lacey and his wife, were present. There was a much better beginning than we had dared to hope for. Since that time I have attended meeting but once or twice. But I am able to counsel with my brethren.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 42)
I am more pleased than I can tell you with the help we have in Elder Haskell as a worker in the school. His wife, also, gives Bible lessons. Brother Haskell has been opening the Scriptures upon the sanctuary subject, and he makes the matter stand out clear and forcible. Sister Haskell gives lessons in Revelation, and makes this subject very plain. All are pleased. It is so nice to have workers who have had an experimental knowledge of the Word of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 43)
We are sure that Brother Hughes and his wife will use their experience in school management as wise and capable workers. O, I am so relieved! And Brother Hare is relieved. Yet I am unable to take any taxation; to attempt to think is a burden. I now lay this weight of responsibility off. If the Lord will give me a rested brain and heart, I will be willing to go anywhere, even back to America. But I see no light in any direction to move away from this place, for other burdens in other places would be waiting me.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 44)
One thing I know, we must be prepared to hold firmly to the truth as it is in Jesus. We cannot be beaten about by the waves of unbelief. We must have a sure anchorage; that we have, and the anchor holds. The end of all things is at hand. The third angel’s message will triumph and we must hold fast to the truth and triumph with it. Let them say all manner of evil against us falsely for Christ’s sake. They said all manner of evil against Christ, the Majesty of heaven, the world’s Redeemer. Then let them say what they will. We will not fail, or be discouraged.
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 45)
In much love,
(12LtMs, Lt 149, 1897, 46)
Mother.
Lt 149a, 1897
White, J. E.; White, Emma Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia May 30, 1897 Variant of Lt 149, 1897. Previously unpublished. Dear Children, Edson and Emma:
Next Monday the American mail leaves this location to be taken to Sydney on the morning mail train, and then it is taken from Sydney post office to the boat and across the broad waters of the Pacific for San Francisco.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 1)
I have but little to send on this boat. I have been suffering great exhaustion. My heart is the principal difficulty. I have studied seriously where I could find a place to draw away from the work and rest awhile, but I fail to imagine any such place. For three weeks I have taken no part in active labor. I have [not] in that time [been present] at family prayer or at the table.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 2)
I have been very grateful to my heavenly Father that He kept me by His power when I have stood so long, carrying the heavy load. Brother Metcalfe Hare has been united with me in all interests connected with our school. Two buildings have been erected—wholesome, convenient, and neat and well-proportioned buildings. There is nothing that bears the phase of ornamental. We have not one pound to spare in needless extras.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 3)
Between the two buildings of the same height we decided it not safe to depend upon iron tanks. We must have an underground cistern. We made provision at once to have this decision carried out. We transported men from Sydney, and there two men worked with dispatch. We had been passing through a drought for a number of weeks, yes, months, but the work was carried forward. The cistern is twelve feet deep. It is bricked up with two tiers of brick. It is dome shaped, built in the fashion of a jug, so that no surface water shall enter it. The brick was plastered over. The cistern was done. Everything that human agents could do was done. The buildings were enclosed.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 4)
We had no money to finish with plastering, but we were full of gratitude to God. All the people who were of the faith worked with a will, and we knew they realized the blessing of God. All are poor but they did what they could do, and beyond our expectation.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 5)
We had but a few days to wait. We were ready, and our heavenly Father sent the rain from the heavens. The tanks had been empty for weeks, but they were all filled. The immense cistern was about one-third full. I feel to praise the Lord every time I think of His great goodness in helping us in our great necessity. Surely we have had a remarkable blessing in this locality, while in regions not far from us cattle and sheep and horses are dying with hunger and thirst.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 6)
And now we are having a quiet rain. It rained last Friday and Sabbath in showers. Sunday and Monday the rain continued through the night, and it is raining, has been raining, all through the day. The large cistern at the school is full, I understand. The four tanks are full.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 7)
I wish and I pray that we may have our hearts filled with all the fullness of God as our cisterns and tanks are filled to overflowing. My heart is longing for the refreshing showers of grace from His presence, for His abundant fullness. The provision the Lord has made for us is too wonderful for us to comprehend and express, but it is not too rich for us to enjoy. It is the enjoyment of this great love the apostle attempts to describe. He speaks of the height, the depth, the breadth of the love of God, which it is our privilege to experience, but which is beyond our knowledge of expression. “Filled with all the fullness of God.” [Ephesians 3:18, 19.] I wish every empty human vessel would now be receiving the showers of the grace of Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 8)
The love of God is an exhaustless fountain. This great love is for us, and we may enjoy it. You have had the privilege, dear children, of tasting of that love and knowing that the Lord is good. This love is a reservoir that is continually supplied with abundant grace and goodness and love. Our hearts may be filled, and may expand and overflow with the fullness of this love of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 9)
Children, have faith in God. If you make mistakes, turn your defeat into victory. Your intensity of love and fidelity will be tested by difficulties and disappointments and trials that your faith shall overcome. The burden you bear for Christ’s sake, the service you render to Him in the complete surrender of your will and ways to God’s will, is the measurement of your love. 1 Peter 1:6-8.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 10)
Encourage faith, talk faith. Do not talk on the dark side. Do not talk of that which you see objectionable in the course others pursue, but talk of Jesus. The living transformation of heart, will, and character concerns us more than anything else. Test and trial come to every child of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 11)
I was conversing with you in the night season, as I mentioned in my letter to you about two or three months since. Before my letter could have reached you, a letter came to me stating the substance of the things I was talking with you about—that you had decided to heed the instruction given you of the Lord to leave mingling the temporal, financial enterprises with your work. This I know has ever been your danger. Now press close to the side of Jesus. Put your trust in Him, and never doubt that you will have wisdom to pursue a plain, straightforward path. He is waiting to speak to you from His Word, that you may speak to others in voicing the words of the Lord in His promises, in encouragement, in warnings. Lay aside every weight and run the race with patience, for there is a crown of life for you each, my children, to win.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 12)
Those who are almost wholly absorbed in the things of time and sense largely lose a sense of the sacred service they are to do for the Master. It may be that you will have inducements presented before you of a temporal character. You have had this kind of experience, and you know how the outcome has been. I fully believe the Lord will teach you, and if you have any light that your duty is elsewhere, it may be the Lord will turn your face this way. Do not hesitate to consult with us in regard to any plans that you may have. Serious times, I know, are before us, and my work must ere long be closed. While my mind and strength are yet granted me, I desire to do all that the Lord has given me to do. You say there are things you do not understand. There are things I do not understand. Why I have had so little suitable help in my work of getting out my books is a problem hard for me to comprehend. You could help me in this work. I have tugged and wrestled under great difficulties. Now I am exhausted. Why we could not be connected in our labor is a mystery.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 13)
Last [Monday] Elder Daniells, Brother Palmer, Brother Baker, and two students came from Victoria; also Brother Wilson and his wife from Tasmania. We were pleased to have them with us on the Sabbath and there was much to be done. Brother Hughes and his wife from America came, and we were very glad. I was not able to attend one meeting, but these brethren came to me to consult over matters of the school. I was so feeble I could scarcely talk with them, but my interest in the work led me to brace up as much as possible.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 14)
I am so very thankful that they came up. The meeting room was full, and our brethren who had not before seen the grounds were delighted with the situation. Elder Daniells was surprised at the improvements that have already been made in buildings and on the land. All were free to acknowledge that they were convinced that this was the very place where the school should be located.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 15)
There were some who thought the second building could not be completed in time to commence the school. We told them, we said, There will not be one day’s postponement. The students may come in. Several came from Melbourne several days before the appointed time. I had said, If there is but one student from other places we will begin the school at the appointed time, even if the building is not all completed.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 16)
We had a good opening, in the new building. The Spirit of the Lord was present. We were pleased and grateful to God that Brother Herbert Lacey was raised up from his sickness to be with us at the opening of the school and to act a part. Brother and Sister Haskell, as experienced laborers, were a great help and blessing to us in the preparation and devising and planing and working to get things in order that there should be no delay.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 17)
Every student who has come has expressed himself as happily disappointed in the appearance of the location and in the buildings erected. Not a murmur, not a word of dissatisfaction, has been heard from anyone. There is a good class of intelligent-minded youth.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 18)
Elder Haskell gives the Bible studies, and he makes everything so plain, so simple that every mind can take it in. How many times I have wished that you were here to listen to the precious words from the lips of the servant of God. All who listen to his words of presentation of the Word, setting before the minds truth in its simplicity, are conscious they are favored. They are learning the “It is written” and how to use the Word of God. “All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness, that the man of God may be perfect, throughly furnished unto all good works.” [2 Timothy 3:16, 17.] Then how important that we all shall appreciate the study of the Scriptures as calculated to make the student wise unto salvation. Precious Word! We are safe only as we eat and digest it. The charge of the apostle to his son Timothy is appropriate for all who claim to believe the truth. 2 Timothy 4:1-5. I am so thankful to God for the prosperity that has marked the work done on the school grounds. We are surprised at the number of the students already here, and others will be coming in.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 19)
If we can preserve the peace and grace of Jesus Christ in our hearts in trials and in difficulties, we shall go through them without discord, distraction, or division. There should be continually the cultivation of love for God, which gives Him our supreme devotion, and love for one another which will bring sunshine into the heart. We have trials, yes. We cannot control circumstances. But we have One in whom our hopes of eternal life are centered. We are undeserving of His great goodness and compassion and love in our behalf. Make it a point in your life never to forget this love. Notwithstanding our errors and mistakes we must not mar our experience by unbelief.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 20)
The Lord our Saviour throughout His entire life upon the earth was seeking to impress His own divine image in His character upon us. He is our sin bearer, and He would help you to carry His cross in service and in trial. He is close beside you, trying to have you realize how sorry He is for you when you make mistakes, and He is always ready to seize hold of the hand that is reached out to Him for help. Bear in mind always that it is not merely a human sympathy, a human heart that draws us by the cords of His love, but it is a love that is divine, that blends with the love of the human agent. “Surely he hath borne our griefs and carried our sorrows.” [Isaiah 53:4.] How? By entering into them and making them His own. Then set God ever before you as your Saviour and Friend. By beholding your Saviour you catch His divine likeness, imbibe His temper, and are imbued with His love.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 21)
Be of good cheer, my son and my daughter. I said I would not seek to influence you in any way to come to this country to help us. I would be very much pleased to see you both. If the Lord would see it best to direct your course this way, I would receive you gladly, but I do not want my desire and affection for my children to draw them away from the work the Lord has appointed you to do. If you feel the Lord would be pleased to have you in this country I would rejoice. I have had a very heavy burden to carry. You could have been a great help to me, and I have needed just that help you could give me. But if the Lord sees it not for your good and His name’s glory, I would not have you leave the work you have been engaged in.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 22)
In my experience I have been so very much alone, alone. With many around me but still alone. I can sometimes have a chance to “be still and know that I am God.” [Psalm 46:10.] I will not dwell upon myself. The Lord is my Helper. He is your Helper. Upon Christian principles and from a Christian basis we have pledged our individual selves to the service of the master, and it is an honor for us to have any connection with God.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 23)
Then too, consider that to us is addressed the words meaning so much, “We are laborers together with God: ye are God’s husbandry, ye are God’s building.” [1 Corinthians 3:9.] We have been quarried out of the world by the mighty cleaver of truth and we are in the workshop of God to be fitted, hewed, and squared. Axe and chisel will act their part upon the rough material, and then comes the polishing process.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 24)
All this work hurts the natural temperament, but there is no other process that can give the character the mold, the impression, of the likeness of Christ-His meekness, His lowliness. We will not become rebellious under the process of fitting up. We want no weak links in the chain of character that binds us to Christ. A whole Saviour was offered up on Calvary’s cross for us, that we may have a complete salvation, perfecting a character after the divine similitude. We are daily to labor earnestly to strengthen every right principle in our characters, that we may be hid with Christ in God.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 25)
You, my son, will never be situated where you will have no provocation by the strife of tongues. I am suffering this continually and more recently from one, McCullagh by name, whom I have treated as tenderly as if it was you, my son, in his place. Never one word or action in all our relation to each other has been unpleasant. He claimed to have perfect faith in the work the Lord had given me to do. He has been treated as a son in regard to careful tenderness. He and his wife have been made as welcome to my table as yourself and your Emma. He was ever seeking my counsel, for oft the whole [of the] churches in New South Wales have been left to our care.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 26)
He has insisted I should give the dedicatory discourse for three newly erected meetinghouses, and the Lord manifested His special presence and power in our midst. In tent meetings he was urgent for my labor, and knowing his physical weakness I would go at every call, again and again. I have ridden from Granville with my horse and phaeton nine, ten, twelve miles to speak in the evening. There was not a place where I could be accommodated and I have ridden back, getting to my bed about midnight. His plea was, “Come; I know what your labors in speaking do for the people. I speak understandingly. Come.” The Lord helped me and gave me perfect victory.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 27)
When I first came to Cooranbong to see the ground, that we might know whether it was best to purchase, Brother McCullagh was sick of inflammation of throat and lungs.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 28)
He could do no speaking, and he took his spring cot and blankets, designing to spend two or three weeks and enjoy the nice atmosphere, hoping it would be a blessing. We went in a boat up Dora Creek to [the] Avondale tract of land. From the light given me in the night season before I came, I was sure we were where the school for New South Wales should be located. When we returned to the humble cottage Brother and Sister Lawrence were occupying the brethren, about eight in number, had a meeting by themselves and decided to purchase the land.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 29)
Next morning at family worship the Spirit of the Lord indited prayer for Brother McCullagh. I felt a deep burden of prayer. It seemed that the whole room was full of unseen heavenly beings. Brother McCullagh was healed then and there. He said every particle of inflammation left him. He was very happy, declaring the Lord had wrought a miracle in his behalf. The next morning he returned to his labor and said he was never more free from any difficulty.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 30)
One morning he came to us and told us his harness had been stolen from the stable. I felt sorry for him and gave him three pounds fifteen shillings to purchase a harness. I had purchased boxes of fruit—peaches and other fruit—and sent [them to] him without charge. These boxes cost me four and five shillings a box. Thus I felt toward him.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 31)
He had a severe sickness last summer. His life was supposed to be in a very precarious condition, and he was advised to go to Adelaide. The weather is mild there. After our camp meeting Elder Hawkins and McCullagh, who seemed to be earnest in the work, were left to bind up the work for a time. Brother Wilson and his wife were with them, but Brother Wilson returned to Tasmania and these men were left with the work.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 32)
The first news that came to Melbourne that was both of these ministers had sent in their resignation, professing that conscientiously they could no longer be connected with Seventh-day Adventists. Brethren Colcord and Daniells immediately went to Adelaide and found that, while under pay to the conference, these men had been working in a most subtle, deceiving manner until the whole church was being carried with them. Their entrancing hobby was the Holy Spirit, sanctification, nothing but Christ. All doctrines were of no value. They presented these deceptive presentations, and worked as the great apostate worked in heaven in that first rebellion. It seemed a repetition on a small scale, resembling the workings of the first great rebel.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 33)
These men would not have any intercourse with our brethren. They had each received three pounds five—sixteen dollars and one shilling per week. While receiving this sum from the conference they were acting out Satan’s attributes in deception. These men visited from house to house, and the most wicked falsehoods came from the lips of Mr. and Mrs. McCullagh. They had not intimated one word to me of any difficulty. They had not laid their complaints before me and given me an opportunity to speak for myself, but they had been from family to family, telling the most tremendous falsehoods concerning me, and yet they claimed to be inspired by the Holy Spirit. We do not for a moment doubt the fact that they were inspired exactly as was Lucifer in the heavenly courts in his rebellion.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 34)
The Holy Spirit never leads men to act entirely contrary to the Word. The directions are plain. We are bound by all the holy motives which the Word of God recognizes to be true, steadfast to principle. In all my experience I have not met with such deep-laid plottings. They gave no intimation of their purposes until they had everything prepared to make a break and carry the whole church, and then what these two men expected was to be supported and establish a school in Adelaide and preach against Adventists, oppose the third angel’s message, and carry out their rebellion to perfection.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 35)
The sin in this raid against me is mostly of McCullagh’s devising. For two years he has been finding fault with every minister, and he has been serving the enemy of God by uniting with the apostate to help him in his work of accusing the brethren. The first step in this direction is dangerous ground for any human being to enter upon. I am sorry, so sorry, for McCullagh. I was so distressed at the thought that the man was doing despite to the Spirit, the Holy Spirit, and was placing himself beyond recovery. I did all I could do to save him. I wrote to both men, but nothing we could say had the least influence to change their purpose.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 36)
Nearly all the church saw their error in listening to the words of these men and are now standing in a good position. It was their lies, which were told from house to house, from place to place, that deceived and came near ruining the church. Why did they not come to me, who had been their friend, and tell me? No, they did not do this, but reported those things which they knew were entirely false.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 37)
The eternal Word is reliable, and the word of man is not reliable. I have felt so deeply over this treacherous work. It has been as a sword in my heart. Now where are they? McCullagh is in Adelaide still. He reported he was going to Sydney, but he has not come yet. He wrote a letter to Sydney to Mrs. Hextall, who was his special admirer, that he wished her to get up a subscription paper to raise money to get his family back to Sydney. This one woman had her son put their name to the paper and that is all. We feared the churches in New South Wales would be tried and shaken, because they were new in the faith. He has sent letters to different ones appealing to them for sympathy and bemoaning his poverty. But these letters contained the most bitter spirit against me and were a list of lies.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 38)
Then Shannon, our house builder, has done a similar work. It seemed that he and Lawrence had connected together, and poor, deceived, deluded men manufactured the most absurd statements about Avondale and the school premises and the workers. These spirits united because work was not given them at a price we could not pay. Thus every step we advanced toward the completion of the school buildings has been by working at great odds.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 39)
Brother Haskell and Sister Hurd Haskell have been a great blessing here. Brother Haskell was called to Adelaide, and I stood alone with Brother Metcalfe Hare to take the meetings on the Sabbath. Brother Herbert Lacey was sick with fever in Sydney, and we tried to do our best. As soon as Brother Haskell came, I let loose the burden of buildings and church and have been in a state of great exhaustion. I was able to be at the opening of the school. Elder Haskell and his wife, and Brother Herbert Lacey and his wife, were present. There was a much better beginning than we had feared. Since that time I have attended meetings but once or twice, but I am ready to counsel with them.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 40)
I am more pleased than I can tell you with the help we have in Elder Haskell as a worker in the school. His wife also works, giving Bible lessons. Brother Haskell has been opening the Scriptures upon the sanctuary subject. He makes the matter stand out clear and forcible. Sister Haskell gives the lessons in Revelation and makes the subject very plain. All are pleased. It is so nice to have workers who have had an experimental knowledge of the Word of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 41)
Brother Hughes and wife, we are sure, will use their experience in school management as wise and capable workers. Oh, I am so relieved! Brother Hare is relieved. But I am unable to take any taxation; to attempt to think is a burden. I now lay off this weight of responsibility. If the Lord will give me a rested brain and a rested heart I will be willing now to go anywhere, even back to America. But I see no light to move away from this place in any direction, for other burdens in other places would be awaiting me.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 42)
One thing I know, we must be prepared to hold the truth as it is in Jesus firmly. We cannot be wobbling around. We must have sure anchorage, and that we have, and the anchor holds. The end of all things is at hand. The third angel’s message will triumph and we must hold fast the truth and triumph with it. Let them say all manner of evil against us falsely for Christ’s sake. They said all manner of evil of Christ, the Majesty of heaven, the world’s Redeemer. Then let them say what they will. We will not fail or be discouraged.
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 43)
In much love,
(12LtMs, Lt 149a, 1897, 44)
Mother.
Lt 150, 1897
White, J. E.; White, Emma “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, Australia November 6, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in TMK 126; 4MR 361. Dear Children:
I shall not be able to write you much this mail. I left the campground, Stanmore, Monday morning, quite sick. I had spoken Sabbath and Sunday afternoons to the crowds that assembled, also Wednesday, making six times. Then I spoke five times in early morning meeting, and twice in special meetings. At one meeting all the ministers and most of the workers were together. This was a meeting of very great burden to me. I had very positive, close, earnest work to do, and the burden upon my soul cut me down. This was Friday, at the early morning special meeting. But I received strength to bear up and speak Sabbath and Sunday. I left for home on Monday, November 1. I have been very sick. In some respects I seem a little better, but I find myself this morning weak and tottering. I do not expect to be able to attend the Melbourne camp meeting.
(12LtMs, Lt 150, 1897, 1)
The Sydney camp meeting has been to all appearances the most promising camp meeting we have yet held. Public meetings began October 21, 1897. At the first meeting the tent was filled, and a crowd stood upon the outside. Thus it was every day when public meetings were announced. On Sabbaths and Sundays a crowd assembled, also on Wednesday afternoons, which is a holiday. I learn from Brother and Sister Wilson, who came to Cooranbong a few days since, that the interest has not lessened but increased.
(12LtMs, Lt 150, 1897, 2)
Stanmore is midway between Sydney and Ashfield, and is one of the most thickly settled suburbs, and a very pretty place. Elder Baker has located in this place, and I learn that Elder Haskell has hired a roomy house, in which to make a home for the workers. Elders Robinson and Farnsworth, with their wives, remained to hold meetings over the past Sabbath and Sunday, and will continue helping them with the tent labor until next Thursday, when Cook’s Excursion leaves for Melbourne. On this the workers can go for half price. Elder Haskell and wife and Elder Starr and wife will continue the work in Stanmore, and educate workers to carry on the work that they may be fitted to do.
(12LtMs, Lt 150, 1897, 3)
Oh, how my heart longs to see the workers place themselves in positions where the Lord can pour out His Holy Spirit abundantly upon them, that they may give God all the glory of the increase, and not take any credit to themselves. Here is where the Spirit of God is quenched. Man is placed where God should be if any good is accomplished. God has not received the glory, and man has been exalted as the One who gave the increase. I am ashamed that it is so. My heart aches; because our prosperity as a people depends wholly upon our dependence upon God for our sufficiency, grace, and perfection of character in and through our Saviour, who has paid the ransom for us with His own glorious merits. Had He not done this, we should have perished in our sins.
(12LtMs, Lt 150, 1897, 4)
When I consider how men are exalted and lifted up and praised, I am afraid for their ruin; because pride springs up, and self-importance buds and blossoms and the Spirit of the Lord is grieved. He cannot put His Spirit upon them, although He has an inexhaustible supply, because they would become self-righteous and forget from whence cometh their strength. All the glory, all the wisdom, that the most capable possess, all the endowments and talents, come from God.
(12LtMs, Lt 150, 1897, 5)
“Thus saith the Lord, Let not the wise man glory in his wisdom, neither let the mighty man glory in his might, let not the rich man glory in his riches: but let him that glorieth glory in this, that he understandeth and knoweth me, that I am the Lord which exercise lovingkindness, judgment, and righteousness, in the earth: for in these things I delight, saith the Lord.” [Jeremiah 9:23, 24.] This is the most precious reproof and encouragement, the most important lesson, for every soul that is trying to serve God. Here is expressed in plain words that in which the Lord delights. All who understand and know God will know Him as One that exercises lovingkindness, judgment, and righteousness. If they walk humbly with God, they will be enabled to keep the way of the Lord, to do His will in all kindness, compassion, mercy, tenderness, and love, for God has said, “In these things I delight.” Then how careful should we be in regard to the fruit of the lips, that we dishonor not God by dealing unkindly with the purchase of His blood.
(12LtMs, Lt 150, 1897, 6)
If we express the character of God, we shall be Christian gentlemen and gentlewomen. “But he that glorieth, let him glory in the Lord; for not he that commendeth himself is approved, but whom the Lord commendeth.” [2 Corinthians 10:17, 18.] “But he is a Jew, which is one inwardly; and circumcision is that of the heart, in the spirit, and not in the letter, whose praise is not of men, but of God.” [Romans 2:29.]
(12LtMs, Lt 150, 1897, 7)
I have much pain of heart as I see some of our brethren who are preaching the Word, and who stand in positions of responsibility, but who have little of the anointing oil which would give them clear, spiritual eyesight in regard to the way in which they should deal with their brethren in the faith. Some are exalted beyond measure, and in this they are ruined. Had they been treated wisely, had they received less praise, and been extolled less, they would not have become so puffed up as though they were superior men, of great wisdom. Mismanaged, they became self-inflated, and thought themselves as gods, capable of handling great things. They lost their balance and fell.
(12LtMs, Lt 150, 1897, 8)
Again, many that have become disheartened need words of encouragement. But the words that ought to be spoken by men who watch for souls are not spoken. We need much to see the work of God moving upon heart and intellect, to develop men who have the testimony that their ways please God. There is need of men who are worked, not by human agencies, but by the Holy Spirit. This will make them all-round men. Why are they not thus now? Because they have not perfect faith and perfect trust and perfect confidence in One who is wise in counsel, who never makes a mistake. There is so little of the deep moving of the Spirit of God upon hearts, that Satan, who as a deceiver represents himself as God, often succeeds.
(12LtMs, Lt 150, 1897, 9)
There is not the least need of making false movements, because the Lord has said, “If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, who giveth to all men liberally, and upbraideth not. But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering; for he that wavereth is like a wave of the sea, driven by the wind and tossed. For let not that man think that he shall receive any thing of the Lord. A double-minded man is unstable in all his ways.” [James 1:5-8.] We have not walked by faith as we should, but by sight. Is it not time that we educated ourselves to cultivate faith? I am now not well, but I do not lose faith. I believe in God, and shall continue to hold fast my grasp upon the promises, and fight the good fight of faith.
(12LtMs, Lt 150, 1897, 10)
If we believe the Word of God, we shall be strong in the strength which the Lord through Jesus Christ has provided for us. We need to bear in mind constantly the efficiency of the Holy Spirit. Why is it that we have so little of the power of the Spirit of God? It is because we do not lay hold of the provision made for us. What subject did our Lord rely upon to comfort His disciples when He was about to leave them? He had many subjects to bring before them, but out of the multitude He chose that of the promise of the Holy Spirit. “He shall teach you all things, and bring all things to your remembrance.” [John 14:26.]
(12LtMs, Lt 150, 1897, 11)
Many things that were desirable Christ had set before His disciples, but the gift of the Holy Spirit was the all-powerful subject. In receiving the Holy Spirit, all other blessings would be included. It is the richest gift, of the greatest and most extensive plentitude. The capacity of the human agent alone determines the greatness of the gift he may receive. God help us to receive the rich gift of the Holy Spirit. Have faith in God, trust in Him, and you will have light and life.
(12LtMs, Lt 150, 1897, 12)
Lt 151, 1897
White, J. E.; White, Emma “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia August 29, 1897 See variant Lt 151a, 1897. Potions of this letter are published in 1MR 177-178. + My children:
Let nothing interpose between your souls and God. If you think that you are not understood, if words are spoken that hurt the soul, do not become discouraged. Be encouraged that there is One who understands. He knows how to help you in every time of need.
(12LtMs, Lt 151, 1897, 1)
“Then shalt thou see and flow together, and thine heart shall fear, and be enlarged; because the abundance of the sea shall be converted unto thee, the forces of the Gentiles shall come unto thee.” [Isaiah 60:5.] There will be many conversions, not so much from the church as from the world. “And they shall show forth the praise of the Lord.” [Verse 6.] The Lord has a work for you to do. Bear this in mind, and never, never unyoke from Christ. “Take my yoke upon you,” He says to every son and daughter. “Learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart, and thou shalt find rest unto thy soul. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.” [Matthew 11:29, 30.]
(12LtMs, Lt 151, 1897, 2)
The Lord will pardon our transgressions, and put a new song into our mouth. “I will greatly rejoice in the Lord; my soul shall be joyful in my God; for he hath clothed me with the garments of righteousness.” [Isaiah 61:10.] We cannot exert a correct influence when we are under a cloud of anxiety and depression. We must reach out the hand of faith, and grasp the hand of our Redeemer. We must not wait for the latter rain. It is coming upon all who will recognize and appropriate the dew and showers of grace that fall upon us.
(12LtMs, Lt 151, 1897, 3)
When we gather up the fragments of light, when we appreciate the sure mercies of God, who loves to have us trust Him, then every promise will be fulfilled. “For as the earth bringeth forth her bud, and as the garden causeth the things that are sown in it to spring forth; so the Lord will cause righteousness and praise to spring forth before all the nations.” [Verse 11.] The whole earth is to be filled with the glory of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 151, 1897, 4)
We are not to look on the discouraging features of our experience. We are to bear a clear, ringing testimony to the world. We are to lift up our heads in faith and hope and courage and assurance. “For Zion’s sake will I not hold my peace, and for Jerusalem’s sake will I not rest, until the righteousness thereof go forth as brightness, and the salvation thereof as a lamp that burneth. And the Gentiles shall see thy light and all kings thy glory. And thou shalt be called by a new name, which the mouth of the Lord shall name. Then shalt thou also be a crown of glory in the hand of the Lord, and a royal diadem in the hands of thy God. Thou shalt no more be termed Forsaken; neither shall thy land be any more termed Desolate; but thou shalt be called Hephzi-bah, and thy land Beulah; for the Lord delighteth in thee, and thy land shall be married. For as a young man marrieth a virgin, so shall thy sons marry thee; and as the bridegroom rejoiceth over the bride, so shall thy God rejoice over thee.
(12LtMs, Lt 151, 1897, 5)
“I have set watchmen upon thy walls, O Jerusalem, which shall never hold their peace day nor night; ye that make mention of the Lord keep not silence.... Go through, go through the gates; prepare ye the way of the people; cast up, cast up the highway; gather out the stones; lift up a standard for the people. Behold, the Lord hath proclaimed unto the end of the world, Say ye to the daughter of Zion, Behold thy salvation cometh; behold, his reward is with him, and his work before him. And they shall call them, The holy people, The redeemed of the Lord; and thou shalt be called, Sought out, A city not forsaken.” [Isaiah 62:1-6, 10-12.]
(12LtMs, Lt 151, 1897, 6)
I have been directed to these words of the Lord, given to Isaiah, and also His words to His servant Jeremiah: “Seek ye the Lord while he may be found; call ye upon him while he is near; let the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts, and let him return unto the Lord, and he will have mercy upon him; and to our God, for he will abundantly pardon. For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are my ways your ways, saith the Lord. For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways, and my thoughts than your thoughts, saith the Lord.” [Isaiah 55:6-9.] See also Isaiah 56:6-12.
(12LtMs, Lt 151, 1897, 7)
There is marrow and fatness in the Word of the Lord, both in the Old and New Testaments. If the individual members of the church will seek the Lord with all their heart, He will be found of them.
(12LtMs, Lt 151, 1897, 8)
I address you, my son and my daughter; again I repeat, Let nothing interpose between your heart service to your God. Keep your eyes steadfastly fixed upon Jesus Christ. Let nothing draw your heart’s devotion from Him. Be true to your Saviour. Heed every word of warning given you. Had those in Battle Creek who have been warned taken heed to the word of the Lord, they would today have been walking in the light. God will not prosper a people who disregard and turn from His messages to please and glorify themselves.
(12LtMs, Lt 151, 1897, 9)
Reformation has not yet begun in Battle Creek. Changes in places and positions have been made, but the hearts of those who have not been molded after the divine similitude are not changed. They see not, nor understand over what they have stumbled. Their eyes need the heavenly eyesalve. Many will not see, neither will they humble their hearts before God. They will follow their own pernicious ways. By these the way of truth will be evil spoken of. They will not hide in the cleft of the Rock that they may behold the glory of the Lord. They will be taken unawares. As a thief will the day of God come upon them. They will not be sanctified, or prepared to see or understand the day of their visitation.
(12LtMs, Lt 151, 1897, 10)
I speak to you, my son. Put not your confidence in man. Make not flesh your arm. Look to your Saviour, who is your strength and your righteousness. Walk humbly before God. Pray in faith, and cling firmly to the hand of Christ. Make complaint of no one. If you see any one doing wrong, go directly to him and in the meekness of Christ tell him, and no one else, his error. Cultivate cautiousness, and trust in the Lord implicitly, for He is your defense. Again and again you have been encouraged to undertake projects that you should have left alone. Then when your weakness has appeared, when the results of following not in the way of the Lord are seen, those who have encouraged you have stood aside, without tenderness or sympathy, letting you bear the whole blame of the wrong.
(12LtMs, Lt 151, 1897, 11)
I say again, Put your whole trust in the Lord. Consecrate yourself, soul, body, and spirit to Him. “Be ye clean that bear the vessels of the Lord.” [Isaiah 52:11.] The truth passing through impure channels becomes marred by the corroding of the thoughts and actions of those who advocate it. “Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father which is in heaven is perfect.” [Matthew 5:48.] Perfection is only obtained when we hide ourselves in the cleft of the Rock. God’s perfection is revealed in the humanity of Christ. Looking unto Jesus, eating His flesh and drinking His blood, we will reveal Him in character. We will then look upon the trust given us as sacred. We will do the work which must be done in and through Christ, sanctified by His power and efficiency.
(12LtMs, Lt 151, 1897, 12)
“In his mouth was found no guile.” [1 Peter 2:22.] No cheap, careless words, called “idle words” will be spoken, because Christ will be an abiding guest in the soul-temple. [Matthew 12:36.] “Thou hast a few names even in Sardis which have not defiled their garments, and they shall walk with me in white; for they are worthy. He that overcometh, the same shall be clothed in white raiment; and I will not blot out his name out of the book of life, but I will confess his name before my Father and before his angels.” [Revelation 3:4, 5.]
(12LtMs, Lt 151, 1897, 13)
My children, we must advance to reach a higher standard. The true position of many who are handling sacred things is being presented before me. They do not appreciate their sacredness or their sanctifying influence, because they do not appropriate the Word. They do not eat and digest Christ’s Word, and therefore they cannot reveal the power of His grace in their daily life. They know only the ABC of Christian experience. They do not take precious walks with Jesus as did Enoch. They do not commune with Him, for they do not know God nor Jesus Christ whom He has sent.
(12LtMs, Lt 151, 1897, 14)
“Behold, I come as a thief. Blessed is he that watcheth and keepeth his garments, lest he walk naked, and they see his shame.” [Revelation 16:15.] “For we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ, that every one may receive the things done in his body, according to that he hath done, whether it be good or bad.” [2 Corinthians 5:10.] “Therefore if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature; old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new.” [Verse 17.] We will not then retain our old, sinful habits and practices, for we are cleansed, we are sanctified, as vessels unto honor. “Whosoever abideth in him, sinneth not: whosoever sinneth hath not seen him, neither known him. Little children, let no man deceive you: he that doeth righteousness is righteous, even as he is righteous.” [1 John 3:6.]
(12LtMs, Lt 151, 1897, 15)
Children, read the Word. You are then eating the flesh and drinking the blood of the Son of God. I am greatly burdened over many who, deceived in themselves, are not walking in the light. Their garments are defiled by sin. “This is the love of God that we keep his commandments.... For whatsoever is born of God overcometh the world, and this is the victory that overcometh the world, even our faith.” [1 John 5:3, 4.]
(12LtMs, Lt 151, 1897, 16)
Again the burden rolls upon me to charge you to counsel with God. Ask of Him wisdom. He invites you to come, saying, “If any man lack wisdom, let him ask of God, who giveth to all men liberally, and upbraideth not, and it shall be given him. But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering; for he that wavereth is like a wave of the sea, driven by the wind and tossed. For let not that man think that he shall receive any thing of the Lord.” [James 1:5-7.]
(12LtMs, Lt 151, 1897, 17)
Do not be surprised that I am solicitous for you. I am very much so when you are in Battle Creek, for I am afraid in your behalf. I am afraid that you will follow the counsel of men, failing to walk where Christ leads the way. I have had opened before me many schemes that men in positions of trust have entered into, schemes that lead away from Christ and righteous principles. Those who entered into these schemes are still blinded; they cannot see at what they stumble.
(12LtMs, Lt 151, 1897, 18)
I want you to look to God and to Him alone. The Lord has not said, If any man lack wisdom, let him go to his neighbor, his pastor, and pray to him, and he shall receive. No; you must have an individual experience for yourself. Then that which you freely receive, freely give. Communicate to others. You are not to gauge your course of action by what others think of you. Work faithfully, with an eye single to the glory of God. To every man He has given his work.
(12LtMs, Lt 151, 1897, 19)
“Come unto me,” He says, “all ye that labor and are heavy laden. Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly of heart, and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.” [Matthew 11:28-30.] Do not turn away from Jesus to broken cisterns that can hold no water. All I ask of you, Edson and Emma, is to walk with God in all humility, Trust in Him who is true and faithful, and then you will be found of Him in peace. He will put His Spirit upon you, saying, “Be strong, yea, be strong.” [Daniel 10:19.]
(12LtMs, Lt 151, 1897, 20)
Lt 151a, 1897
White, J. E.; White, Emma NP August 29, 1897 Variant of Lt 151, 1897. Portions of this letter are published in 4Bio 319. My Children:
Let nothing interpose between your souls and God. If you think you are not understood, and words are spoken to hurt your souls, do not be discouraged, but be encouraged that there is One who understands. He knows how to help you in every time of need.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 1)
These words we repeated, for they were being fulfilled: “Then thou shalt see, and flow together, and thine heart shall fear, and be enlarged; because the abundance of the sea shall be converted unto thee, the forces of the Gentiles shall come unto thee.”Isaiah 60:5. There will be many conversions, not so abundant from the churches as from the world, and they shall show forth the praises of the Lord.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 2)
The Lord has a work for you to do. Bear this in mind. Never, never unyoke from Christ. “Take my yoke,” He says to every son and daughter; “learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.”Matthew 11:29, 30. The Lord will pardon our transgressions and will put a new song into our mouths. “I will greatly rejoice in the Lord, my soul shall be joyful in my God: for he hath clothed me with the garments of salvation, he hath covered me with the robe of righteousness.”Isaiah 61:10.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 3)
We cannot exert a correct influence when we are under a cloud of anxiety and depression. We must reach up the hand of faith and grasp the hand of our Redeemer. We must not wait for the latter rain, for it is coming upon all who recognize and appropriate the dew and showers of grace that will come upon us. When we gather up the fragments of light, when we appreciate the sure mercies of a God who loves to have us trust Him, then every promise will be fulfilled. “For as the earth bringeth forth her bud, and as the garden causeth the things that are sown in it to spring forth; so the Lord God will cause righteousness and praise to spring forth before all the nations.”Verse 11. The whole earth is to be filled with the glory of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 4)
We are not to look on the discouraging features of our experience. We are to have a clear, ringing testimony to bear to the world. We are to lift up our heads in faith and hope and courage and assurance. “For Zion’s sake will I not hold my peace, and for Jerusalem’s sake I will not rest, until the righteousness thereof go forth as brightness, and the salvation thereof as a lamp that burneth. And the Gentiles shall see thy righteousness, and all kings thy glory: and thou shalt be called by a new name, which the mouth of the Lord shall name. Thou shalt also be a crown of glory in the hand of the Lord, and a royal diadem in the hand of thy God.”Isaiah 62:1-3. We have abundant reason to praise the Lord God of Israel. Verses 4, 5, 6, 10-12. I have been directed to these words of the Lord in Isaiah, also to His servant Jeremiah, and I have a word for the people.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 5)
“Seek ye the Lord while he may be found, call ye upon him while he is near. Let the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts: and let him return unto the Lord, and he will have mercy upon him; and to our God, for he will abundantly pardon. For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, saith the Lord. For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways, and my thoughts than your thoughts.”Isaiah 55:6-9.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 6)
There is marrow and fatness in the Word of the Lord, both in the New and Old Testament Scriptures, and if the individual members of the church will seek the Lord with all their heart He will be found of them.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 7)
I address you, my son and my daughter; again I repeat, let nothing interpose between your hearts and service to your God. Keep your eyes steadfastly fixed upon Jesus Christ. Let nothing draw away your hearts’ devotion. Be true to your Saviour. Heed every word of warning given you. Had the men and women who have been warned in Battle Creek taken heed to the Word of the Lord they would today be walking in the light. God will not prosper a people who disregard and turn from His messages to please and glorify themselves.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 8)
The reformation has not begun in Battle Creek yet. Changes have been made in places and positions, but the hearts who have not been molded after the divine similitude are not changed and see not nor understand over what they have stumbled. Their eyes need the heavenly eyesalve. But many will not see, neither will they humble their hearts before the Lord. They will follow their own pernicious ways by which the way of truth will be evil spoken of. They will not hide in the cleft of the Rock that they may behold the glory of the Lord. They will be taken unawares. As a thief will the day of God come upon them, and they are not sanctified or prepared to see or understand the day of their visitation.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 9)
I speak to you, my son, put not your confidence in man, and make not flesh your arm, but look unto your Saviour who is your strength and your righteousness. Walk humbly before God, pray in faith and cling firmly to the hand of Christ. Make complaint of no one. If you see one doing wrong, go directly to that one and in the meekness of Christ tell him, and no one else, his error. Cultivate cautiousness and trust in the Lord implicitly, for He is your defense.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 10)
Again and again you have been encouraged to undertake some methods and projects which you could have left alone. Then when your weakness has appeared, in going in a path not the way of the Lord, those who have encouraged you stood aside to let you bear the whole suffering of the wrong, without tenderness or sympathy. Now, I saw, you must put your whole trust in the Lord. Consecrate yourself soul, body, and spirit to God. “Be ye clean that bear the vessels of the Lord.” [Isaiah 52:11.] The truth passing through impure channels becomes marred by the corroding of the thoughts and words and works of those who advocate it.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 11)
“Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father which is in heaven is perfect.”Matthew 5:48. Perfection is only obtained when we shall hide ourselves in the cleft of the Rock. God’s perfection is revealed in the humanity of Christ. Looking unto Jesus, eating His flesh and drinking His blood—which is His Word, which is Spirit and life—we will reveal Christ in character. We will take hold of the sacred trusts of responsibility as sacred, and do the work which must be done in and through Christ Jesus, sanctified by His power and His efficiency. In His mouth was found no guile. Not a careless, cheap word—called “idle words”—will be spoken, because Christ is an abiding guest in the soul temple.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 12)
Who will be overcomers? “Thou hast a few names even in Sardis which have not defiled their garments; and they shall walk with me in white: for they are worthy. He that overcometh, the same shall be clothed in white raiment; and I will not blot out his name out of the book of life, but I will confess his name before my Father, and before His angels.”Revelation 3:4, 5.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 13)
I say unto you, my children, we must advance to reach a higher standard. I am having presented before me the true position of many handling sacred things. They do not appreciate their sacredness, neither their sanctifying influence, because they do not appropriate the truth, eat the Word, digest it, and reveal the power of the grace of Jesus Christ in their practical life. They know only the ABC of Christian experience. They do not take the precious walks with Jesus as did Enoch. They do not commune with Him and do not know God nor Jesus Christ whom He hath sent.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 14)
“Behold, I come as a thief. Blessed is he that watcheth, and keepeth his garments, lest he walk naked, and they see his shame.”Revelation 16:15. “For we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ: that every one may receive the things done in his body, according to that he hath done, whether it be good or bad.”2 Corinthians 5:10. “Therefore if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new.”Verse 17. We will not then retain our old sinful habits and practices. We are cleansed; we are sanctified as vessels unto honor. “Whosoever abideth in him sinneth not: whosoever sinneth hath not seen him, neither known him. Little children, let no man deceive you: he that doeth righteousness is righteous, even as he is righteous.”1 John 3:6, 7.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 15)
Children, read the Word and practice it, then you are eating the flesh and drinking the blood of the Son of God, and He hath eternal life. I am burdened very greatly over the many who are deceived in themselves, who are not walking in the light, who are not prepared for the coming of Christ, whose garments are defiled with sin. “For this is the love of God, that we keep his commandments ... For whatsoever is born of God overcometh the world: and this is the victory that overcometh the world, even our faith.”1 John 5:3, 4.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 16)
Dear Children:
Again the burden rolls upon me to charge you: Counsel with God. Ask of Him wisdom. The Lord Jesus invites you, “If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him. But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering. For he that wavereth is like a wave of the sea, driven by the wind and tossed. For let not that man think that he shall receive any thing of the Lord.”James 1:5-7.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 17)
But, children, do not be surprised that I feel solicitous for you. I am very much so when you are abiding in Battle Creek, for I am afraid in your behalf that you will follow the counsel of men and not walk every step where Christ leads the way. I have had laid open before me so many schemes that men in positions of trust have entered into that were leading away from correct and righteous principles. They are still so blinded that they cannot see at what they stumble. I want you to look to God and Him alone. The Lord has not said, If any man lack wisdom let him go to his neighbor, his pastor, and pray to him, and he shall receive. No; you must have an individual experience for yourself. Then that which you freely receive, freely give. Communicate to others.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 18)
You are not to gauge your course of action by what others may think or say of you, but work faithfully with an eye single to the glory of God. To every man He has given his work. “Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn of me, for I am meek and lowly in heart, and ye shall find rest unto your souls.” [Matthew 11:28, 29.] Do not turn away from Jesus and go to human, broken cisterns that can hold no water. All I ask of you, Edson and Emma, is to walk with God in all humility of mind. Trust in Him who is true and faithful, and then you will be found of Him and He will put His Spirit upon you. Say, Be strong, yea, be strong.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 19)
I know not when W. C. White will be here. I hope before the school closes we shall see him. All are anxiously looking for him and very desirous that he shall come. We have provided a good comfortable house for him, but it is not thoroughly furnished. I have not one question or doubt in reference to this matter. It is not one particle extravagant, but plain as plain can be. Nothing extra, but it is convenient. There is oilcloth on dining room floor, and matting on May’s and Willie’s room and the twins’ room. They remain healthy and pleasant, but full of life from the hair of their heads to the soles of their feet. Wherever we go—Sara and I—we take the babies with us.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 20)
May and Sara and I and the twins went six miles in the country to get oranges. We get the best oranges I have ever tasted, good-sized ones, at threepence (six cents) per dozen. We shall get these oranges for some months to come. Have plenty of excellent lemons at the same price as the oranges. We shall have, I expect, a good crop of peaches and apricots and nectarines. I wish you could be here in orange time, which is now, and in peach time in November. The twin boys enjoy fruit—peaches, oranges, mandarins.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 21)
We have two oranges on one little tree which has been planted only one year. We hope we may see oranges on our trees next year, if not many. We want to see some growing. Brother Martin came from Kellyville and brought us navel oranges and planted them in our front yard. They are, you know, always green. This kind never grows large but bears the best fruit and we expect to raise all the oranges we shall use, in one or two years. We purchase twenty dozen at a time for our family.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 22)
The house I built for W. C. White: There is an eight-foot veranda around two sides of the house. Then I have an underground cistern fourteen feet deep and sixteen feet across. This makes it of large circumference. It is bricked up in cement. We have had drought for one year since we came here. I have a large brick oven built out of doors and we have the most beautiful bread. May uses the oven, also Sister James. Her husband is our farmer. We have an extensive creek; the water never fails. The washhouse is built close by the creek, and the water is pumped up into a barrel and we have washtubs set in this house. We have a furnace bricked in, and a large iron boiler. We kindle a fire under the boiler and there we heat water and can fruit, take baths, and wash our clothes. This serves for ourselves, Sister James, and May.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 23)
We seem to be a confederacy, a company concern, and we are glad to help one another with our conveniences. We have a fruit-house filled with shelves made of brick close by our house. Here we keep our canned fruit, our oranges, lemons, apples, or anything we have. The reason we built the piazzas on Willie’s house is so the children can live out of doors rain or shine. This makes them the picture of health.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 24)
Wednesday, August 24
These pages I wrote with one eye closed and by lamp light. You may be perplexed to read them.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 25)
Elder Haskell has just left us. He went to Sydney Monday to see in regard to the lumber for the chapel. Brother Lamplough went with him. Their bill of lumber was procured on better terms than Brother Hare could purchase it, because Lamplough was a builder. All lumber, iron work, and windows are now ordered, so as soon as the boat shall land the lumber, the work will go on.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 26)
Brother Haskell, Sara, and I went to see Brother Hardy. At first he was a little offish but when we proposed he take hold with Brother Lamplough as director his attitude directly changed and he says he will take hold with Lamplough. We have now secured Lamplough, Baron, and Hardy as good builders. Five more men will unite with these and put up the building in the next six weeks. Another class of men are clearing the land, so we have now the workmen. Brother Clayton in Sydney is making the seats. At two o’clock we go to the school to give decision in regard to style of seats. Also I promised to go and decide the exact location of meetinghouse.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 27)
This morning I have been reading critically several chapters on the life of Christ. We have had a visit from two young ladies by the name of Nicholas, a half-breed, a missionary, and a young man, son of a prince, who is visiting around the world. He is a native of Tahiti, and he decided to spend the rest of this term in the school. Then he thinks he will obtain the consent of his father to attend the next term.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 28)
August 27
This afternoon I was notified I was wanted on the site of the meetinghouse to see and approve the facing of the building. We met Brother Haskell and Nelson Lamplough, and several men working and clearing off the immense monarchs of the forest. The bullock team, seven span of oxen, were drawing away the trees and piling them up to burn. They burn leaving only a pile of white ashes. We had them all put in heaps on the immediate grounds, so that the building will go up without obstruction. We all agreed as to the facing of the building.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 29)
The second bullock team came with the first load of lumber at four o’clock on Friday. I assure you it is a lively time here now to build this small temple for the worship of God—which we needed so much. Every one is willing to do in labor or in money to help build, and all are full of enthusiasm to push the work through in five weeks and have the building completed. The cost will be about six hundred pounds. We think it is a good work to be pushed while the animation and zeal are on, for the Spirit of God is moving the people to arise and build. Every one of the students wants a hand in the building if he can find a place to work. The master builders are Hardy and Lamplough and Baron.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 30)
The work will have to be done without a day’s loss if we finish in time, and the delegates will visit the school and see the improvements made. Tuesday night I had prayed most earnestly at family prayers for the Lord to manifest unto us His mercy and His will, and urged my petition before the throne of grace. We were preparing for a large meeting and we were making our intercessions and pleading with God. That night a voice spoke to me, “Tell the people, ‘Arise, shine, for thy light is come, and the glory of the Lord is risen upon thee. For, behold, the darkness shall cover the earth, and gross darkness the people: but the Lord shall arise upon thee, and his glory shall be upon thee’”Isaiah 60:1, 2. These words were repeated by one and another and those who would come to our gathering repeated the words.
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 31)
We hope that such glory will be experienced as I was shown in my dream would come to the people of God who would follow on to know the Lord. There was an awakening among the people of God. I heard the voice of supplication and prayer, mingled with faith, and words were spoken, “He doth manifest himself unto us.” [See John 14:21.] The Word of the Lord in promises given to His people was coming from human lips that seemed to be touched with a live coal from off the altar, and words sweet and heavenly were spoken. These words were spoken: “And the Gentiles shall come to thy light, and kings to the brightness of thy rising.” [Isaiah 60:3.] Words were spoken, “He hath sanctified me unto himself. He hath given me pardon and peace.”
(12LtMs, Lt 151a, 1897, 32)
Lt 152, 1897
White, J. E.; White, Emma; White, W. C. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia April 6, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 7MR 83-84; 9MR 357-358; 4Bio 294-298. Dear Children, Edson, Emma and Willie:
I must embrace you all in this communication. There are new things developing in religious as well as in temporal matters. By the letters enclosed you will learn that Brethren Hawkins and McCullagh, who were laboring in Adelaide, have given up their position on the truth and are going in for holiness altogether. They have come out against the testimonies of the Spirit of the Lord.
(12LtMs, Lt 152, 1897, 1)
Elder Daniells telegraphed this to us, and we at once made arrangements for Brother Starr and wife to go to Adelaide, and for Brother Pallant to carry on the work in Queensland in Brother Starr’s absence. On receipt of the resignation of these men, Brother Daniells, in company with Brother Colcord, went to Adelaide. There they found a determined apostasy. These men had united to accept some other light than the third angel’s message.
(12LtMs, Lt 152, 1897, 2)
I believe our brethren arrived in Adelaide on Friday evening, but these men refused to converse with them. They gave out an appointment for a meeting Sunday evening, and asked Brother Daniells to preach in the tent that same evening. This he refused to do, going to hear them instead. They had said repeatedly that they would have nothing to say against Adventists. On Sabbath Brother Daniells preached from the third chapter of Malachi. But you will learn all in the copies of letters sent.
(12LtMs, Lt 152, 1897, 3)
Brother Haskell has left us for a week or two to visit Adelaide. We deemed it advisable for him to go. His wife has remained to prepare matters for the opening of the school. We thought as Brother Haskell had ordained both Brethren McCullagh and Hawkins, that he might possibly save these poor deluded men. He left us last Wednesday. At this time Brother Hare was in Sydney, procuring doors and necessary articles for the second building. He came back on Thursday, and was very much discouraged when he found that Brother Haskell had gone.
(12LtMs, Lt 152, 1897, 4)
We have appreciated Elder Haskell here at this time very much. He is a great help and strength to us all, especially to Brother Hare. The men working on the second building, some of whom are working out their pledges, are doing very indifferent work. The work has moved slowly in the preparation of a cistern. This, however, is now prepared for the bricklayers who have come from Sydney, sent by Brother Robert Shannon. They commence their work in the cistern today.
(12LtMs, Lt 152, 1897, 5)
On Friday we received a telegram from Brother Starr, saying that he would come to Dora Creek by the ten o’clock train. We met him and took him to our house. He spoke to the church on Sabbath, as I was not able to attend. He and his wife left Cooranbong evening after the Sabbath.
(12LtMs, Lt 152, 1897, 6)
I sent word to Brother Hare to appoint a meeting for all who would attend on Sunday morning at six o’clock, as I had something to say to them, and also for him to meet Sister Haskell, Sara and myself evening after the Sabbath. On Saturday evening we had our interview. Our means were gone, and the school building could not be finished to open school at the appointed time. Sister Haskell asked just how many hands could be put on to the building, how many on outside work, how many on the cistern, and how many inside. She wrote these down on paper, and after everything had been stated, she and I said, “We will have every position filled.” Brother Hare argued that it was impossible.
(12LtMs, Lt 152, 1897, 7)
We opened the morning meeting with singing and prayer, and then we laid the situation before them all. I told them that I would let them have Brethren Connell, James, and Worsnop, and pay them their hire. Brother Connell said that he had a two week’s pledge to work out. Brother James said he would give one weeks’ work in any line or place where they might put him. Brother Anderson also had pledged two weeks, and so one and another volunteered until men women, and children were accepted. I told them that I would give Sara to work in union with Sister Haskell, and they agreed to lay the floor with the help of Brother James to place the boards and press them into position, while Sister Haskell and Sara should drive the nails. Our meeting lasted from six until eight o’clock. After meeting the brother from Queensland made some depreciatory remarks about “lady carpenters,” but no one to whom these words were addressed responded.
(12LtMs, Lt 152, 1897, 8)
Every soul was put to work. There were over thirty in number. The women and children worked in the first building, cleaning windows and floors. Sister Worsnop came with her baby and children, and while she worked on the inside of a window, her eldest girl of ten years worked on the outside. Thus the work in the first building was nearly completed in the first day. Sister Haskell and Sara completed nearly one half of the dining room floor. Brother Hare says everyone was enthusiastic. The women who engaged in the various branches of the work did well. Brother Richardson was putting the brick in the floor of the cellar. Some of the girls passed the brick in from outside, while others inside passed them to Brother Richardson.
(12LtMs, Lt 152, 1897, 9)
In the afternoon I was sent for, to consult with Brother Hare in regard to making changes in the divisions of the dining room. He showed me a little room off from the preparation room for the kitchen, and the store room back of that. We decided that the milk room should be transferred to the cellar, and the room apportioned for that should have the studding removed, and the whole business be made a good-sized kitchen with a cooking stove in it, and that that compartment be used, for the present, as a dining room which would accommodate all the students. We thought it advisable that the dining room proper be used for a school room, for there is not one room large enough in the first building for such a purpose. We also decided that a compartment be prepared twelve by twelve <[at] one end of the store> for the one who carries the burden of the cooking, and there was all the room necessary for a store room. This we considered a great advantage.
(12LtMs, Lt 152, 1897, 10)
Then Brother Hare conducted me over the immediate premises, and we decided on the trees that must come down, one of which went down yesterday. Little Robert Hare is very earnest and zealous in cutting up another big tree by the roots. He has cut off one large root with his hatchet, and has made quite a big hole in the ground about the roots. We left all the acacia trees, wattle trees they are called here. They are a very beautiful green, and bear a fragrant yellow blossom. I proposed that the immense stump just at the front of the building, should be burned out, letting the fire do the work rather than employing a man for it.
(12LtMs, Lt 152, 1897, 11)
Monday, April 6. The workers, men, women, and children, are all at work. This morning I went to the depot for May White and Master James Henry White. May went to Maitland last Wednesday to get fillings for her teeth, leaving Herbert at Grandpa Lacey’s, and remained there until Monday. Father Lacey also spent from Friday till Monday there.
(12LtMs, Lt 152, 1897, 12)
In the evening, accompanied by Maggie Hare, I took the carriage over for Sister Haskell and Sara. Maggie, Minnie, and Brother Tucker helped all day Sunday; but as the mail leaves next Monday, I could not spare them longer. I was so pleased to see the dining room floor laid with the exception of three strips. These last required a carpenter to place them in position. The sisters had put the first coat of paint on the window frames. Brother Hare said that the women’s diligent work had done more to inspire diligence in the men at work than any talk or ordering. The women’s silence and industry had exerted an influence that nothing else could do. These women have worked until their hands and fingers are blistered, but they let out the water by skilful pricking, and rub their hands with vaseline. They are determined to get at the work again, laying the floor in the dining room, which I have mentioned as the dining room.
(12LtMs, Lt 152, 1897, 13)
The two from Sydney who were at work in the cistern were smokers, and their breath was intolerable. Brother Richardson was in the cistern with them, helping to advance the work. As they were in need of more help, Sister Haskell and Sara left their floor to handle brick, in order that there should not be a moment’s delay. Ernest Ward was also in the cistern. The women brought the brick and passed it to James. Ernest took it from his hands, and passed it to the workers. But we suppose that there will be more youth at work this afternoon.
(12LtMs, Lt 152, 1897, 14)
Father Tucker has been putting the first coat on the glazed windows that have just come from Sydney. Every one is doing his best. Our “lady carpenters” are at work on the second floor designed for a kitchen.
(12LtMs, Lt 152, 1897, 15)
Brother Tucker, Sisters Haskell, Sara and Ernest have just come in, and are of the best courage. They have found others who can pass the brick, and so have been able to complete their floor.
(12LtMs, Lt 152, 1897, 16)
Yesterday all the furniture in the mill loft was washed and cleansed from vermin, and prepared for the new building. One more floor is to be laid this afternoon.
(12LtMs, Lt 152, 1897, 17)
We hope the cistern will be finished before it rains. It has been threatening for some days, and everything is crying for rain. But I hope the cistern will be prepared for its reception before it comes. The carpenters are siding up the building. Both ends are done, and quite a piece of the lower part of both sides. Brother Connell is carting the articles from the boat which came in yesterday afternoon. He has also been shoveling sand. Two teams are at work drawing with one or two workmen with him. So you see every hand is employed.
(12LtMs, Lt 152, 1897, 18)
Brother Hare is full of courage now. Brother Haskell will be back in a week or two at most from the time he left. But we know he is needed in Adelaide. His wife and Sara are heart and soul in the work. They make an excellent span just at this time. They will be in readiness to lay the upper floor after today I think. Everything that is needed has come from Sydney and is right at hand, so that there will be no delay.
(12LtMs, Lt 152, 1897, 19)
School will be opened April 28, 1897.
(12LtMs, Lt 152, 1897, 20)
I am so thankful that next Sabbath we shall be able to meet in the dining room of the second building. This will be a great blessing to us all. We cannot lathe and plaster the building this season. There is no money to do this. But the enclosed building will be sufficient to protect us heat and from cold, and will be neat and sweet and wholesome, so we can finish the work with fresh courage. Thank the Lord for His goodness and His mercy and His love. I think this little crisis has been a great blessing. It has brought us all to a proper spirit of unity one with another.
(12LtMs, Lt 152, 1897, 21)
We hope to have something farther to write after the mail comes. We are looking for letters from America by the Vancouver boat. Maggie has just come from Cooranbong with only one letter for me, just a few lines. There ought to be an American mail in the Vancouver boat. I cannot understand why it is that nothing has come to me.
(12LtMs, Lt 152, 1897, 22)
Lt 153, 1897
White, J. E.; White, Emma Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia April 6, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in 14MR 273-277. + My Dear Children:
I was conversing with you in the night season. We were having some serious conversation together. You opened before me freely that which you intended to do. We conversed very pleasantly, and you proposed many things. But after we had canvassed these things thoroughly, you said, “Mother, the only safe path for me is to follow out implicitly the light the Lord has given me in the testimonies you have sent me.” You looked up with light and hope expressed in your countenance, and continued, “I see my way clearly after this conversation. I have not that freedom, that spiritual uplifting, that I had directly after I gave myself to the Lord, to do his will and his way, irrespective of consequences. I am disposed to take myself into my own hands, and work myself, in the place of giving myself unreservedly to God to be worked by his holy mind and will.
(12LtMs, Lt 153, 1897, 1)
“I did then pray in humility, mother. I had nothing to plead but the precious virtue of the blood of Christ. I fell all broken at the feet of Jesus, saying, ‘In my hand no price I bring, simply to thy cross I cling.’
(12LtMs, Lt 153, 1897, 2)
“I cannot serve God with a divided heart. I can see that I must not take financial matters upon me, if I would have my mind fruitful in the Scriptures. By thus allowing my mind to go into temporal arrangements, temporal things soon became an absorbing passion with me, and I have lost much of my burden for souls. I was successful in taking individual cases and conversing with them, in praying with them, and helping them step by step to the light. In searching the Scriptures with them, I found the most precious gems of truth, and could see the Scriptures that I had often read, but now in a light that I had never before discerned. By thus making the Scriptures simple and plain to others, the same were applied to my own mind with great force, and the peace and joy of Christ was in my heart. I have received much encouragement from Scriptures of this character: ‘For thus saith the high and lofty One that inhabiteth eternity, whose name is Holy: I dwell in the high and holy place, with him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit, to revive the spirit of the humble, and to revive the heart of the contrite ones.’ [Isaiah 57:15.]
(12LtMs, Lt 153, 1897, 3)
I am most blessed, and realize most the special help of God when I follow closely in every word the Lord has given me in warnings and encouragement. ‘This is the way, walk ye in it.’ [Isaiah 30:21.] I mean to do this. When once I allow my mind to be engrossed with financial matters and temporal projects, whatever their character, my mind loses its peace and joyousness. Self-conceit comes in. I think what great things I can do, when I am all the time growing dry and sapless. When humiliation is united with filial obedience and perfect trust, I feel that heaven is very near. I have a precious assurance and holy boldness, and I march forward with a firm and certain tread, knowing that I have the presence of Jesus with me. But when I become careless and self-sufficient, I have that poverty of soul that unfits me for evangelical work.”
(12LtMs, Lt 153, 1897, 4)
I said many things to you of what the Lord had revealed to me of our probabilities and possibilities. Your strength is in seeking, not to make a business to subdue the soil, not in teaching others how to do physical work, but in holding forth the Word of life. One warning from God in this direction should be enough. But you have been repeatedly instructed in regard to your line of duty. I do not say that you should remain in the South. It may be that the atmosphere is too trying for your strength. I do not say come to me. I say, Seek the Lord; ask of Him, and do His bidding.
(12LtMs, Lt 153, 1897, 5)
One thing I have light upon is that God has plainly told you your duty. When your strong inclination has carried you contrary to the Lord’s expressed will, you have lost confidence in yourself. There is a hard and bitter fight with temptation for you, but it is no use to let go your hold of faith, and let the Spirit go out of you. How could I stand up under it if there were anything I should do that would bring shame to my soul? I have to hold constantly by faith, and pray and believe, that I may receive.
(12LtMs, Lt 153, 1897, 6)
The Master has called you to a work, and this work is to seek and to save that which is lost. Overwhelmed with a sense of your possibilities and probabilities, I awoke at a very early hour, and commenced my writing. You need to hold communion with God. Unless your soul is uplifted to Him, and you lay all your wants before Him, you will not feel that courage, that strength, and that sustaining hold upon His precious comfort and power that will bring His peace into your soul. Say to yourself, If I have not a broken and contrite heart, I shall not experience the promise: “For thus saith the high and lofty One that inhabiteth eternity, whose name is Holy; I dwell in the high and holy place, with him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit; to revive the spirit of the humble, and to revive the hearts of the contrite ones.” [Isaiah 57:15.]
(12LtMs, Lt 153, 1897, 7)
Faith is your to exercise as the gift of God. You need not fluctuate between hope and fear and despondency. Be assured that as you approach God, you will as surely know that He is drawing nigh unto you, to nourish and encourage and enrich your soul. Trust the Lord as if the blessing were already in your possession. “If any of you lack wisdom,” He says, “let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him. But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering. For he that wavereth is like a wave of the sea, driven of the wind and tossed. For let not that man think that he shall receive any thing of the Lord.” [James 1:5-7.]
(12LtMs, Lt 153, 1897, 8)
If the Spirit beareth witness with our spirit that we are the children of God, what is the result? The believing soul comes into perfect submission to the will of God. The Majesty of heaven condescends to a holy, familiar intercourse with him who seeks God with the whole heart, and the child of God, through the abundant manifestation of His grace, is softened into a childlike dependence. You must commit your soul and body unto God with perfect trust in His power and willingness to bless you, helpless and unworthy as you are. “For as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believed on his name.” [John 1:12.]
(12LtMs, Lt 153, 1897, 9)
Do not become restlessly active, but zealous in faith, with one object, namely, to attract souls to Jesus Christ, the crucified Redeemer. It is not the logical sermon, the sermon to convince the intellect, that will do this work. The heart must be persuaded, and melted into tenderness. The will must be submitted to God’s will, and the whole aspirations directed heavenward. You must feed upon the Word of the living God. It must be brought into the practical life. It must take hold of and command the whole man. Those who possess that faith that works by love and purifies the soul will be sanctified body, soul, spirit, and intellect. There will be an effectual ministry when the servant of God makes it the business of his life to grasp the Word of God with a determination that nothing can release, to hold fast to that Word, to eat it, and impart it to others as the Word of life. When Jesus is our abiding trust, our offering to God will be ourselves. Our dependence will be on the righteousness and intercession of Christ Jesus as our only hope. There is no confusion, no distrust, because by faith we see Jesus ordained of God for this very purpose, to make reconciliation for the sins of the world. He stands engaged by solemn covenant to mediate in behalf of all who come to God by Him, and to accomplish their salvation if they will only believe. The privilege is granted us to come boldly to the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy, and find grace to help in every time of need.
(12LtMs, Lt 153, 1897, 10)
Lt 153a, 1897
White, J. E.; White, Emma “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia August 24, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in 21MR 367-372. Dear Children Edson and Emma White:
We have been having considerable rain for several days. My garden was made in the lowland, and twice it has been overflowed. Now we hope there will be a spell of dry weather so that we can work the land. We have had one week of most beautiful weather. Bear in mind that it is our winter now. I can scarcely write, the paper is so cold to my hands. I have not kindled a fire in my stove for one week, for a fire is only necessary in the few early morning hours. I am so thankful that we have so healthful a climate. When you come to Australia, I will build you a home of your own if the Lord prospers me. I think we have far more sunshine and fine weather here than in any country I have ever visited. All who come here improve in health. It is a very unusual thing to have foggy or cloudy weather.
(12LtMs, Lt 153a, 1897, 1)
Willie has a very comfortable house for his family. It is not yet thoroughly furnished. We wish he could have come up on the last boat.
(12LtMs, Lt 153a, 1897, 2)
Yesterday we had a short call from Brother Brandstater and wife. They have two small children. They think of taking a position with Brother and Sister Semmens in the Health Home, he acting as treatment hand. We are expecting Brother and Sister Hare from Fresno, Cal[ifornia]. Dr. Hare is to officiate as physician in the Health Home.
(12LtMs, Lt 153a, 1897, 3)
I am expected to speak at the school as often as possible. The things that need to be done in connection with the work in this missionary field are a continual strain, and the writing that I am called upon to do puts a double tax upon me. My head becomes very weary, and refuses to work.
(12LtMs, Lt 153a, 1897, 4)
We are now in process of building a chapel. We hope to get it finished to dedicate at the close of the school term. Twice I have been called to the probable location of our church, the very nicest ground on the whole purchased possession. We have the ground selected, but the particular spot where the building is to be they expect me to decide. We need a church so much, and have needed it during the two years that we have been on this ground.
(12LtMs, Lt 153a, 1897, 5)
We have held our meetings in a loft above the sawmill, and there the furniture and all kinds of things used in the school gave it the appearance of an auction room. I am feeling sad, so very sad, that I should have consented to this. If the Lord will pardon my transgression, I will by His grace, in every place where I shall labor, make the spiritual rather than the temporal necessities of the first importance. I am so sorry as I realize that I have neglected this work, which should be first, until the last. The dearth of means was my excuse, but I ought to have walked by faith. I have not honored God as I should have done had I moved out in faith notwithstanding seeming impossibilities.
(12LtMs, Lt 153a, 1897, 6)
When the Lord sees that we will trust Him implicitly, He will work in our behalf, and we shall see the salvation of God. The Lord proves us, He tests us to see if we will make Him our only trust. We need a much sharper, keener faith than we now have. We need to constantly cultivate an earnest, living, trusting faith, and in cause and spiritual work keep our petitions constantly ascending, seeking the Lord for clear discernment. And sharp spiritual eyesight will be given every true seeker. Has not the Lord told us, “Seek ye my face”? And will we not individually respond, “Thy face, Lord, will I seek”? [Psalm 27:8.] This is the call of God, and this the appropriate answer to that call. The Lord wishes us to know Him by an experimental knowledge as a kind, tender Father who has our interest and happiness in mind just as a loving earthly father cares for his children.
(12LtMs, Lt 153a, 1897, 7)
The heavenly Father loves His sons and daughters. He wishes all to know Him. It is because men are not more than half converted that the church is so dead and lifeless. There are many who are and have been all their life half Christians. Their names are in the book of life, and if they turn to the Lord with full purpose of heart, they respect the voice that says unto them, “Seek ye my face,” and reply, “Thy face, Lord, will I seek,” [and] they shall see God with a clear, elevated, spiritual sense. The religious sentiment awakened in the heart is recognized as God’s call, and is obeyed.
(12LtMs, Lt 153a, 1897, 8)
Everyone will be tested and tried in the very way that is the most trying. Men cannot trust to their own wisdom. Self-sufficiency, if indulged, will be their stumbling block. Self must die and not have a resurrection every other day. The words must be truly spoken, “I live, yet not I, but Christ liveth in me.” [Galatians 2:20.] The “I” is a very hard personality to kill. “I” rises into life in full proportions if given the least opportunity or encouragement. Then, confident in their own supposed wisdom, men forsake the right way. They were once in the right way; for they could not have forsaken the right way had they known nothing about it. Those then who have once been real Christians, who have known the right way, but have forsaken it, come under the jurisdiction of Satan to be used as his instruments against the truth as it is in Jesus. Satan’s masterly power will be exercised to make men and women lose the crown of life which it is their privilege to obtain.
(12LtMs, Lt 153a, 1897, 9)
Judas was chosen as one of Christ’s disciples. Christ did not reject him because he was not perfect. Judas had the power to heal the sick and to cure diseases, but the lesson to be taught every one that is a church member is that having their names registered on the church books will never make them Christians. It is doing the Word that makes us sons and daughters of God. Judas, notwithstanding the lessons of Christ, failed to be converted daily, to be an instrument sanctified and polished for the Master’s use; he became subject to temptation. His old hereditary and natural tendencies Satan found he could use to dishonor the Master and imperil his own soul.
(12LtMs, Lt 153a, 1897, 10)
These things are not understood by many in the church at Battle Creek, and the result will be as it was in the case of Judas. Some will depart from the faith. Having a knowledge of the truth while not being sanctified by it, they will be constantly working out wrong characters, and they will really do more harm because of the knowledge of the truth which they have. They will confederate with apostates and be the means of betraying sacred trusts. God calls for the whole-sided, undivided interests of the men whom He has chosen.
(12LtMs, Lt 153a, 1897, 11)
The pure in heart shall see God. This seeing God in a clear, spiritual light is salvation to the soul of every believer. As soon as a soul decides to die to self, the new light begins and grows stronger and more decided until he is able to endure the sight of Him who is invisible. And as he sees God, he becomes fashioned in character after the divine similitude. His words, his attitude, his spirit, his actions in everything, testify to the clearness of his judgment. In proportion to the seeing of God will be the spiritual force of his character. The consecration to God of the life and time and powers of every converted soul is the result.
(12LtMs, Lt 153a, 1897, 12)
A life of freedom and idleness, a life of self-pleasing, is not the life of a Christian, nor has [it] ever been. Christ was a worker, and He gives to all His followers a law of service, that they may benefit the temporal and spiritual interests of their fellow men. He presents to the world a higher conception of life than they have ever thought of. The true recognition of Christ’s work is service. A life of obedience and service is not only the true life for man, it is the most distinguished, the noblest that a man can live. He brings himself in connection with the Life and Light of the world, and in connection with his fellow men. This makes the law of service the connecting link between God and the lives of his fellow men, and constitutes him a laborer together with God, living to be good and to do good.
(12LtMs, Lt 153a, 1897, 13)
When will those who profess Christ learn that they must put on Christ in words, spirit, and actions? This will not lead to feebleness and inactivity, to self-love and self-pleasing. It becomes us as Christians to have a clear understanding, to recognize our duty toward God by taking up the responsibilities which bind us to our fellow men in the strong links that the law of God has defined, that we love our neighbor as ourselves, all our service merging itself into the life of Jesus Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 153a, 1897, 14)
The noble life which Christ has made it possible for us to live—one of obedience and service—makes us partakers of the divine nature. Cannot we experience the inner strength of piety which animated Jesus Christ? “I live, yet not I, but Christ liveth in me.” [Verse 20.] That life will reveal that it is a part of Christ’s life, wearing Christ’s yoke, lifting His burdens. The transformation of the human character makes the yoke of Christ easy and His burden light. Through faith every one can, if he will, become one with Christ in his obedience and his service.
(12LtMs, Lt 153a, 1897, 15)
It is God’s prerogative to command; it is the duty of man to obey. Nothing is forced upon any soul. The honor of duty is a thing conferred upon him as a son of God, an heir of heaven. He is to labor for God in interested, true-hearted, glad, honorable service. In obeying all His commandments, a spirit of love for God is revealed. In this very atmosphere of love, Christ lived and worked.
(12LtMs, Lt 153a, 1897, 16)
Each word, each action is a work for God. Here is faith in God, and faith in men. Christ would never have given His life for the human race if He had not faith in the souls for whom He died. He knew that a large number would respond to the love He had expressed for humanity. It is not every heart that responds, but every heart may and can, if it will, respond to that love that is without a parallel. “My sheep hear my voice,” Christ said. [John 10:27.] A heart yearning for God will recognize the voice of God. God cannot respond to one soul that does not respond to His grace offered, His love bestowed.
(12LtMs, Lt 153a, 1897, 17)
He is waiting for a response from souls in Battle Creek. The issue rests wholly with themselves. He bids them to the marriage feast; He sets before them the banquet that will satisfy every want. His Word is full of marrow and fatness. “Then shall ye seek me and find me, when ye shall search for me with all your hearts.” [Jeremiah 29:13.] Shall this decision and effort commence in every family in Battle Creek? Then the Lord will give an outpouring of His Spirit as on the Day of Pentecost.
(12LtMs, Lt 153a, 1897, 18)
August 25
Dear children, watch unto prayer. Then you will know that you do know that your life is hid with Christ in God. Those who live in these last days are to be overcomers by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony. There is no time now for levity, self-indulgence, and stupidity in the understanding of the work we have to do. Activity and devotion are united; work and piety blend. There is to be appropriate strength given for daily duties, which is derived from the worshiping of God in the beauty of holiness. The lamp must burn, which is impossible unless it is fed with holy oil. And the oil which is so precious is efficacious only as it is communicated by reflecting light upon the pathway of others. Busy activity is to be proportioned with devotional exercises in worship and diligent, cheerful ministry to the needy souls whose inquiry is, “What must I do to be saved?” [Acts 16:30.]
(12LtMs, Lt 153a, 1897, 19)
“Then answered I, and said unto him, What are these two olive trees upon the right side of the candlestick, and upon the left side thereof? And I answered again, and said unto him, What be these two olive branches which through the two golden pipes, empty the golden oil out of themselves? And he answered me and said, Knowest thou not what these be? And I said, No, my lord. Then said he, These are the two anointed ones, that stand by the Lord of the whole earth.” [Zechariah 4:11-14.]
(12LtMs, Lt 153a, 1897, 20)
There are times when Christ would say to those in His service whose energies have been overtaxed, “Come ye yourselves apart into a desert place, and rest awhile.” [Mark 6:31.] We have the record on one occasion, after a day of ceaseless toil, that our Redeemer lay, a coil of rope for His pillow, fast asleep in a fisherman’s boat. His exhausted human nature cried for rest and sleep. What a lesson for human beings who do nothing to bless others. Behold the Saviour! How pressing were the necessities which sought Him for relief! Teaching in the temple, healing in the temple, explaining the Scriptures in the streets, by the wayside, in His retired walks—the subjects so urgent left Him no time for repose. His sympathies were drawn out for the oppressed, He comforted the mourner, He brought hope to the hopeless, He healed the scars and bruises that sin had made. He went about doing good.
(12LtMs, Lt 153a, 1897, 21)
The warning is given, Let us not sleep as do others in a spiritual lethargy. Let us watch and be sober. O, that the work of reformation so essential in Battle Creek should begin. In all our institutions, all on duty should stand at their posts saying, “Here am I, send me.” [Isaiah 6:8.] He who was wise in counsel is waiting for you all to see your need of help, and it is abundantly provided. It is waiting for you. “The pure in heart shall see God.” [Matthew 5:8.] As a present help in every time of need His presence is revealed. As you ask Him and call upon His name for help, He says, “Here I am close beside you, ready to help you if you are ready to be helped.” Communion with God is for each one, personal and direct. The heart under the guidance of the Holy Spirit will burn within them with the love of God. They are like trustful children. Christ looks not for merit. O, if all would come just as they are, and let Him make the preparation in taking them as His. The Lord only wants them to receive Him and learn to wear His yoke and lift His burdens, that heaven may behold that they are laborers together with God. Why cannot every soul that needs help and rest come to the Burden Bearer, that he may have light and life.
(12LtMs, Lt 153a, 1897, 22)
Christ could not help being bright and shining. His very work was to shine. “I am come,” He said, “that they may have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.” [John 10:10.] In Me is no darkness at all. With sadness Christ says that there are some who love not the light, because their deeds are evil. They do not come to Jesus to deliver them from the power of evil. Light means revelation, and the light is to shine amid moral darkness. Christ is everything to those who receive Him. He is their Comforter, their safety, their healthfulness. Apart from Christ there is no light at all.
(12LtMs, Lt 153a, 1897, 23)
There need not be a cloud between the soul and Jesus. Why do so large a number who profess to believe in Christ have so limited a view of the life-giving power of Christ? We are not one of us to act as if the Word, the life and light, was to be given to us grudgingly. His great heart of love is longing to flood the soul with the bright beams of His righteousness. “Whoso is athirst let him come and take of the water of life freely.” [Revelation 22:17.] We are acting as if we must only taste, when our faith should say, “Let me drink of thy fulness.” Faith, living genuine faith, is required. We are privileged to receive of the abundant supply. Then our duty is, “Freely ye have received, freely give.” [Matthew 10:8.]
(12LtMs, Lt 153a, 1897, 24)
Our Lord was a successful worker with the common people. This was the class that always heard Him gladly. Why, O why, I inquire, are there so few that carry any burden for souls? His heart was yearning to make souls happy. “Come unto me,” He said, “all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart, and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.” [Matthew 11:28-30.]
(12LtMs, Lt 153a, 1897, 25)
We are now amid the perils of the last day when many shall be purified, made white and tried. “But the wicked shall do wickedly, and none of the wicked shall understand; but the wise shall understand.” [Daniel 12:10.]
(12LtMs, Lt 153a, 1897, 26)
Lt 154, 1897
Weber, R. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia December 8, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Sister:
For some time I have desired to write to you, but I have been much exhausted and unable to do the writing that positively demanded my attention, and have had to neglect very much work that is suffering to be done.
(12LtMs, Lt 154, 1897, 1)
We would be much pleased to attend the Napier camp meeting, but this we cannot do because the interest here will not permit of us doing this. Maggie will send you a copy of letters that go to Wesley Hare, so I need not repeat that. We would not be able to leave the work in Sydney now. We are the very height of interest.
(12LtMs, Lt 154, 1897, 2)
One man of noble appearance, during the camp meeting, heard me speak in reference to tobacco the last time that I spoke on the ground. After the camp meeting he met Elder Haskell, and said he gave up his tobacco, but it was a hard struggle. He had severe pains in his stomach for some time. This forced, injurious stimulus was removed, but it takes time for nature to rally after she has been abused and her powers enfeebled so long. And it was the attempt of nature to rally that caused these severe disturbances. They advised him to drink hot water in abundance whenever the pains returned. He afterwards told them that he did this, and had no more trouble. We thank the Lord for this. He is a man that will be able to help us financially to build a house of worship.
(12LtMs, Lt 154, 1897, 3)
I write these things thinking that you will be interested to hear in regard to them. We feel deeply grateful to God that He has given strength and power to His servants to do the work so much in need of being done in the suburbs of Sydney.
(12LtMs, Lt 154, 1897, 4)
Here at my home we are very busy in writing. I would be pleased to have Maggie come to you if it were possible. But it is not possible till someone can come in to supply her place. She is my right hand helper. I cannot have her leave me now, until the Lord shall send me someone who can take her place. I have many books to prepare for the press, and Maggie has educated herself to help me in this kind of work. The Lord has blessed her with knowledge to do this work, which is so much needed. She is engaged in a good work in the service of God. He has given her His work to do in this line. We are pleased to give her work, and the Lord accepts her service.
(12LtMs, Lt 154, 1897, 5)
While she would be desirous to see and to please her mother, you must not have the impression left on your mind that she could come as well as not if she wanted to; for it is not the case. She knows that she cannot be spared without the work should suffer loss. She does not know that I am writing to you at all, but I thought you ought to know in regard to this matter, so that you would not be inclined to trouble her with urgency to come to you when it is not possible for me to spare her at present. We are well blended in the work. We appreciate her services.
(12LtMs, Lt 154, 1897, 6)
Before she came to me, I was perplexed and troubled to know what to do, and the Lord designated Maggie Hare as the one who could unite with me. This was so plainly given, that I did not hesitate to connect her with my family. Fannie Bolton was with me then, but she is not with me now. But Maggie is worth as much more to me than Fannie was, as you can imagine.
(12LtMs, Lt 154, 1897, 7)
Now please do not make Maggie’s heart sad and sore by keeping before her your urgent request for her to come to you when she knows it is not possible for her to come. When we have someone who can take her place, and she can be spared for two or three months, I will encourage her coming. The Lord has given Maggie her work to do in His cause, and He will sustain her in this work. This is the Lord’s work that He has appointed her, and I do not want any influence brought in to divert her from the work.
(12LtMs, Lt 154, 1897, 8)
I shall now leave this matter, trusting that you will be reconciled to the Lord’s will, and to the necessities of the case. I shall be glad, very glad, when the time comes, to accompany Maggie to New Zealand, and visit you in your home with your daughter. I have a great desire to visit Kaeo again, and see our people in the faith, and bear my testimony to them. The Lord is soon coming, and we have no time to lose in getting before the people the last message of mercy to be given to our world. The work will increase more and more in depth and in breadth. There will be an intense interest to the very close of time. Is it not the will of God that we wish to study? It is not my will, but, “What will the Lord have me to do”? [See Acts 9:6.]
(12LtMs, Lt 154, 1897, 9)
To every human being He gives his appointed work. He has given me my work, and He has given Maggie her work, and that is to connect with me. I have only one other worker, and that is Minnie Hawkins. She also is connected with me in the editorial work, but neither of these can be spared. Both are needed, and I shall have to ask for the number I now have, in order to get out the work that I intend shall come to the people.
(12LtMs, Lt 154, 1897, 10)
When The Life of Christ is published, I shall send you one. Then you can know in regard to the work that Maggie and Minnie are handling.
(12LtMs, Lt 154, 1897, 11)
With much love to yourself and family, and to your husband, whom I have not seen, but who is my brother in the Lord,
(12LtMs, Lt 154, 1897, 12)
May the Lord bless you.
(12LtMs, Lt 154, 1897, 13)
P.S.—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 abuse of the Lord’s goods. God calls upon men and women to invest their intrusted 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 stand ready 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.
(12LtMs, Lt 154, 1897, 14)
Lt 155, 1897
To Whom It May Concern NP 1897 Previously unpublished.
KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS, that I, ELLEN G. WHITE, (widow), a resident of Cooranbong, Northumberland, New South Wales, have made, constituted and appointed, and by these presents to make, constitute and appoint MYRON J. CORNELL, a resident of the City of Battle Creek, County of Calhoun, State of Michigan, my true and lawful Attorney for me in my name, place and stead, to lease, mortgage, grant, bargain, sell, remise, release, convey, and quit claim, to whom and upon such terms as my said Attorney may deem best, all of my right, title and interest, estate, claim and demand, both in law and in equity, as well in possession as in expectancy of all real estate situated in the State of Michigan, and belonging to me; giving and granting unto said Myron J. Cornell, my said Attorney, full power and authority to do and perform all and every act and thing whatsoever requisite and necessary to be done in and about the premises as fully to all intents and purposes, as I myself might or would do if personally present, with full power to revocation, hereby ratifying and confirming all that my said Attorney shall lawfully do or cause to be done by virtue hereof.
(12LtMs, Lt 155, 1897, 1)
IN WITNESS WHEREOF I have hereunto set my hand and seal the _____ day of ____________, One thousand eight hundred and ninety seven.
(12LtMs, Lt 155, 1897, 2)
Sealed and delivered in presence of SEAL
Lt 155a, 1897
To Whom It May Concern NP 1897 Previously unpublished.
KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS, That I, ELLEN G. WHITE, (widow), of Cooranbong, Northumberland, New South Wales, in and by my letter of attorney, bearing date the 11th day of November, One thousand, eight hundred and ninety one, did make, constitute and appoint Harmon Lindsay, a resident of the city of Battle Creek, County of Calhoun, State of Michigan, my true and lawful Attorney, as by said letter more fully appears.
(12LtMs, Lt 155a, 1897, 1)
That I, the said Ellen G. White, do by these presents annul, countermand, revoke, and make void, said letter of said attorney, and all authority and power thereby given said Attorney, Harmon Lindsay.
(12LtMs, Lt 155a, 1897, 2)
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and seal the ____ day of ___________ One thousand eight hundred and ninety seven.
(12LtMs, Lt 155a, 1897, 3)
Sealed and delivered in presence of SEAL
Lt 156, 1897
Haskell, S. N. Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia April 8, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 1BC 1115; 4BC 1163-1164; 7MR 177-178. Dear Brother Haskell:
Your letter was received yesterday. Thank you for writing so fully as you have done. The telegram concerning the Monday night meeting was received, so we expect something more when your letter shall reach us giving us particulars. We were anxious to know if the leaders of this rebellion had fallen on the Rock and were broken. Do they hold fast their wicked apostasy?
(12LtMs, Lt 156, 1897, 1)
There never has been a movement made among Seventh-day Adventists, without any occasion, equal to this. We hope so much Elder McCullagh will see and understand what course he is pursuing, for it will lead to terrible results.
(12LtMs, Lt 156, 1897, 2)
Please to present before the people the case of Korah, Dathan, and Abiram. These men rose up in rebellion. Numbers 16. These men “rose up before Moses, with certain of the children of Israel, two hundred and fifty princes of the assembly, famous in the congregation, men of renown.” [Verse 2.] Please read them this chapter. All these things are written for our instruction and admonition upon whom the ends of the world are come. Then let us as a people take heed and not follow their example of unbelief. I feel sorry for these men who have permitted themselves to be worked by satanic agencies and call it the Holy Spirit.
(12LtMs, Lt 156, 1897, 3)
Christ came to our world not to aid Satan in working up rebellion but to put down rebellion. Wherever men start out in rebellion they will work secretly and in darkness as they will not come as Christ has told them to do to the ones they have any matter against, but will take their budget of falsehoods and enmity and evil-surmisings and satanic representations, as did Satan to the fellow angels under him, and gain their sympathy by false representations.
(12LtMs, Lt 156, 1897, 4)
McCullagh is the life and soul of the rebellion he has instigated. He has apostatized from the truth—a secessionist. If he had been one-half as zealous to set his house in order, take his position as a servant entrusted of God with sacred responsibilities, he would today have stood as a faithful servant before the universe of heaven. How much better it would have been for our brother to have been a thorough Bible student, to dig for truth as for hidden treasures, rather than imitating the first great rebel, to present himself as one who was a subject of sympathy; that time employed by himself and wife in doing their work, not God’s work, in evil speaking and surmisings and false representations. For I have not given him one jot or one tittle of cause for all his evil speeches against me, only as I bore to them the message in writing which the Lord gave me.
(12LtMs, Lt 156, 1897, 5)
I did not make this matter public; I did not converse with them as I would be pleased to do, for warning came to me that I must write out those things of warning and reproof. Words would leave them an opportunity to misstate and claim that I said things which I did not say and which had never come into my heart to say. Once in writing they would speak for themselves. All that I have written must now be put in print and a copy given to all to whom it is deemed essential. I did not think I would have to do this, but himself has made it a necessity.
(12LtMs, Lt 156, 1897, 6)
There is a grand rebellion in the earthly universe. Is there not a great leader of that rebellion? Is not Satan the life and soul of every species of rebellion which himself has instigated? Is he not the first great apostate from God? A rebellion exists. Lucifer revolted from his allegiance and makes war on the divine government. Christ is appointed to put down the rebellion. He makes this world His battlefield. He stands at the head of the human family. He clothes His divinity with humanity, and He passes over the ground where Adam fell and endures all the assaults of Satan’s temptations, but He does not yield in a single instance.
(12LtMs, Lt 156, 1897, 7)
The salvation of a world is at stake. He resisted the arch-deceiver. In behalf of man He must conquer as a man, and in the very same manner man must conquer by “It is written.” His own words under the guise of humanity would be misjudged, misinterpreted, falsified. His own words spoken as the divine Son of God could not be falsified.
(12LtMs, Lt 156, 1897, 8)
It will be in the last great day when every case receives as his works have been. It will be the final and eternal condemnation of the devil and all his sympathizers and all who have served under his jurisdiction and have identified themselves with him. Will he have a reason to assign for his rebellion? When the Judge of all the world demands, Why have ye done thus? what reason can he assign, what cause can he plead? Bear in mind every tongue is silent, every mouth that has been so ready to speak evil, so ready to accuse, so ready to utter words of recrimination and falsehood, is stopped and the whole world of rebellion stands speechless before God; their tongues cleave to the roof of their mouth. The place where sin entered can be specified.
(12LtMs, Lt 156, 1897, 9)
“Thou wast perfect in thy ways ... till iniquity was found in thee.”“Thine heart wast lifted up because of thy beauty; thou hast corrupted thy wisdom by reason of thy brightness.” All this was the gift of God. God was not chargeable with this—making the covering cherub beautiful, noble and good. “By the multitude of thy merchandise they have filled the midst of thee with violence, and thou hast sinned: ... thou hast defiled thy sanctuaries by the multitude of thine iniquities, by the iniquity of thy traffick.” [Ezekiel 28:15-18.]
(12LtMs, Lt 156, 1897, 10)
In this place traffick is the emblem of corrupt administration. It denotes the bringing of self-seeking into spiritual offices. Nothing in spiritual service is acceptable to God except the purposes and works that are for the good of the universe. To do good to others will redound to the glory of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 156, 1897, 11)
The principles of Satan’s working in heaven are the same principles by which he works through human agents in this world. It is through these corrupting principles that every earthly empire and the churches have been increasingly corrupted. It is by the working out of these principles that Satan deceives and corrupts the whole world from the beginning to the ending. He is continuing this same policy-working, originally begun in the heavenly universe. He is energizing the whole world with his violence with which he corrupted the world in the days of Noah.
(12LtMs, Lt 156, 1897, 12)
The revolters against divine government will not ascribe their disaffection to themselves. This will be seen to the close of time. This apostasy in Adelaide is not a new chapter in our experience, as you well know. Apostasy has come in to our ranks as it came into heaven, and all who unite with Satan in this kind of work will act on the same principles Satan has worked. Not open, not frank, but in secrecy. Satan must deceive in order to succeed. “In vain the net is set in the sight of any bird.” [Proverbs 1:17.]
(12LtMs, Lt 156, 1897, 13)
There must be speech made under cover of garments of righteousness, glorious prospects before the church, this is the class of temptations, a great good to be obtained by doing the very things the Lord God told them not to do, deceiving speech to mislead, to hoodwink, to blind.
(12LtMs, Lt 156, 1897, 14)
We read, Satan transforms himself into an angel of light. [2 Corinthians 11:14.] This is the very way he works in all his deceptive methods, in all ages of the world. He assumed the pretense of great humility in practice of self-denial. He was giving up sure interests in order to bring in corrupt principles, in practice. So great was his power of dissimulation, so apt and skilful was his acting, no eye but the eye of God could fathom his purpose.
(12LtMs, Lt 156, 1897, 15)
No person is righteous unless they are pure in thought and in living connection with Him. The power and strength of this apostasy will be broken. It is a mystery of deception, but this deception can be unveiled. I have much more to write upon this subject but I cannot write more now.
(12LtMs, Lt 156, 1897, 16)
You are questioning whether you shall return at once or remain a time longer. We will wish you to remain in Adelaide just as long as it is apparently a necessity. Brother and Sister Lacey come up today to Cooranbong. With your wife, we can get along nicely. So do not worry about anything here. The cistern will be almost, if not quite, completed, as far as the brick work is done, then comes the plastering next week.
(12LtMs, Lt 156, 1897, 17)
We will meet in the dining hall on the Sabbath and bid a willing farewell to the old chamber with all its inconvenience and disagreeable appearance. You may be able to be here at the opening of the school. If not, Brother and Sister Lacy and your wife will do the work. The Lord will help them and will help you where you are to stand on the field of conflict. But the Lord will work, and none can hinder Him. The devices of the enemy will come to naught. Truth will triumph and bear away the victory. God is infinite; He measured the waters in the hallow of His hand. He will work for His own name’s glory and for the good of His people.
(12LtMs, Lt 156, 1897, 18)
The church at Adelaide needed just this experience, and it will work for the good of all those who love God and keep His commandments. There will be men who will depart from the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits and doctrines of devils. It always ends in giving up saving truth, the commandments of God and the testimony of Jesus Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 156, 1897, 19)
I join with you heartily in saying we need students to have the Word of God open to them in clear lines, going deeper and deeper. The pure doctrines of our faith must become the main part of the education of our students. Here eternal interests are involved. The positions of the stronghold of our faith, which have brought us where we are, must be oft repeated, for Jesus and salvation is in it all. Men and women must become rooted and grounded in the truth, established, strengthened, settled.
(12LtMs, Lt 156, 1897, 20)
We will want you to remain there just as long as you seem to feel it is duty. Then when you feel it safe to leave, we will welcome you with all our hearts. We are praying for you all. Be firm, give no place to the devil, crowd him out. Find out if you can what part every brother has acted.
(12LtMs, Lt 156, 1897, 21)
Lt 157, 1897
Starr, Brother and Sister [G. B.] Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia April 14, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 10MR 293. Dear Brother and Sister Starr:
I learn by letter from Brother Haskell that he will leave Adelaide on Wednesday or Thursday. We did hope so much that our Brethren McCullagh and Hawkins would be willing to talk over matters, and that personal interviews would clear away the fog the enemy has enveloped them in and they would be convinced they had been following another leader. But I have not felt clear that all has been done that may be done. I hope that you will not consider their case beyond remedy and leave them to themselves.
(12LtMs, Lt 157, 1897, 1)
Meet them if you can, and while you stand steadfastly for the truth, do it in a spirit of love for their souls.
(12LtMs, Lt 157, 1897, 2)
My heart yearns over them. I greatly desire to remove every stone over which they have stumbled, if it is possible to do this. It is best to do all that can be done by human agency uniting with the Divine.
(12LtMs, Lt 157, 1897, 3)
The Lord is full of mercy and compassion and love, but He will not change and alter one thing that has gone out of His mouth to meet man in his perversity. He wants [that] His human agency should be a channel of light, to communicate light, walking in the true, pure light to lead souls to the light as He is in the light.
(12LtMs, Lt 157, 1897, 4)
How wonderful are the works of our God. He reveals how little dependence can be placed in men. We should educate our people to make the Lord God of Israel their trust, and have faith, living active faith in God, a continual growing faith—not [faith] in ourselves.
(12LtMs, Lt 157, 1897, 5)
May the Lord’s blessing rest upon you as you shall seek to recover these souls, not only every one of the church but the men who have deceived them because they themselves were deceived.
(12LtMs, Lt 157, 1897, 6)
O, let us teach as never before the necessity of pure clean hearts and sanctified thought because the very thoughts are brought into captivity to Jesus Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 157, 1897, 7)
Sin besets every soul very closely and unless it is resisted firmly, will obtain the victory. If the habit of resistance is formed, and carefully and prayerfully sustained, there will be less trouble in combating the oppressing power that is constantly urged to overcome the soul.
(12LtMs, Lt 157, 1897, 8)
We shall see that those who have been making all preparation not to unite firmly with their brethren will accept the powerful temptations, when Satan finds a favorable opportunity to dissolve their unity, and to confederate [them] in a party who lead out upon theories they call truth, for Satan is clothed in angel garments and he will make most plausible presentations.
(12LtMs, Lt 157, 1897, 9)
There are many who live a life supposed to be religious that stops far short of real service to God. They do not abide in Christ. Those who abide in Christ are building up a character after the similitude of Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 157, 1897, 10)
Many are as near to Christ as was Judas. They listen to His words through His human instrumentalities and receive that portion which pleases them, which does not reprove and rebuke their appetites or passions, and go on just as Judas did without reforming and transformation of character. But they are not Christians. They do not wear the yoke of Christ and live to please Christ. If they can have heaven and carry their own temper and disposition into heaven, then they will have heaven.
(12LtMs, Lt 157, 1897, 11)
The almonds were brought to our home by Brother Goodheart. Thank you for your remembrance of me. They are very good, sweet nuts.
(12LtMs, Lt 157, 1897, 12)
Brother Haskell has great liberty in opening the Scriptures to others. He gives opportunity to all. The first class is in the morning meeting at six o’clock. Then there will be other lessons given by Elder Haskell. At ten o’clock Sister Haskell gives lessons from Revelation.
(12LtMs, Lt 157, 1897, 13)
This is an excellent beginning for the school.
(12LtMs, Lt 157, 1897, 14)
Brother Haskell ploughs deep. All listen to him with eager attention and are feasting on that which they gather from the storehouse of the Word.
(12LtMs, Lt 157, 1897, 15)
I have been quite sick for about two weeks, but I am improving now. I send you copy of letters sent to South Africa this morning.
(12LtMs, Lt 157, 1897, 16)
May and the children are doing well, but their house is so cold, we dare not keep the White boys in it. We have given up our parlor to May and the children, until their home is done.
(12LtMs, Lt 157, 1897, 17)
I have been writing and reading the copies of letters to Africa. I could not sleep past one o’clock.
(12LtMs, Lt 157, 1897, 18)
I hear them now stirring about getting ready for meeting. May the Lord bless you in your work and then the people will be blessed.
(12LtMs, Lt 157, 1897, 19)
In love to all the saints in Adelaide.
(12LtMs, Lt 157, 1897, 20)
Lt 158, 1897
Starr, Brother and Sister [G. B.] Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia May 19, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in 9MR 366-368. Dear Brother and Sister Starr:
We received and read your letter with interest. I was not surprised at all to learn that these men who have had so great light should make rapid strides in determined apostasy. This experience reveals to us the fact that true rebellion is incurable. These men take a large amount of knowledge with them of what constitutes truth and evidence. They may misinterpret it all, misapply the truth, but they cannot convert truth into error, neither can they convert error into truth. The truth will live through all time and through eternal ages. Men letting it alone, separating truth from their lives, in no case lessens the value of truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 158, 1897, 1)
I would exhort the church to encourage faith and talk faith and act faith. This experience through which you are passing is of God to give you a genuine experience in the things of God. Putting on the robe of humility, we must take our position as learners in the school of Christ. If we will listen to His words, to be repeated to us in this age of this earth’s history, there must be silence in the soul; the clamorous pretensions to self-sufficiency must be cut away from our life. Learn of me, says Christ, for I am meek and lowly of heart and ye shall find rest to your soul. [Matthew 11:29.]
(12LtMs, Lt 158, 1897, 2)
It is essential that we study our Bibles more diligently, that we become more choice in our conversation, for this can be an influence for good. We need to see and sense the inefficiency of human accomplishments, our own impotence, and the dignity and glory of Christ Jesus. The Lord puts us under the guidance of the Holy Spirit if we will walk humbly, trustingly, confidingly in Him. He leads us into all truth. The Holy Spirit takes the things of God as they fell from the lips of Christ and conveys them with living power to the obedient heart. He, the Alpha and the Omega, delivers us into the mold of the gospel that we may take the perfect image of its Author.
(12LtMs, Lt 158, 1897, 3)
You have, in Adelaide, had the fact made apparent to you how unsafe it is to trust in man and make flesh your arm. Submit to the authority of the great Teacher in all humility of mind. He will arm you with His mind, which will fortify you to discern all rebellion. It is a great mistake in all our churches that religion is ofttimes credited to the persons who give in words an assent to the truth; but unless the truth is brought into the inner sanctuary of the soul it does not control the thoughts, the words, or the conduct of life. We need simply to have the truth in our hearts.
(12LtMs, Lt 158, 1897, 4)
These apparent difficulties we have met in our experience will be of greatest advantage in revealing to us that men and women may be converted to men but not to Jesus Christ. If the men who preach to them apostatize, they have so feeble a hold of Christ they will apostatize too, because they have never been really converted to the truth. We must find solid foundation for our feet.
(12LtMs, Lt 158, 1897, 5)
We see the two ministers who have preached to you have departed from the faith, and those whose faith was no higher than the ministers will go where their ministers go and leave their Redeemer and deny the truth, giving heed to seducing spirits. Many, many will depart from the faith they once professed, but those who hold fast the faith, firm unto the end, will be overcomers and shall have the crown of life.
(12LtMs, Lt 158, 1897, 6)
Lt 159, 1897
Haskell, Brother and Sister; Starr, Brother and Sister [G. B.] Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia December 7, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother Haskell, Sister Haskell, Brother and Sister Starr:
We had reason to thank Brother Starr that he assisted us so much in getting us on the train from Strathfield to Cooranbong. We had the compartment all to ourselves and I lay down and rested all the way. Brother James was waiting at Dora Creek for us, with our surrey. It was well to have a cover over our heads, for it rained hard and the wind was blowing strong. It had rained some, not very abundantly.
(12LtMs, Lt 159, 1897, 1)
All the family was rejoiced to see us. American mail had come; will bring you some interesting matters, when I shall come next Friday.
(12LtMs, Lt 159, 1897, 2)
It has rained all night, and has rained very hard this morning. It is dark and cloudy. But this rain is just what we have earnestly prayed that we might have. It is the blessing of God to be highly appreciated by every one. I am so glad we are here at home and [do] not have to go through the program of coming home today.
(12LtMs, Lt 159, 1897, 3)
I rested quite well last night until half past two o’clock. I have been, this morning, reading my American mail, which I will give you the benefit of when I shall come [the] last of this week. I am feeling much better healthwise. I praise the Lord that we are receiving that which we need so much, refreshing rain to cause vegetation to flourish, and [to] supply our tanks and cisterns.
(12LtMs, Lt 159, 1897, 4)
The Lord will hear our prayers in opening the way for a meetinghouse to be built in Stanmore or some other suburb close by Stanmore. Would it not be best to look in adjoining suburbs? See what you can do. The Lord has a place for us, and we will “arise and build.” [Nehemiah 2:20.] We should not delay this matter. We should press it through as fast as possible. Let there be most earnest prayer ascending to our Heavenly Father who is rich in resources. “Go forward” is the word for us. See at once what the Newtown church will do. They need a house of worship. Watch and pray. The Holy Spirit is pledged us. Say little for a short time in regard to the church building; tell every thing to the Lord. Talk to the ear that hears prayer and that responds, “Here I am.” [Isaiah 58:9.] Say very little now, but pray most earnestly.
(12LtMs, Lt 159, 1897, 5)
The Lord can speak to hearts. Dwell upon the love of God to man in giving Jesus. Speak words that shall enlighten those who are in darkness, how to find the Saviour precious to their souls. Let our own hearts be softened, our own hearts be refreshed with the dew of heaven, then let it flow forth in prayer and songs of praise. Rest, trust, believe we shall see the salvation of God. Hold fast the promises.
(12LtMs, Lt 159, 1897, 6)
Lt 160, 1897
Haskell, Brother and Sister NP December 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother and Sister Haskell:
Mail brings me a letter from Brother Baker. He has just come around to offer me a room in his house, and I do not feel at present to accept it. He says you have secured a home close by his home. I would gladly have accepted the offer of a room when we were needing one so much, but the room they had was reserved for Elder Daniells and wife, and I should not now feel free to accept a room. I cannot help but consider I was not wanted and therefore I shall not consider I am wanted now. I have nothing against either Brother or Sister Baker, but I will not trouble anyone with my presence unless I know it to be the best thing to do.
(12LtMs, Lt 160, 1897, 1)
You may consider my letter, which the girls are now copying, strikes a rather singular note, but it is needed. I want all to bear in mind that the workman is worthy of his hire, and if any question this, read James 5:4. God forbid that any who labor for their [own] wages shall be so urgent to preach faith, to educate in faith and trust in God those whom they would have labor in uncertainty [regarding their wages]. Every one who labors should have a set sum for their labors. They will work just as interestedly and receive just as profitable an experience. I propose that we do some home missionary work on these very lines, for God is no respecter of persons.
(12LtMs, Lt 160, 1897, 2)
I am still quite weak, but steadily improving. I have not yet made up my mind to go to Melbourne. I think I might accomplish just as much good here in New South Wales and perhaps more than to go to Sydney. You have so much help I am not needed; but when our brethren shall leave for Melbourne, if my strength improves, I will come to Sydney, if you think it best. If not, I shall be glad to remain where I am and rest.
(12LtMs, Lt 160, 1897, 3)
I have had precious seasons of communion with God. I long to see our people venturing in one line of work after another by living faith worked by the Holy Spirit of God. I pray for this; I long for this more than the weary soul longeth for the morning. Let us cultivate faith, living, active faith.
(12LtMs, Lt 160, 1897, 4)
I did hope to receive a line from you today, but I suppose you have all that you can attend to. I have been quite ill, but I thank the Lord I am able to attend to a few things.
(12LtMs, Lt 160, 1897, 5)
For two years I have felt that I knew not what would come next demanding means, but I may take in the whole period since I have been in this country. They have been years of close, hard study to know how to make ends meet. I have occasionally invested means in purchasing goods at the selling-off clearance sales, whereby I can clothe the naked with the least expenditure of money. There have been solicitors who are not of our faith begging for old clothing; and those who are children of God are really in a worse condition in various ways than these parties who are so free to beg, for this seems to be their trade. They had much rather beg or steal than work. I have a mind to help all much more than it is possible for me to do.
(12LtMs, Lt 161, 1897, 1)
When we came to the woods one year ago last July to see the land, I thought to purchase. We traveled with our horses and carriages through the thick growth of young trees—wattle, ti tree, black oak, and Australian gum—over longs and around logs, breaking down the brush ten and fifteen feet high. After looking well, we decided to engage in the experiment of clearing, and planting trees and seeds immediately when the ground was ready.
(12LtMs, Lt 161, 1897, 2)
We employed the students then obtaining an education. There were Bible studies in the morning. I attended these morning meetings at six o’clock and gave morning talks to the students, and the Lord was indeed present in our assembly as we addressed the students after a season of most earnest prayer. Then all went forth to their labors in clearing the ground selected for the school buildings. They worked until about two o’clock, then took their dinner and enjoyed it. At three their studies commenced. Their testimony was that they could advance in their studies fully as fast as when they did nothing in the line of physical labor. They were fully convinced that agricultural, out-of-door employment combined with studies would be of far more benefit to them than merely studying alone. They were getting an education essential for practical life, and for physical improvement, by exercising all their God-given faculties of mind and nerve and muscle. Some of these students who could be spared commenced their work in clearing and making a road in the woods to connect with the government road, while others were clearing grounds for building and to put into fruit trees and for planting our vegetable seeds.
(12LtMs, Lt 161, 1897, 3)
We had scarcely a shower from December until the next December. The ground was dry and hard to work. Then came men from Parramatta and Granville to obtain employment. They were Sabbath-keeping Adventist. They were poor and could not get work. Here were intelligent men who needed clothing and food for themselves and for their families. And there were some youth. We set to work. After these men had been employed some months we saw the clothed, and some had earned means to supply their families. We then let them go, and employed others who were destitute and needed food and clothing. We had four tents pitched—my family tent, a dining tent, and tents for the workers.
(12LtMs, Lt 161, 1897, 4)
We saw the most noble giants of the forest, not cut or sawed down but dug out by the roots. Some were one hundred feet high, and when down, the trunks, or body of the trees, were high as my head. Many of these trees were perfectly smooth, without limbs, for a great distance. It seemed a great pity to see them stacked up in piles and an immense bonfire made to consume them. In Melbourne, in the winter months, it cost us one pound per week for fuel and coal to keep comfortable. One of these immense trees would make fuel for a large family for one year.
(12LtMs, Lt 161, 1897, 5)
Then we employed men with their bullock teams—six and eight span, with their large plows—to break the soil and cut and tear away the immense roots. Some were two feet through, and reached to a great distance underground. We did not wait to plow the entire ground, but made furrows and then our needy workmen could be employed to work with spade and hoe to prepare a space to set out trees—peach, apricot, plum, apple, nectarine, orange, lemon, and fig trees. They were just as earnest and anxious and industrious on the grounds where the school was to be located. A twenty-five-acre plot of swamp land was cleared, and trees were planted. We decided the best thing we could do was to give object lessons in the cultivation of the soil. We were wholly dependent upon Newcastle or Sydney for vegetables and fruits, and much loss was sustained in transporting these perishable goods.
(12LtMs, Lt 161, 1897, 6)
December, 1896 [1895], we moved to Sunnyside, Cooranbong. Our trees were set late, our seeds put into the ground late, and because of the lateness of the season but little was planted in the vegetable line.
(12LtMs, Lt 161, 1897, 7)
Lt 162, 1897
White, J. E.; White, Emma “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia October 16, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 4Bio 320-322. Dear Children, Edson and Emma:
The Sabbath is past, and there was so large a number present to attend the dedication of the house of worship that we could not be accommodated in the upper room of the school building. The church was done. I had not allowed myself to go upon the ground since the foundation was laid. I felt that the building was under the especial supervision of God; and it was so. The circumstances had been arranged by the Lord, without any of our wisdom. There were leading carpenters who receive high wages for their work; but this we had not considered at all. The word of the Lord came to me unexpectedly in the night season, calling my attention to the first two chapters of Haggai. Both chapters were to be carefully studied.
(12LtMs, Lt 162, 1897, 1)
“Thus speaketh the Lord of Hosts, saying, This people say, The time is not come, the time that the Lord’s house should be built. Then came the word of the Lord by Haggai the prophet, saying, Is it time for you, O ye, to dwell in your ceiled houses, and this house lie waste? Now therefore thus saith the Lord of Hosts; Consider your ways,” etc. [Haggai 1:2-5.] “Arise and build.” [Nehemiah 2:20.] I will send you copy of these messages written.
(12LtMs, Lt 162, 1897, 2)
Sabbath is now past. The house was well filled on Sabbath. I was requested to speak, and did so. The Lord gave me His message to give to the people. I spoke from 1 Corinthians 3:9-23. I felt deeply in behalf of myself and in behalf of our people who claim to be Sabbathkeepers, that they should be all now that the name “Christian” represents.
(12LtMs, Lt 162, 1897, 3)
We had an excellent meeting. The students were prompt in bearing their testimony. We had, the previous Sabbath, a very interesting meeting in our narrow limits of the upper room of the second building. Twenty of the students have been baptized, and some came to the school who had not an experimental knowledge of what it means to be Christians; but not one student leaves the school but gives evidence of now knowing what it means to be children of God.
(12LtMs, Lt 162, 1897, 4)
This was our last meeting in that upper room. Now we entered our chapel. I wish you could step into it. This was our first religious meeting, and it was indeed a place that we had done our best to build, that it should in its construction accommodate, comfortably, those who should assemble to worship God, and would do honor to God. He signalized His presence in our midst. The students bore free and excellent testimonies. It was indeed a pleasure to look at the building. It exceeds the expectation of all. The workmen have put heart, cheerfulness, [and] willingness into the work. They have expressed that they felt the angels of God were round about them. Those workmen, in the providence of God, were out of work, and waiting for something, they knew not what. But every hand was needed, and the building moved forward so smoothly, without a ripple for first two weeks. It seemed the Lord’s angels were working with the workers. We had stated seven weeks to complete the building. Ten days—lumber did not come. If we had had the lumber, it would have been done before the seven specified weeks.
(12LtMs, Lt 162, 1897, 5)
We learned by telegram last Friday, October 15, that Willie was in Wellington. The steamer, the paper reports, will be in Sydney, Tuesday, October 19, if they have favorable weather; if hindrance in head winds come, she will not arrive before Wednesday morning. Our camp meeting in Sydney commences Thursday next, October 21. So you see that we have a very close, busy time of it here, just as we shall have to enter upon a two-weeks’ labor in camp meeting.
(12LtMs, Lt 162, 1897, 6)
Brethren from Melbourne say they will not leave directly. They want to remain as long as they can, and see the place, and I hope they will do so. They certainly ought to go out in the boats to the river, called and misnamed Dora Creek. It is a narrow body of water, but very clear, and very nice from the creek. The boats enter the lake, or sea, the most beautiful representation of a lake we have ever seen. Farms are on both sides, bordering the banks of the lake on both sides for several miles. Boats come up to the very school grounds to deliver their cargo from Sydney. These brethren have keen perception of the beautiful, and they certainly will appreciate it in their view taken in this location.
(12LtMs, Lt 162, 1897, 7)
Well, we must wait no longer to write you. Some leave this morning, and we leave tomorrow morning, to prepare our place for a two-weeks’ sojourn in Stanmore, where our camp meeting is to be held. We have secured three large rooms within five minutes’ walk of the campground. W. C. White has one or two rooms, myself one large room. Then our large family tent is pitched on the ground for my family, and a dining tent. W. C. White will have his tent also on the ground. Those twin boys are small chaps, but they do need a big space for themselves.
(12LtMs, Lt 162, 1897, 8)
Our meetings here have demanded all my time. [With] visitors and councils, reading manuscripts for Life of Christ, and manuscripts or articles for the papers, and looking after one thing and another, I am fully occupied. This is the only letter I send to America. I shall send this to you. No other line goes to any one, so you may communicate as much as you please of this.
(12LtMs, Lt 162, 1897, 9)
May and her family are well. She leaves with us on the morrow for Sydney, in full expectation of meeting her husband either Tuesday or Wednesday. All the family go on the ground tomorrow morning. I have got through this strain remarkable well. I feel thankful to God for His great goodness. We had beautiful weather at the dedication of the chapel, and the previous Sabbath, which was just as important. Now I trust in the Lord to go through the taxation of camp meeting, two weeks in Sydney, then a camp meeting following in Melbourne if the Lord gives me strength to attend. I am having all my workers and family go but my two youngest children, the girl sixteen, the boy fifteen years old. And Marian Davis will not consent to go. She is working on The Life of Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 162, 1897, 10)
I must now say, God bless you, my children. Keep cheerful, pure in thought, pure in word, because you are pure in heart. We are of good courage in the Lord, full of hope and peace. Oh, that we might see the salvation of God in our camp meetings. We will have faith and hope and courage in the Lord. May the Lord bless you and hold your right hand, that you may receive of His strength and hopefulness daily, is my prayer.
(12LtMs, Lt 162, 1897, 11)
I have much written, but impossible to get it copied. Next mail is the regular mail, next Monday, for San Francisco. Then we will have something to send.
(12LtMs, Lt 162, 1897, 12)
Mother.
Lt 163, 1897
Kellogg, Brother and Sister Stanmore, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia December 20, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 4Bio 339. Brother and Sister Kellogg:
We are pleased to write you that [we] praise the Lord with heart and soul and voice. There are several souls who have taken their stand on the Sabbath since we came to Sydney this time. They are those who can be a great help to us to reach other souls. No man no longer delay building a commodious house of worship. The work is deepening and widening. Most excellent families are taking their stand and the work goes forward.
(12LtMs, Lt 163, 1897, 1)
The mission house is occupied by Elder Haskell and wife, Elder Starr and wife, and the girls whom they are educating. They are giving them Bible instruction, and all are advancing. Every penny is carefully treasured. They have scarcely chairs to sit in, and everything is utilized—[they are] using boxes for tables and bureaus. I have a room of my own. Elder Haskell furnished me a comfortable chair. I furnish my room, and I spend Sabbath and Sundays speaking to the people in the afternoon.
(12LtMs, Lt 163, 1897, 2)
I was taken very sick before leaving Cooranbong. Physical force left me. Sara thought at one time that I was dead. But no, my work is not done. I rallied (this was Thursday). Sara said, “It is not at all consistent that you should go to Stanmore to speak to them Sabbath.” I know, I said, it is not consistent, so far as appearance and circumstances indicate, but I feel drawn to Sydney. I shall go.
(12LtMs, Lt 163, 1897, 3)
The Lord prepared the way before me. I always take [a] second-class car, and the compartments are not always restful, and the seats are hard. But there was a second-class compartment empty, every whit as good as first-class, and we entered it. Sara made me a bed, and I lay down on the seat and felt the peace of God in my heart. Only one lady came into the car. I always take [the] ladies’ compartment. We changed cars at Strathfield, and rode to Petersham. There we took a hansom and in a short time were at the mission home. Brother Wilson met us at Strathfield and helped us in the change. Friday night was a hard night for me, for the heat wave passed through Sydney.
(12LtMs, Lt 163, 1897, 4)
The Lord gave me words for the people Sabbath afternoon. I knew He would sustain me. There are periods in the work when we must have every living current in exercise—the Lord working through the human agent. I knew this was an important crisis in the work. I knew also that I had words for the people. We had a good congregation and the Lord blessed me. Several others have taken their stand. This is what we desired.
(12LtMs, Lt 163, 1897, 5)
Sunday, yesterday, I spoke again. I had contracted a severe cold and my throat was quite sore, but the Lord gave me freedom; His blessing rested upon me, and the people listened with the deepest interest. Our brethren are working constantly, preaching and visiting, instructing from the Bible, and praying with families. I must not visit, but I will do what I can in speaking. Sara scolds me quite severely because I will be so presumptuous, as she calls it, but the Lord helps me and I shall work.
(12LtMs, Lt 163, 1897, 6)
We have never seen so great interest. Many souls are taking their stand, and they are a more intelligent class than those who came out in Ashfield. Some are already paying their tithes. Last night another man said he must keep the Sabbath. He has been convicted since the Ashfield camp meeting in 1894. He says he is meeting great opposition, but he cannot delay longer, for he has no peace of mind. There are several excellent men, who are now in the government employ, who are searching the Scriptures daily. They attend every meeting and are deeply stirred by the Holy Spirit. We cannot let go the work here. The Lord will teach and bless and gather in the harvest.
(12LtMs, Lt 163, 1897, 7)
Dr. Kellogg, will you please to inquire in my behalf in regard to my son, Edson White. Look into the situation, and if he needs money to help him complete his book, draw upon the Review and Herald office on my account and help him through. I do not want him to borrow of any one, and I will be his helper. I come to you because I would rather the Review and Herald should not know that I am helping him. They will know that you and I have dealings, and you can tell Edson but not the Review and Herald. You know how soon their jealousy is aroused. Tell Edson to keep his own counsel. You will accommodate me much in doing this.
(12LtMs, Lt 163, 1897, 8)
When my books get into the market, I shall have means to invest in more books. I am much perplexed to know what shall be done, but I must get into print much matter that should have been published long ago. I have sent a telegram to Africa for Sister Peck. She will now come. Sister Haskell received a letter from her that she was all ready to come at once if she knew Sister White wanted her now after her long delay.
(12LtMs, Lt 163, 1897, 9)
One and another have held Sister Peck away from me, not because they were doing the right thing, but because they were ignorant of my work and my true position and the burdens I have carried. They know not in regard to the real character of my work. They think anyone could do well enough for Sister White.
(12LtMs, Lt 163, 1897, 10)
If you could see the school Sister Peck is working for, you would understand the unpromising elements that compose the school. There are teachers who could fill that position who could not possibly do the work that needs to be done in connection with my work. Those working with me must be those who are connected with God—those who have spiritual discernment—worked by the Holy Spirit. I have lost much by not having persons who could help me—now, when I need help the most. I cannot relate all the particulars. I hope the Christian Temperance book will be completed. I am sorry for such delays, but so it is, and I must not fret, but my soul is tried and grieved at these delays.
(12LtMs, Lt 163, 1897, 11)
I am to look at the site for the meetinghouse here, and it is considered a good location in Newtown, but they ask for this lot four hundred and fifty pounds. We cannot reach it. We should have, and could obtain, money for the building of a house of worship, we think, which would cost seven or eight hundred pounds. But we must have a chapel, and we want it all finished by the first of March. But this price for the lot seems to swallow up so much money that we do not know what to do. We will not become involved in debt, but we must “arise and build.” [Nehemiah 2:20.] We cannot delay. We are now awaiting the acceptance of the offer of a much less sum for the lot, and in a few days will know. The new ones who have come to the faith are making their donations. We cannot fail. We must go forward in the name of the Lord. This house of worship must be built. There is no other way.
(12LtMs, Lt 163, 1897, 12)
There is one point I left out of my letter in reference to Edson’s matters. He thought he must have money. He asked Brother C. H. Jones of Oakland, California, for five hundred dollars. He agreed to let him have the money if he would let him have a half interest in his book. This Edson agreed to do, but he felt bad to do it. He saw no other way, but I have written to Brother Jones that I would take that matter off his hands and he might charge me with the five hundred dollars. So, you see, Edson may get along without more money; but if he cannot, please do this for me, as I have stated, and draw upon Review and Herald office for the needed amount.
(12LtMs, Lt 163, 1897, 13)
You will have sent to you from my editors copies of writings you would be interested in. I was much interested in your letters, but since receiving them have had an ill turn and could not get to the meetings to read the enclosures. I shall now keep them to read at Stanmore and, when I return to read in Cooranbong.
(12LtMs, Lt 163, 1897, 14)
These ill, sinking turns are so much like death that all my family are greatly perplexed and distressed over the matter, but I am not ready to die yet. The Lord will spare my life till there is a work done with my writings that could not possibly be done without special help. Had I been able to get Sister Peck when I should have had her, then I would have been released from great responsibilities. I will not blame any one for this, that they have not been able to take in the situation, but certainly if they had known they would have labored to secure me the help I so greatly needed. I have thought of Frank Belden. If he would only give himself to the Lord, he could have been a great help to me, but I do not want those who are full of accusing others.
(12LtMs, Lt 163, 1897, 15)
The Lord will help me; the Lord will strengthen me. The book on [the] life of Christ is done. Thank the Lord for this. We now need a small printing press that we can get off small tracts and pamphlets. I must have this. There are presses that are small to take copies of writings with the least working, but I will not write more.
(12LtMs, Lt 163, 1897, 16)
I cannot get these letters copied, for I have no machine here. Sara thought we would go home today, but we are held here for me to see the spot of land they are negotiating for, to erect a meetinghouse.
(12LtMs, Lt 163, 1897, 17)
Lt 164, 1897
White, J. E.; White, Emma Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia July 4, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 4Bio 305, 308, 324-325. Dear Children, Edson and Emma:
The school now numbers over sixty students. There will be some new students who will come this week. We did not expect so large a number would attend the school the first term, and we did not expect so good a class of students.
(12LtMs, Lt 164, 1897, 1)
We are pleased with the principal of the school and his wife. They are determined to carry out the testimonies. Brother Hughes does not say, “Go, boys,” but pulls off his coat and says, “Come, boys.” He works with them. He is the right man for the place. All take hold with a will, cheerfully.
(12LtMs, Lt 164, 1897, 2)
I have been bearing the testimonies which the Lord has given me to bear. The two last Sabbaths in June our meeting room was full. The Spirit of the Lord was upon me, and the Lord manifested that His Spirit was working upon the hearts of all present. We had excellent testimony meetings after the discourse. The subject the last Sabbath was upon the talent of words. My text was first epistle of Peter 1:20. I will send you copies of the substance of these discourses.
(12LtMs, Lt 164, 1897, 3)
Yesterday, July 3, I dared not attend the meeting. I had labored quite sufficiently Friday afternoon in a committee meeting. It was expected I would speak, but I dared not venture. Sunday, today, must be the closing of my American mail.
(12LtMs, Lt 164, 1897, 4)
I was much exhausted. Again I seemed to be impressed that Elder Haskell had the Word of the Lord for the people. The report is that the discourse from Elder Haskell was most excellent. As it was the first Sabbath in the month, the ordinances of the Lord’s Supper and feet washing were observed.
(12LtMs, Lt 164, 1897, 5)
The meeting room was nearly filled last Sabbath. We have had most beautiful, pleasant weather the past week—clear sunshine, cool nights. We had the first frost last night. It is midwinter in this country. Today is the Fourth of July, with clear, beautiful sunshine—cool morning, but no fire needed after the sun shines. We seldom have any fog here. We consider the climate excellent. It is remarked [that] scarcely any one dies around here in Cooranbong.
(12LtMs, Lt 164, 1897, 6)
Willie’s family are all well. The boys are healthy, rosy-cheeked, rollicking little fellows. When Sara and I go to Morisset, four miles and a half, or to Cooranbong, one mile and a half, or to Dora Creek, three miles, we manage to tuck in the children and give May a little resting spell. Ella May and Mabel now go to school and are away from 9 a.m. until one o’clock p.m. Having to manage the two, she cannot do much else. The lads have learned when the horse comes to piazza, they will both run to grandma, their two pairs of little arms stretched out, saying “Gegee, Gegee.” This is about all the words they speak. They are in such ecstasies over getting a chance to ride that I have not the heart to say, No. So they bundle in with their little red coats and white plush caps.
(12LtMs, Lt 164, 1897, 7)
We are all caught in the mistake of not distinguishing them one from the other. Lines of difference are very slight. Their skin is very clear and white, their cheeks red. Their eyes are dark—not blue. Their hair is dark and has not any curl in it. They are just beginning to trot around. They have been good-natured and not troublesome, but now they are so lively we will have to watch them. They have lived very much in the open air, and can scarcely be content indoors. Their great delight is in being on the ground. Then they are in the greatest glee. They are very pretty boys. Their father will hardly know them, and they will hardly know their father.
(12LtMs, Lt 164, 1897, 8)
Willie has been having a one-story cottage built. We have arranged that the piazzas shall be eight feet wide and on two sides of the house. The railing is made so that there is not a possibility of their getting out or falling over, and there is a gate that will have a spring catch which will keep them corralled, so the young White colts will not be straying out in the woods like lost sheep. They are different from any of my children in their talents of words. They do not talk at all, but they know what is said to them. My boys talked when ten months old. These boys were born April 6. In two days they will be fifteen months old.
(12LtMs, Lt 164, 1897, 9)
Willie will start for home on the next boat and, if he comes direct, will be here the last of August. I want the house completed, that they shall be all settled in it when Willie comes, for of all things that he dislikes [it] is moving. The building will cost three hundred pounds. We shall probably have to hire some money but not if I can get of the conference money loaned without interest—one hundred pounds. We want to get the family where they will be comfortable. This is not possible where they now are, this midwinter time. The rooms were unfinished except the one we finished, the bedroom where the little children were born. The building was the first built on the land, to be used for a workshop and then for wash house. I let them have the use of the only spare room in my house, which I used for parlor. That has a good fireplace and is plastered. They bring their children into that room in the morning, and they occupy it until evening, then they put the boys to bed.
(12LtMs, Lt 164, 1897, 10)
We might have had the house completed now if it were not [that] I gave up my workmen to complete the second school building. You might suppose that this was a very fine house to cost so much, but it costs just about double to build a house here, and takes three times as long as to build a house in America. Before the weather boards can be nailed on the house every one has to be bored with a gimlet to put the nails through the wood, it is so hard. The wrought [iron-]nails will double up if this is not done. So you see everything takes longer and lumber is more expensive. Then here our boards for floor come from Oregon, America. All the lumber here will shrink very much. The buildings which should not cost in America over one hundred pounds cannot be built here for less than two hundred pounds. This makes all meetinghouses and all dwelling houses cost much more than in America.
(12LtMs, Lt 164, 1897, 11)
I have just been called away to receive visitors from Pennant Hills and from Kellyville—Brother Schowe and his daughter from Pennant Hills, and Brother Martin from Kellyville. Brother Martin visited me three weeks ago and recommended that the trees be all rooted out from our garden. The tops had already been cut off, but they were sapping the richness and moisture from the ground. These gum trees will absorb all the moisture and richness from the ground. Brother Martin said he would come up and make our garden for us. He is a farmer and gardener. He has just come. Brother Schowe is a school teacher, principal of the school at Pennant Hills. The whole family came into the truth reading [Patriarchs and Prophets], and afterward Brother Smith’s book, Daniel and Revelation. He is considered a superior teacher. While they are eating their dinner, I am completing my letter.
(12LtMs, Lt 164, 1897, 12)
Brother Schowe has brought me many plants, a root of the cloth of gold rose, enormous bulbs of dahlias, and several very nice specimens of roots. This is his vacation, so he can leave now and remain away about one week. He has close friendship and fellowship with me and believes all the testimonies. He has a large amount of very fine land at Pennant Hills. So you see, I shall have to break off my writing and do some visiting. He has not been here at Cooranbong before. He is deeply interested in the school now in session here at Avondale. We have now to take up all our plants and bushes and have the ground laid out in proper beds.
(12LtMs, Lt 164, 1897, 13)
I wish you could see the monarchs of the forest—trees that have been rooted out. Their roots were enormous. The trees were one hundred feet high and the trunks very large, enormously large. We could make nothing grow in our yard successfully but now we will expect to see a better growing than we have hitherto had. I am pleased that Brother Martin has enlisted himself in my behalf. He charges nothing for that which he does for me. I pay his fare, not exceeding about two dollars.
(12LtMs, Lt 164, 1897, 14)
Well, the house of Willie we would call small in America, but here it will be regarded quite large. But there is not a room too many. All is better calculated than my house. But our house was started for an office. We knew we could not obtain the funds to create that which we so much needed, and took what we could get. Women and girls climbing up stairs is to be avoided if possible. There is too much of that business done in America. I find it a saving of my strength to be on first floor.
(12LtMs, Lt 164, 1897, 15)
I do want to see you both so much. I can only be grateful to my heavenly Father that He gives me clearness of mind and health at my age. We have cleared just a few trees to make a place for Willie’s house. We are having five acres fenced so that we can set out a strawberry bed and peas and radishes, and in August plant potatoes. Now is the time to do this.
(12LtMs, Lt 164, 1897, 16)
Well, Edson and Emma, I hope you will remain well. I was glad to understand your resolutions in your last letter. Your work is to do the will of God in opening the Scriptures to others. I send you enclosures that I consider of great value. Will you copy this letter I send to you, and send the same to your aunt, Mrs. P. Foss, West Minot, Maine? I cannot write her, for I have not time to do this. I send you two pages of letter I did write, yet I think did not send. I will add: the meetinghouse has been built in Hobart, Tasmania, and they are in a much better condition spiritually.
(12LtMs, Lt 164, 1897, 17)
Put your trust in God and follow His counsel at all times and you will find it safe and secure. Do not let loose your hold on God, but learn of Christ in His school. You will obtain an education of value. Press close to the bleeding side of Jesus and be not desponding or discouraged. Work to do God service with an eye single to His glory and you will receive His peace, consolation, and joy.
(12LtMs, Lt 164, 1897, 18)
Mother.
Lt 165, 1897
Farnsworth, Brother and Sister Stanmore, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia December 6, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother and Sister Farnsworth:
I thank you for your letter to me. I am hoping and praying that the Lord will work and bring souls to take a decided stand. We are praying that not less than one hundred souls shall stand under the banner of truth, the third angel’s message. Give us souls, give us souls is our plea.
(12LtMs, Lt 165, 1897, 1)
We left Cooranbong last Friday and came to this place. We find the work advancing. The tent was well filled on Sabbath all day. The Lord strengthened me to speak to the people, and then we had a most precious social meeting. Sunday morning the sweet, precious peace of Christ came into my heart. I felt the Holy Spirit’s influence. Strength came to me, and I was revived and felt special courage and joy in the Lord.
(12LtMs, Lt 165, 1897, 2)
[As] I [gave] the message in regard to the Sabbath and the coming of our Lord, the Holy Spirit was upon me. The people listened with the deepest interest, and my soul was free in the Lord. Oh how glad am I that the Day Star hath visited us! There has been most diligent working. Up to the present time meetings have been held every evening in the week with the exception of Monday night. Now they give up meetings Saturday evening, but they only transfer their labors that evening to visiting families to watch for their souls as they that must give an account. The chief workers have interested families that they can reach better by personal labor, speaking a word in season to help some minds over a perplexing point.
(12LtMs, Lt 165, 1897, 3)
There is now from henceforth to be a half hour’s season of prayer before the discourses. The workers will invite all to come one-half hour earlier, then will inquire if there are any points which they do not understand. If so, they explain the matter to them until they can comprehend it. They give them all the main features of our faith in discourses, that they will not fail to have an all-round experience. The families seeking for the truth seem hungry, longing for the light, and they grasp ideas eagerly. The Holy Spirit is in our meetings. Oh, the plan of redemption, what a truth, what a precious, glorious theme! “Thou shalt lay their sins,” said Christ, “upon me, and the believing souls shall have peace and rest. I will bear their sins and, my Father, Thou wilt be merciful to their unrighteousness, and their sins and their iniquities thou shalt remember no more. The merit of my righteousness shall be theirs, and for my sake thou shalt bless them in me, with all spiritual blessings.”
(12LtMs, Lt 165, 1897, 4)
December 12
I thought to respond to your good letter at once, but then I knew not where to address my letter and while waiting to get some clue to your whereabouts I learned you had left for New Zealand. Then I knew I should have to tarry until another boat should leave. I am very thankful to say that after a long trial with kidney and heart difficulties, since the camp meeting, I am now improving. Last Sabbath was rainy, and I did not go to Sydney although I intended to spend last Sabbath and Sunday in Stanmore. But the rain has come, commencing in Cooranbong Friday, in Sydney Monday, and continuing to rain every day—gentle showers, not violent at all, but seeming more like the dew of heaven. This rain is beyond any human estimate. We were praying for it, and we feel deeply grateful for the blessings which our God alone can give.
(12LtMs, Lt 165, 1897, 5)
Lt 166, 1897
White, J. E.; White, Emma Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia January 14, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in TDG 22; 4Bio 289. Dear Children:
The regular mail leaves Monday and I must write to you a little now and then. I received nothing from you, Edson, in last mail. I was disappointed, but thought that circumstances hindered you. I cannot write you much. Will only say a few words. My head and eyes are wearied out. I send this letter, and Willie will let you see the one I send to him.
(12LtMs, Lt 166, 1897, 1)
I am having much work to do of late and more writing than I care to attend to, but once I get this batch off I shall not try to write much more, for I am tired of it. I expected to send you a diary from day to day but I have not done it. I could not possibly spend time to write in my book.
(12LtMs, Lt 166, 1897, 2)
I hope Emma and you are well. Do not either of you attempt to go one step without the evidence that you have Jesus with you. Never, never separate from Jesus, your very best Friend. Beset the throne of grace for help, for the golden oil to be emptied into the golden tubes in the golden bowls, and then you may be sure that some of the lamps—the churches—will burn brightly. The Lord would have us ask that we may receive. There are the heavenly messengers waiting for the sincere petition, and they draw nigh to the hungry, thirsting soul. Then let your whole souls go out after God. Wait on the Lord. The heavenly messengers will empty themselves into the golden tubes flowing into the golden bowls to enlighten others. If you ask, believing, you will receive. Never, never be destitute of the golden oil, for this will keep your lamps burning.
(12LtMs, Lt 166, 1897, 3)
Believe ye receive the things ye ask for and ye shall have them. Come with humble heart, but presenting the promise. Then believe you do receive. The name, the all-prevailing name of our Saviour, is our assurance and our boldness. God presents Himself to us as a hearer of prayer. Keep on right ground with God, so that you may have the witness of the Spirit that you are one of His elect and faithful, trusting ones.
(12LtMs, Lt 166, 1897, 4)
Never allow Satan to discourage you. Trust yourself not in the hands of Edson White, but in the hands of God. Practice prayer; cultivate humility and meekness; but commit the keeping of your soul to God. Depend in all that you do on the Holy Spirit, for He is our strength, our efficiency. The Lord is ever training us through difficulties. Pray, pray; be instant in prayer. Commit everything to God in prayer—your business cares, your disappointments, your joys, your fears.
(12LtMs, Lt 166, 1897, 5)
Do this, children, and you will have a sense of God’s presence, and thankfulness and gratitude will flow forth from your heart and lips in vocal praise. Your heart will be mellow, and you will make melody to God in your heart.
(12LtMs, Lt 166, 1897, 6)
My son, rise to a high standard. Do not indulge in cheap talk, but let the soul go forth in expressions from your lips of the love of Jesus.
(12LtMs, Lt 166, 1897, 7)
Let us always be sober, reverential, in dealing with the Word of God. There is an eternal consequence in our rightly employing our talents of speech, our talents of voice, and every qualification given us to exercise and improve. We are to be pure in speech, holy in all manner of conversation, drawing nigh to God and He drawing nigh unto us. I will not be able to write more. I have a meeting tonight over a special case.
(12LtMs, Lt 166, 1897, 8)
Mother.
[P.S.] W. C. White will let you read his letter. Was in meeting till eleven o’clock p.m.
(12LtMs, Lt 166, 1897, 9)
Lt 166a, 1897
White, W. C. Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia January 11, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Son Willie:
I send you copies of matter written and one more copy I will send to Dr. Kellogg, I think.
(12LtMs, Lt 166a, 1897, 1)
I am much troubled in regard to the course of Brother and Sister Shannon. They have said all they could say and many things untruthfully. I have seen Brother Lawrence and talked with him. I have spoken two Sabbaths in succession and brought the things written before the people. Sister Shannon remains with the Hughes family. Her tongue is very active and most bitter. He and she report he left a good business in Hobart to come to Cooranbong, and then to be treated as he has been is terrible. Is this true? Well, there has no word come from them yet.
(12LtMs, Lt 166a, 1897, 2)
We had a meeting last night and I spoke plainly to Brother Lawrence. The working hands were present. I presented before them the unselfish course that should be pursued by all who located on the school ground. I tried to show Brother Lawrence his supreme selfishness, but I am coming to the conclusion it is a hopeless case. He says he cannot be interested in but one thing; if he is interested in land, he cannot be interested in and do anything else. He has been an elder of the church, and what has he done? I told him he had been sitting on Satan’s idle block of temptation, for Satan to work his mind. Now the Lord has no need of Brother Lawrence on this ground. He works on thoroughly selfish principles. Self, self, self is first and last and best in everything. He is a schemer.
(12LtMs, Lt 166a, 1897, 3)
Brother Hare sold him a nice little cow for three pounds. He is going to move away somewhere and he offered that cow for five pounds. It proves to be the best cow they have. O’Neal would not make an offer of more than four pounds. I told him the cow, if of value, is just what the school will need and that he should return that cow for the same price he gave for it, but he said he had given his word to O’Neal. I afterwards learned he offered the cow to Sister Coulston for five pounds, and she offered him four pounds ten. I sent him four pounds in gold for the cow, to return to the school, but he said he had offered it to Sister Coulston for four pounds ten and his word was pledged (twice, you see, to two different parties). Connell came back with the four pounds. He could not let the cow go for less than four pounds ten.
(12LtMs, Lt 166a, 1897, 4)
Last night we had a meeting, and I laid out his course plainly before them all. I asked Brother Lawrence how much he paid Brother McCann for girdling the trees for Brother Craig. He said he did not remember. “I understand one pound was your price for girdling the trees. You gave Brother McCann ten shillings. You were getting one dollar and a half per day working for me. I consider this sharp practice to thus rob a poor man of the money you took, and kept the ten shillings yourself.” Well, he said, it took his time. But he was working at the same time for me, getting the six shillings per day. I told him this was just the course Judas pursued. He would do some little service and pay himself out of the treasury, and Jesus called him a thief. [John 12:6.] Well, our meeting lasted until [late]; it was after ten o’clock when we reached home. Brother Hare talked nobly in the meeting. He was the only one to sustain me, because the others, I think, did not know what to say. He puts things before them in strong terms, but truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 166a, 1897, 5)
Now, in regard to Shannon. Did you send for him? You told me he was in Sydney, and it was providential that he could get no work in Hobart, and he came to Sydney to find something to do. But now, as did Brother Miller, he puts things in a strange, false light, and Sister Shannon’s tongue is set on fire of hell. They say, Shannon and his wife, Metcalfe Hare is a hypocrite. You know and I know it is not thus. He may become impatient at times and speak harshly, but I know he is in the right place, and his heart is in the school interest.
(12LtMs, Lt 166a, 1897, 6)
I send you copies of letters from Brother Daniells. I believe Miller and Brother Wood and the boys will all again be connected with the office. Brother Anderson in Melbourne is coming around right, so we will see the bright spots and not the clouds. I expect a letter from him today.
(12LtMs, Lt 166a, 1897, 7)
May and the children are well. The children are becoming more and more interesting. I went in yesterday noon and Brother Lacey was holding one and the other was in a chair close by. He had a little harpsichord he was playing, which set them almost frantic with delight.
(12LtMs, Lt 166a, 1897, 8)
Received a good letter from Brother Starr yesterday. Today the mail goes and I cannot get this copied. Next mail goes to America in one week. Will have more to send then. I understand that the house or rooms we intend to build cannot be undertaken by the men here for two months. I shall try to find some other workmen; if not, it must be delayed. I do not want the school hindered at all. That must be pushed.
(12LtMs, Lt 166a, 1897, 9)
Lt 167, 1897
White, W. C. Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia January 14, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 8MR 256. Dear Son Willie:
We are all well except myself. I am some better than when you left Cooranbong. We have much to be thankful for. We feel sad that Brother Shannon should pursue the course he has done, and Sister Shannon also has done a large amount of mischief making. When I consider the matter in our connection with Brother and Sister Shannon, what grounds they can have for their present feelings and complaints in a mystery to me. We are not safe anywhere and to connect with anyone, even of our own professed brethren and sisters. We feel so burdened over the condition of things we seem to be unable to help. What can be done?
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 1)
I think the principles of Brother Lawrence have developed most decidedly. Here he is on the school ground, and he has from first to last questioned the price of things he would purchase, to make as low a price as possible; then he has placed his work at a high estimate. His time he considered of great value. Wherein he will help the school is a problem. He keeps his money in the office in Battle Creek. He has nothing he gives in point of money. His tithe is not brought in here, and he considers he would have helped the school with money if he had confidence in the managers.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 2)
You know, Willie, we have met these close, selfish men who make money their god, who have come to [the] Health Retreat and other places when we were trying to build up special interests, [such] as schools and sanitariums. They had money they were going to invest, but something was not according to their minds, and they never did anything.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 3)
The penurious spirit that Lawrence manifests is so unchristian, so sharp for himself, that it is painful, distressingly painful. For eighteen months he had bedstead, mattress, and bedding from the school. Brother Hare charged him the simple sum of five shillings. He told him he thought three shilling was plenty. In several things in business deal he has shown great tact to get things cheap and then try to sell them for nearly double what he gave. This, I learn, has been his education. But we cannot write all these things.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 4)
I have done what I could to show him what he was doing, but it makes no impression upon him, I think. He has cultivated this spirit until it is second nature to him. Brother Craig gave him one pound for girdling the trees that were on his allotment. He hired a grayheaded man, Brother McCann, and gave him ten shillings, and when I presented this to him he said he had to stake out the land and show him where to work; “my time is worth something.” I told him if I should count my time for every favor I did a brother or neighbor it would swell into a large sum. Here were several poor families we had felt it our duty to help. How much had he done to help them? Christ said, “The poor always ye have with you.” [John 12:8.] I said, I am writing on the case of Judas. It is stated he was a thief. [Verse 6.] He cared not for the poor, but took the money for his own benefit, to help himself. In doing the little essential things in connection with Christ and His brethren he exacted to the last penny for every act of his. None of us should do as Judas did.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 5)
I am very tired and very sick of such missionaries. We can do very well without them. I have not confidence in Lawrence locating in Gisborne. I would not dare to have him do this, for the spirit of avariciousness is so marked that he seems either to be completely blind or all shame or sense of propriety is gone. He will talk all you will listen to him of his tact and ability, and he told me once, in a certain period of his life, he did do considerable work in some line of missionary labor—what line I cannot remember—but he said when he engaged in farming he could not do religious visiting, for he could not carry on two lines of work.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 6)
Now, I cannot discover where he has one qualification to benefit any church that was ever formed. His wonderful qualifications for farming may exist, but I have been unable to see anything superior in this line. But he principles and practice of Brother Lawrence in dealing, in buying cheap and selling again for double, is marvelous. This is of that kind of ability that would be dangerous for any church. All that he will admit is he is selfish. He said he offered for the land nigh us all that the land was worth. It was no good and it was only for my sake he proposed to purchase it that it would increase the value of my land. This is his manner of trading. I have perfect evidence of how much interest he has manifested for me or for anyone in Cooranbong.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 7)
But I wish to tell you that we miss Rousseau very much. It is no use to think of running a school with the young men, Lacey and Teasdale, unless you can have a principal of dignity, a man of firmness, who will stand firm as a rock to principle. You will not succeed here with surrounding elements, and I would not remain here. The men Shannon and Lawrence have proved unreliable to work in our school interest, because they cannot fleece money out of the enterprise in benefiting themselves.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 8)
And here I am, standing in this mixed-up condition, without one person who has influence enough to be respected. I entreat of you to secure to most reliable, conscientious man who has sufficient authority to command respect. If Brother Starr could connect with the school a portion of his time, what would you think of that? I do not know what is best, but one thing I do know, we must have preceptor of the school who is of sufficient age and experience to command respect.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 9)
I talked with Brother Semmens in regard to the sister we thought to have come to connect with the Health Home. He says he dare not encourage her coming, for we must have a less expensive matron and one who will work in any place where she is most needed. So this is the situation, and he has one in mind, a Sister Hungerford, who will, he thinks, suit all around much better than the sister I had in view. So we must not urge her any more, for it is Brother Semmens’s privilege to understand and choose who shall be connected with him as helper. We will visit Sydney either this week—tomorrow is Friday—or next week. We may be able to help them some about planning.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 10)
I have, just a few hours ago, talked with Brother Lamplough in regard to the building. I am sorry to say that I cannot get my lumber without sending to Sydney. Brother Hare has lumber to get out for school building, and cannot get what I want under four weeks. These four weeks the carpenters have nothing to do, and I will have the two rooms and my barn put up in that time. The building of house will cost me, all complete—two rooms thirteen and a half by fourteen and a half, all plastered and painted complete, piazza eight feet wide, full window put in where little window is now in the house which is May’s bedroom, the window where my house joins cut down, the chimney to carry three stoves built outside of old building—three hundred fifty dollars. I do not know as I can ask to have it done for less. I thought it would be more enjoyable if there were two feet more width on piazza.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 11)
I am sorry that I must pay money out and out for much of this, but my two White boys must have room. They were rather poorly when they came here. They are teething good and strong. Had some restless nights, but they are looking so bright and sweet and wholesome. May the Lord spare them to us is my prayer. I go in every day, and sometimes twice, and the babes stretch themselves to get at me, laughing and crowing. Both are well now.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 12)
May feels much less lonesome than where she was. If I get peaches, I take in some every day till they are gone. Anything I get I shall let them have a share. May is quite comfortable as she is now, but we wish to provide for the winter. We thought we must put off building for at least two months, but the plasterers cannot come to do the school building for four weeks. In that time the house in prospect will be done. He puts all hands on the building and drives it as fast as he can. Then the barn must be planned and up while workmen are here and can do it. As soon as the school building is plastered then they can do my work on the house. It seems to fit in exactly. So we will get lumber at Healy’s mill and in Sydney. The flooring will be Oregon pine. I believe that is all I can say in regard to the building. Is this too high a price—three hundred fifty dollars for all complete?
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 13)
Friday, January 15
Sara and I had a talk with Brother Hare since writing the foregoing. I have had the bill of the building complete, and find it is four hundred and _____. I said I must not build. I will defer building now. I will not invest so much. I will get your plan of house and will consider the advisability of putting the building on the spot where you designed it should be—put up the whole framework and finish off two comfortable rooms, or four as we can decide is best, with the lean-to as kitchen. I shall ascertain the plan of house all finished.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 14)
I thought I would see Brother Hare. He says if the carpenters go on my building it will delay the next building they intend to build, that there is enough to keep them employed to finish up odds and ends on the school building all ready for the plastering. I told him my conclusions. He says it is good, and he would advise the last decision to be carried out. It would be the saving of many pounds. May coincides with this. The house she occupies is made fifty per cent more handy, and cooler. It is cooler in these hot days than our cottage. There is circulation of air all through the house by cutting the door from the diningroom to that little room, which placed the stove in there nicely. And the door was already there, so it is a comfortable house.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 15)
In winter we will have another house for her. If we could move this little building across the road and then attach the rooms to it, the money invested would tell to some account and no loss at all would be sustained. I will wait for you to express your mind in this matter. She takes babies and Ella and Mabel down to washhouse and babies sit in carriage or on rug on the floor, and they wash everything. She says is so handy; it is only half the work.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 16)
You have got two of the least troublesome children I have ever seen, except Henry and Willie. Edson was not well much of the time of his babyhood. It is wonderful how little they worry and fret. Sara fastened the hammock in the added room, and they enjoy it very much.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 17)
I would say I have consulted Father Lacey, and he thinks it altogether the wisest plan. I am going to have the building examined and see if it can be moved. I shall never want a family [that is] not one with us so near me. But we will wait your decision. If we can get the barn we will do so; if not, we will wait until we can.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 18)
I instructed Brother James to attend first to the school orchard and see the special necessities there. When he has done this he will come to my orchard and see what is needing to be done there, and when these are done he will have a plan for [a] barn and see that a rough building is put up to accommodate horses, carriages, and feed for stock.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 19)
My eye is quite bad, and I cannot write much. I have written to Shannon and to Elder Daniells quite often, and I am burdened much over many things.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 20)
One thing, I am thinking, you are crowding families all together too near the school. I advise that a large space of land be reserved without settling families so near the school. We see the folly of this. Let them locate at some distance from the immediate school lands. When families come in that can render moral strength to the workers in the school, then you have accomplished a good job, but from the light given me there will be, as there is now, those who shall settle on the land who will be thorns in our sides. Close by is the water and the boats, and the carts and the wagons and the horses between the school and me. We shall have a severe time of it. The _____ they use will be broken and injured, and the school must stand the expense of getting them repaired; and then if they are not permitted to be favored they will do as Shannon has done—go away and talk and fill the minds of churches with suspicion and distrust.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 21)
The Gage family locating here, I fear, is a mistake. They are very free to expect favors and very exacting in regard to any favors they may do. I do not fancy we shall have any easier time with such families locating here, but it looks to me a big mistake to crowd in as close as possible to the school grounds persons whom we have not proved. I have seen such a grasping spirit, such a readiness to ask for favors, and, under the missionary banner, to consider themselves are the ones to be considered. There will be a constant friction in this line, for they will never be pleased unless they receive all they desire and expect, but they do not consider obligations are mutual. Well, enough on this line. There is a positive demand for good families from America to come to locate in Cooranbong—not right on the ground nigh the school but at a distance; on the school land, but not in its shadow. Families will complain of the children, and the children may have sufficient cause to complain of families. Think of this thing and let me know your mind.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 22)
Nearly one week ago I had an interview with Brother Lawrence. I set before him his true situation—that his love of money constituted it an idol. “But they that will be rich fall into temptation and a snare, and into many foolish and hurtful lusts, which drown men in destruction and perdition. For the love of money is the root of all evil: which while some coveted after, they have erred from the faith, and pierced themselves through with many sorrows. But thou, O man of God, flee these things; and follow after righteousness, godliness, faith, love, patience, meekness. Fight the good fight of faith, lay hold on eternal life, whereunto thou are also called, and hast professed a good profession before many witnesses.” [1 Timothy 6:9-12.]
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 23)
I told Brother Lawrence that his love of getting money and his great desire of keeping money were proverbial. It was a physical and moral disease. I set before him the principle. I should have acted in regard to the cow. He had tried to sell the cow to O’Neal for four pounds and the calf for ten shillings. He said it was a new thing to pay for a cow and a large price for her calf, which was supposed to go with the cow. Then he offered the cow to Sister Coulston for four pounds ten shillings. She would not give so much. I told him if it was a good animal he knew the school should have it, and he should return the cow and calf at the same price he gave for it. But he said he thought it was a straight business deal. Then I sent four pounds for the cow but he said he must have four pounds ten shillings. I stated in a two-page letter that I would place that cow in the school and give it to the school, just where it should be. Our conversation was not satisfactory.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 24)
Then the money he had taken from Brother McCann for his own pocket came to me, and I called a meeting, and, as I have stated, I had to talk very plainly. I brought up the case of Judas. His appearance was that of an intelligent man of keen discrimination and possessing shrewd business capacities. Judas had all the opportunity of the other disciples of learning the practical lessons of instruction given of Christ every day, if he had appropriated these lessons. But his scheming propensities were carnal and were corrupting the whole man. I said, You are following in the very same track—selling your soul for your love of gain.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 25)
I poured out words that the Lord gave me. The Lord spoke through me that he knew not what manner of man he was. He was following the leadings of Satan. He was hindering the work of the Lord. I said to him, Money is your god. You worship it, hoard it, and soon the word will be spoken of you “Ephraim is joined to his idols, let him alone.” [Hosea 4:17.] The meeting closed, and as I passed out he shook my hand.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 26)
Well, the Holy Spirit of God was striving with him that night, the next day, and the next night. He felt convicted and began to see himself and his condition. He felt an awful burden, and he began to surrender to God. Then light came in and he began to see himself more and more. Early in the morning he went down to Brother McCann’s and paid him the ten shillings he had withheld, and the Lord blessed him. He talked as if he was gaining a rich experience, expressed a desire that the work should go deep and not stop there. I believe the Spirit of the Lord was working with him. He made a good confession. Said he had been like a man paralyzed and blind, perfectly blind. He was as a man awakening out of a long sleep. He would not rest until he should see all things clearly.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 27)
The next day was Sabbath. We had the Spirit of the Lord in the meeting. I knew the Lord gave me a message for the people. Brother Lawrence confessed. He made a very long story of his coming from America, but he at last came to the point and confessed his influence had been all wrong. He seemed to be broken up, but he did not touch the particular things. I do not know whether he met the mind of the Spirit of the Lord or not, but I was much burdened.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 28)
Sister Lawrence got up and had a long story to tell of how good she was and how good her father was. He had not embraced the truth, was very much opposed to the truth, but what a good Christian he was, and he had brought her up. Oh, it was so out of place and so tedious! I at last begged of her not to take precious time to tell the family history. She had stated that she wrote to her son if they had money to waste to send it over here. I suppose she meant to give the impression that this is the business they were engaged in. Some took it that she meant that they would find abundance of opportunity to use all they would waste. But as she and he both had talked so freely about wasting means, I think it was as I first understood it, that was to send money here to be wasted by being misappropriated.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 29)
It seemed as though a funeral pall had enclosed us, and I was mortified and distressed. The meeting soon closed and I was glad to go out while they were singing. I felt so burdened.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 30)
I am unable to write much today. My left eye troubles me very much. Tonight we have a meeting about the horse dicker, the strangest piece of business I ever heard of being done. Tonight we have this matter investigated—Brother Lacey, Brethren Wooden, Connell, Hare, and myself. What a pity I have to engage in such business, just because not one man is left here who will be respected. It is too bad. I will do my best, but ought not to do anything in the matter. I will write the results after the meeting.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 31)
I received the letters Brother Daniells sent to you. I am relieved of a great burden. Brethren Miller and Wood and the Miller younger brothers were needed. I am very thankful to the Lord for this reunion and in a proper, correct manner. I also received excellent letters from Brother Farnsworth and Brother Baker. I will send them if I can get them copied. These three letters were a bit of sunshine amid the clouds. I read them in meeting Sabbath—not the Farnsworth letter, for that was too long. May the Lord bless him for writing so tenderly and so truly. You know I wrote him in regard to his preaching the Word and keeping his hands off the machinery. How it relieves me to hear such a response to a message of caution given.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 32)
Received a letter today that Sister Baker has a fine boy, weighing nine pounds. All doing well. They want Chrissie Martin to come. They need her much. But Chrissie Martin goes home. She learns her mother is not well. Her father is sick. Sister Lucas has just gone to visit her mother and is to remain away two weeks. Now Chrissie leaves and we have no help. I thought of going to Sydney but will not go this week.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 33)
This letter is in jots and tittles and I am afraid it will not interest you, but just pass it over to Edson. I wish you could see the few late peaches we allowed to remain on the tree. They are very large and very nice. We have tomatoes in abundance. There will be all May and our family will want. The vines hand full. Our grape arbor is now being put up. Harry is here while there is no work for him on school building.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 34)
Mother.
Willie, did I send you a copy of a dream I had in regard to you and Dr. Kellogg? I cannot find it; thought I might have sent it.
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 35)
(Could not get this copied.)
(12LtMs, Lt 167, 1897, 36)
Lt 168, 1897
White, W. C. Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia January 17, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Son Willie:
Last night we had a long meeting in which I set forth principles. The trade of the horse was taken up and discussed. There is the same kind of dealing in all the work of Brother Lawrence, but he is, I am thinking, beginning to see things more clearly. He says he means to get right. He has not had this matter I send you, but this is the only copy that I have sent away and it is right that you should have this.
(12LtMs, Lt 168, 1897, 1)
Brother Lawrence is beginning to see things in a more distinct form—that his life practice and principles will not stand the test of the judgment. I think the Holy Spirit is working with him. He said last Friday he wanted the work to go deep and thorough, and he wanted now to understand his duty. If they wanted him to work, he would be willing to work at any price they may give him; but if he will only go away somewhere with his wife, who is a Pharisee in self-righteousness, we would feel much better. Now Brother James has come here and moved his family here. We can see no place for Brother Lawrence, but he does not feel like leaving. May the Lord help us all to understand our duty before Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 168, 1897, 2)
I can write no more now. I hope Haskell will come back here. I feel it is unjust to leave me here just as I am, along, to carry this load.
(12LtMs, Lt 168, 1897, 3)
Mother.
Lt 169, 1897
White, W. C. Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia January 18, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 4Bio 323-324. Dear Son Willie:
Your family is at last moved. All the things are away except the posts. The ground is so hard that it is considered it will hardly pay to remove them. The family are again in this house where your twin boys were born. The work was long. The heavy goods to be moved are now over and the family nicely settled. They look real cozy and have room enough for the present.
(12LtMs, Lt 169, 1897, 1)
May would not consent to move the stove into the house. It was outside and rather discouraging work. But a thought came into my mind, put there by the Spirit of the Lord: Cut a door through where the stove stood before, put the stove in that little room. After a little thought I called Sara and began to plan for this. Here Connell did excellent service. Everyone was pleased. The window in that little compartment was in the exact place for the pipe to go through. Zinc was put up the sides and back so that there was no danger or risk to run of fires. May says the stove takes about half the wood that was used in the convent, and the oven bakes perfectly. The draft is excellent. Now she says she will not be in a hurry about the new buildings.
(12LtMs, Lt 169, 1897, 2)
We had all the plans made and figured upon to build two rooms fifteen by fifteen and an eight-foot wide piazza. We thought to have it on the side you mentioned, but May preferred it to be on the end where the tank is. Have it unconnected with the house, a chimney arranged to the old house and to accommodate the old and the new so that when the new shall be removed the chimney will be of use in the house that now is. The house will face the road just as our cottage. We found it would cost for piazza and additional room fourteen pounds and then we should not have much. Our present plan-two rooms, chimney, piazza, will cost us about one hundred and twenty-five dollars, all lathed and plastered, and then the family will have all the room they need, and be comfortable. They have no care of milking. They take a pan of milk night and morning all scalded. May says close by us she does not feel half as lonely as she supposed she would feel.
(12LtMs, Lt 169, 1897, 3)
The babies are doing well. Herbert was sick for a day or two—could not take his food—but is all right now. They both know me and laugh and crow as soon as I come in sight. I take one, [and] the other will work his arms and make every maneuver to have me take him too. But one, you know, is an armful. It is a treat to me to see and tend the little ones whenever I can.
(12LtMs, Lt 169, 1897, 4)
The building of the house will be started in two weeks, and then you will be comfortable for one year at least. They could do very well without a house, but I do not have any inclination that way. The girls, Ella and Mabel, are doing nicely. The mother was down at the convent with both babies, trying to clear up. Sister Anderson was employed two days to work in cleaning. The children here were setting the house in order. It looked neat as a pin. I came in on them about noon one day and found them both on their knees praying. I said, Good! It just brought tears to my eyes, so that at first I could not speak to them.
(12LtMs, Lt 169, 1897, 5)
Lt 170, 1897
White, J. E. Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia January 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Son Edson:
I am sorry that I have not letters written to you with my own hand, but I send copies that will interest you. I want you to be of good courage and have strong faith in God. Keep your eye fixed upon Jesus. He is the Author and Finisher of your faith. Keep on the Christian armor, prepared for battle at all times and in all places. Sara is waiting for this. I received no letter from you this month. I am disappointed, but such things will happen and therefore I will not worry. Next mail I hope to be able to write more fully. You will see by copies that I have had an immense sight of writing to do for Melbourne, South Africa, and Battle Creek.
(12LtMs, Lt 170, 1897, 1)
Be of good courage in the Lord. Your only safety is in keeping the eye single to the glory of God. He will be with us. In much love to you and Emma,
(12LtMs, Lt 170, 1897, 2)
Mother.
Write me often as possible. If I could only see you and converse with you!
(12LtMs, Lt 170, 1897, 3)
Lt 171, 1897
White, J. E.; White, Emma Summer Hill, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia February 15, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in TMK 198, 330; CTr 45; 4Bio 291. Dear Children, Edson and Emma:
I am writing you at half past one o’clock a.m. We left Cooranbong last Monday eve. Brother Haskell had come from New Zealand and wished to see me upon important matters regarding the Health Home—rooms to be furnished, and economy to be exercised in everything connected with the work.
(12LtMs, Lt 171, 1897, 1)
Sabbath I spoke in Newtown, where our people assemble on the Sabbath. We need so much a house of worship in this place. Meeting in the halls is costly business, and they are illy fitted for meetings. Elder Haskell spoke at Ashfield in forenoon and assisted me in the afternoon at Newtown. The social meeting was excellent. Sunday afternoon I spoke at Ashfield and Brother Haskell spoke in the evening.
(12LtMs, Lt 171, 1897, 2)
Sister Hurd arrived in Melbourne from Africa one week ago last Sabbath. She went off the boat to Brother Daniells’ place, but it was ascertained smallpox was on board, therefore she with others was brought back to the boat and all were quarantined. So we cannot see her, but communications have come from her by letter. Last Sabbath the boat Nineveh came to Sydney and three passengers are in quarantine on a beautiful island. Letters are passed back and forth, but that is all the communication that will be allowed. [Elder Haskell?] inquired of the proper one if he could not see Miss Hurd. He said, “Yes, but you would be popped into quarantine immediately.” We return to Cooranbong next Thursday and shall be glad to get home.
(12LtMs, Lt 171, 1897, 3)
I would be glad to be with Willie and you through the meetings held in Battle Creek during the conference, but this cannot be. The work must be established in Australia. There is need of all the workers we now have, and we must have more also. I expect Sister Peck from Africa will unite with us in the school work, and she may help me in my work. Marian is, you well know, feeble. She does what she can, and I do not see how I could do without her, but I must have more who are qualified to do the work intelligently. Maggie Hare does well in preparing articles for the papers, and the many letters that I feel constrained to write. I shall not be able to get off all the matters I designed to send, because my left eye troubles me considerably, and I cannot get the matter copied on the typewriter.
(12LtMs, Lt 171, 1897, 4)
May White and the children are all well and pleasantly situated close by us. The twin boys are two bright, pretty children, ten months old the sixth of February. They are very good-natured, easily amused, seldom ever cry, and in short are the best of children. They keep their mother pretty busy taking care of them.
(12LtMs, Lt 171, 1897, 5)
Well, about our health home. There seem to be but very few patients at present, but we think that there will be. I have furnished me a room, that I can have a place to stay when I shall go to Sydney. For this I pay one dollar per week. Brother Haskell is furnishing a room at his own expense, and when patients shall come in then they can leave the room and Brother Semmens can pay him back again from the money paid for the room. I hope this health home will prove a success, but it is an experiment. We have not facilities in workers, neither money to use to do any such work as Dr. Kellogg is doing, but I know that could we have the money and workers we should see that such a kind of work would pay in more ways than one.
(12LtMs, Lt 171, 1897, 6)
It would be reaching a class that we otherwise could not reach. Again it would be an entering wedge to introduce the truth. It would be just such a kind of work as must be done to fulfill the commission of the parable to go out into the highways and hedges and bring in the maimed and the halt. The specified ones are apparently the most unpromising class, but when just such ones are labored for, there will be discovered among them men who possess talents but whom misfortunes have buried out of sight. There will be found drunkards and human beings who have sunk very low, into the very mire. But the gospel supper is a feast spread for even such as they.
(12LtMs, Lt 171, 1897, 7)
They are not the worst of all beings. There will be found those who, if they will, may come to the supper. And this kind of labor God approves. The Holy Spirit will be the efficiency of all who work in this line.
(12LtMs, Lt 171, 1897, 8)
I hope that something more can be done for the Southern States, but I am convinced that our people have a work to do in this line. If the churches in every locality who believe the truth would sense the importance of working now while they can work, there would be hundreds who are now at ease like Moab who would sense the situation and go to work, coming up to the help of the Lord against the mighty. It is a matter that should stir every soul that while it is now day is the golden opportunity. But there must be those who will come into the harvest field and who will be workers without expecting their wages in this world. In the next world they will be abundantly rewarded.
(12LtMs, Lt 171, 1897, 9)
There are men and women who have been letting their talents rust with inaction, who are wasting their time doing nothing in communicating light, and who could do a most precious work and grow in grace and capability to work by doing their best in accepting the work just where they are. They can single out individuals—their neighbors—and give them personal labor. A work is neglected here that ought to be done to communicate in a wise manner the light given of God. The Holy Spirit will be the Instructor of all who engage in such labor, consecrating themselves to the Lord and seeking wisdom of God daily.
(12LtMs, Lt 171, 1897, 10)
Some can do much in a quiet way. All can work, but it will be in varied ways to do service to God. There can be no set, prescribed plans and special routine of methods. Let the Holy Spirit lead and guide the workers. Every man and woman and youth has talents to use to do service to Jesus Christ, who has purchased him with the price of His own blood. Personal effort, connected with the ministry, should be entered into largely. Our churches need to awaken to a sense of Christian duty to seek to save the souls perishing in their sins. There are heathen close to our own doors whom believers in the Word have not spoken with, showing regard for their souls. We must have a higher, deeper, more demonstrative faith than we now have. Souls are perishing in their sins, and God has given us light and evidence of what He would have us do.
(12LtMs, Lt 171, 1897, 11)
God has given us a long time of probation. There will be a personal dealing by the Lord with each individual. The Lord will investigate the use we have made of the talents He has entrusted to us. He has paid the wages of His own blood, and His own self-denial and sacrifice and sufferings, to secure the willing service of every soul as a laborer together with God. If only all felt their accountability to God to wisely employ the gifts in talents entrusted, what a revenue would be brought to God through Jesus Christ! The one talent may and will increase by use. The supposed lowliest gift, the humblest service, may reach minds and influence hearts that those who possess larger talents could not touch.
(12LtMs, Lt 171, 1897, 12)
Now, now, now is our most favorable time to work. Individual visitation is of great value. In love for Jesus Christ and love for human souls the truth is to be carried to every family, talked of by every fireside that it is possible for you to find access to.
(12LtMs, Lt 171, 1897, 13)
Do not begin at once to talk of temporal things, but let the people understand you have come as a loving, sympathizing heart to save them from ruin. Women can oft do this delicate work better than men. Earnest, God-fearing women can do a precious work for the Master. This kind of work is the remedy for lukewarm, selfish, covetous souls. They will, if they work to save others, melt away the cold, icy atmosphere which has surrounded their souls.
(12LtMs, Lt 171, 1897, 14)
The Lord is soon to come, and we have only a remnant of time in which to work. You may be often disappointed because you find your earnest, loving interest meets no response, but the experience of the greatest Teacher the world ever knew is before you. He was refused, opposed, rejected, derided. Let us consider our Saviour’s life and say, I will not fail nor be discouraged. The system of labor, personal labor, will do a work that but few anticipate. To carry it out in the spirit of Jesus because you are conscious you are doing Him service will oft prove a cross, but bear in mind that the Holy Spirit is the worker. The human agent working for God is not alone. “Not by might, nor by power, but by my spirit, saith the Lord” will do wonders. [Zechariah 4:6.]
(12LtMs, Lt 171, 1897, 15)
Labor in perseverance, in tenderness, compassion, prayerfulness, and love, will do more than sermons. The Lord Jesus, in giving His life for the saving of the world from the curse of sin, intended greater things than our eyes have yet witnessed.
(12LtMs, Lt 171, 1897, 16)
The Holy Spirit is waiting for channels through whom to work. If all would do the work to which they were appointed, thousands of people might be saved. Satan will not always triumph. The Spirit of God will be poured out upon the church just as soon as the vessels are prepared to receive it. How long shall the faith of the people of God remain so limited, so narrow? Why not exercise faith that the Holy Spirit shall [so] increase in large measure in divine blessings, and intensify human agencies that the glory of the Lord shall be revealed?
(12LtMs, Lt 171, 1897, 17)
My son Edson, the more humble you keep, the closer you draw to God and show you trust Him as a little child trusts its parents, the more securely you will walk. Your strength is wholly in God—in your simple, entire trust in God. The churches of Seventh-day Adventists need to walk more by faith and be less dependent upon feeling.
(12LtMs, Lt 171, 1897, 18)
Edson, if you come in close relationship to Jesus Christ you see wondrous things out of His law that are not now seen. The softening, subduing influence of the Spirit of God upon human hearts and minds will make the true children of God to sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus. Christian culture will be carried on in every heart worked by the Holy Spirit. There will be a soft, subdued spirit in all those who are looking unto Jesus. The love of Jesus always leads to Christian courtesy, refinement of language, and purity of expression that testify [to] the company we are with—that like Enoch we are walking with God. There is no storming, no harshness, but a sweet fragrance in speech and in spirit.
(12LtMs, Lt 171, 1897, 19)
The Word is to be our study. Here is a mine of precious ore. Much of it has been glimpsed at, but there is the digging to be done to secure much more precious treasures. There have been many who have just rummaged over the surface in a most careless, slovenly manner, when others are searching more carefully and prayerfully and perseveringly and hidden, inestimable treasures are found.
(12LtMs, Lt 171, 1897, 20)
Edson, be sure to search the Scriptures prayerfully. Do not let anyone’s speeches or thoughts revealed in actions, affect you. You want an abiding Christ. He loves you. He has drawn you by the cords of His love. Let it be seen that your life is hid with Christ in God. Let there be no hasty speech, no cheap words, no slang phrases. Let it be demonstrated that you are conscious of a companion whom you honor, and that you will not make Him ashamed of you. Only think, dear children, we are representatives of Jesus Christ! Then represent His character in words, in deportment, that others may see and understand your good works and glorify God.
(12LtMs, Lt 171, 1897, 21)
The working of the Holy Spirit will reveal the human agent a laborer together with God. The converting power of God is needed every day to sanctify and fit vessels for the Master’s use. Oh, there are precious lessons in the Holy Book that we are yet to find and practice! Our conscience must recognize and revere a higher standard of Christianity.
(12LtMs, Lt 171, 1897, 22)
My son, time is short. Dear children, consecrate yourselves wholly to the service of God. Let your light shine forth in clear and steady rays, undimmed by the dark shadow of Satan. You may be all light in the Lord. You may be increasing in efficiency, in purity, in the knowledge of God, if you keep meek and lowly of heart.
(12LtMs, Lt 171, 1897, 23)
I have written you a long letter. It is now fifteen minutes of five o’clock, and beside this I have written a letter to Dr. Gibbs. But you cannot tell what a yearning of soul I have for you, children, that the Lord shall work in you and by you and through you.
(12LtMs, Lt 171, 1897, 24)
Mother.
Lt 172, 1897
White, J. E.; White, Emma Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia March 15, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Son Edson and Daughter Emma:
I can write but a few lines at this time. I have arisen at two o’clock and have written Willie and Dr. Kellogg. He is particular to send me important matter, which I highly prize, by every mail. He does not neglect one mail. Sometimes he sends two and three letters in one mail.
(12LtMs, Lt 172, 1897, 1)
I now send letters to Willie which he may wish to retain. I wish you to have a copy of these important letters so I send them to C. H. Jones with explicit directions for him to copy them if he chooses to retain copy, and send you a copy as soon as he can. This is the best I can do for you on this mail. Willie, I suppose, will be with you, and you can read his letters, as I send to no others in Battle Creek. Copies must go to Elders Daniells, Farnsworth, and Hickox. Every copy is taken up.
(12LtMs, Lt 172, 1897, 2)
I am quite nervous, as this is thirteen pages I have written since two o’clock a.m. It is now my breakfast time and I must eat, for I take only two meals per day—at seven and one o’clock. I shall have no uneasiness in regard to you in your work if your reliance is wholly upon God. Holiness is a constant agreement with God, the shaping of the life in conformity to Christ. The soul windows are kept open towards the Sun of Righteousness. Live for God. You can live in simplicity of mind, cherishing the meekness of Christ. The Lord Jesus’ command to you is “Learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls.” [Matthew 11:29.]
(12LtMs, Lt 172, 1897, 3)
I cannot go farther now. I am so weary. Love to you and Emma.
(12LtMs, Lt 172, 1897, 4)
Mother.
Edson, I have written to you largely. I have sent you copies of important letters. Whatever you deem best to put into the hands of others you can do so. I have written to Brother Tait. You would send him a copy of some things I had sent to you, just as much as you can afford to send him. You can send the same I send you to him, and let him copy and return to you. It is much work to get off so much writing and I want to do all the good I can. Some things may come out in the papers in time, but not yet have we time to get it edited. I wish to send in two weeks manuscript on life of Christ for you to use as I have specified. If I can, I will get this off on this mail. Have been up since three o’clock, writing.
(12LtMs, Lt 172, 1897, 5)
Mother.
Lt 173, 1897
White, J. E.; White, Emma Refiled as Lt 149a, 1897.
Lt 174, 1897
White, W. C. Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia July 5, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Son Willie White:
I wish I could write with some hope you would receive these lines, but I am uncertain where to address you. We are all as well as usual. All your family seem to be in the best of health. The twin boys have rosy cheeks and are two sturdy, rollicking boys. May and the two girls are well.
(12LtMs, Lt 174, 1897, 1)
Your house is nearly finished. The first coat of plastering is on, but it has dried slowly so that the man left for Parramatta last Sunday. They will come to finish next Sunday. Then the carpenters can go on with their work. Brother Worsnop is digging the cistern. This I considered essential, that you should have a water supply, for this is treasure at all times. We hope the second coat will dry fast so in three weeks your family may be in and settled and prepared for you.
(12LtMs, Lt 174, 1897, 2)
All the trees are rooted out of the garden and out of the front yard. All the gum trees were rotten, decayed even in the branches. They evidenced to us that they absorbed the moisture of the ground. When the great monarchs fell and stove to pieces, the branches and the trunks were full of water. Pailfuls, Cornell said, ran from them in their fall.
(12LtMs, Lt 174, 1897, 3)
I hardly know what to write you. The meetings here have been intensely interesting. The last three Sabbaths they were especially so. The ordinances were celebrated last Sabbath. The word is that Brother Haskell spoke with deepest interest, giving a powerful discourse. The two Sabbaths in succession before the last, I felt that I had a message for the people and the Lord gave me much freedom. I was pleased to see the interest manifested in the testimony meeting. Many students took part and with feeling spoke their gratitude to God for the words that had been spoken.
(12LtMs, Lt 174, 1897, 4)
I am very thankful the Lord has favored us with the presence of Brother and Sister Haskell. They seem both to be an exact fit. I shall indeed feel sorry if she will be removed for another to take her place, but we cannot expect always to hold them here. But we shall be very loath to part with either of them. I have never known Brother Haskell to be so full of the right words in the right place as now, and he interests the students. But he would do much good, his wife connected with him, in Melbourne and Adelaide, for just such labor as he gives will be a great blessing.
(12LtMs, Lt 174, 1897, 5)
We are much pleased with Brother and Sister Hughes. They will be the right ones to work here. Brother Hughes does not say to the students, Go and do this or that, but he says, Come, let us do this job or that job, and the students take hold with a will. They seem to be cheerful in their work. They have no meat nor butter on the table but enjoy their meals. In some way the ball playing came in on Sunday, but as we talk the principles of the value of time, it being a precious talent, not to be employed in self-pleasing but in the very work Christ was engaged in in His human life, there is less enthusiasm in their exercise for mere amusement. The expression has been made that they felt happier when they were using time and strength in useful, needful work.
(12LtMs, Lt 174, 1897, 6)
The Word of God practiced by our Saviour is our safeguard for spiritual health and physical health. Here is light for us from the throne of God. It should indeed be the man of our counsel. Here is a treasure house from which we may draw. We need not any of us send thousands of miles away for counsel.
(12LtMs, Lt 174, 1897, 7)
Certain directions are given us to follow in regard to our duty to our fellow men, and if we do the expressed will of God, so simply and plainly stated, the precious promise is, “Then shall thy light break forth as the morning, and thine health shall spring forth speedily: and thy righteousness shall go before thee; and the glory of the Lord shall be thy rereward. Then shalt thou call and the Lord shall answer: thou shalt cry, and he shall say, Here I am.” Here are the conditions: “If thou take away from the midst of thee the yoke, the putting forth of the finger, and speaking vanity; and if thou draw out thy soul to the hungry, and satisfy the afflicted soul; then shall thy light rise in obscurity, and thy darkness be as the noonday: and the Lord shall guide thee continually, and satisfy thy soul in drought, and make fat thy bones: and thou shalt be like a watered garden, and like a spring of water, whose waters fail not.”Isaiah 58:8-11.
(12LtMs, Lt 174, 1897, 8)
With this promise we are rich. We need not send far off for help, for God is nigh unto all who call upon Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 174, 1897, 9)
There now seems to be harmony in the school and prevailing generally. But we shall be so glad to have you home again. We need you here. And I am so glad you will have a home to come to. I cannot write you more now but shall hope to see you soon.
(12LtMs, Lt 174, 1897, 10)
Mother.
P.S. Brother Daniells and Brother Palmer were to leave for Western Australia. I wrote to them I could not see why they should now leave when the religious liberty question was coming to the front and everything should be done that is possible for human effort to do, and then leave the result with God. But if it is essential that one go to Western Australia just at this time, let Brother Palmer go alone and Brother Daniells remain to exert all the influence possible to press back the power of darkness. We can do our best as far as human power is concerned, and then leave the result with God. I enclose the letter in return. Also a letter from Brother Farnsworth.
(12LtMs, Lt 174, 1897, 11)
In much love,
(12LtMs, Lt 174, 1897, 12)
Mother.
We shall pray every day for you that yourself and those who accompany you may have the special blessing of God in your journey over the great deep.
(12LtMs, Lt 174, 1897, 13)
Lt 175, 1897
White, J. E. Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia July 9, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Son Edson White:
I have but a little time to write you, for the burden of many things is upon me. If you had been with me since Willie left I could have laid upon your shoulders the planning of [a] house for Willie White. He left the plan, which we have had to study over and estimate cost of everything and then to see how much we could invest in it. The cost was itemized, and we went over the matter item by item and studied how to reduce the figures. We cut down here and there, and did not allow one needless thing.
(12LtMs, Lt 175, 1897, 1)
The foundation was to be made of brick. That cost we lessened. We made the blocks of wood, all of which had to be covered with tin on the top so as to keep out white ants. This was a reduction of the price. Then we cut out several other items of expense. In the plastering they generally have three coats. The last is the white coat which is the most costly. We dropped out that and had the first and second coat. It looks dark, that is all, but answers the purpose just as well.
(12LtMs, Lt 175, 1897, 2)
July 16, 1897
The Sabbath is drawing on. Our cistern for W. C. White’s house is just finished digging. If we have fair weather the cistern will be bricked up. We shall put four hands on Sunday. They put in it two tiers of brick laid in cement. It is fourteen feet deep and forty-two feet around. We wanted all this work done, for it is very nasty work. The material coming from the cistern is like sticky clay, and must be drawn away so as not to be scattered on the ground. Today four men have been at work on this branch alone. Connell is drawing brick from the school grounds, one half a mile. Loading and unloading is quite a business. He has one man to help him. Worsnop has been digging the cistern. Brother James, who is my farmer and all-round workman, also assists in this matter, and the work is going forward nicely.
(12LtMs, Lt 175, 1897, 3)
May White will begin to get into her house next week. It will not be entirely dry, but we will not have them sleep there for a couple of weeks. We have feared rain, but we have a beautiful sunset and if the rain holds off a few days—three days longer—this great job will be done. It is a most essential piece of work for this country. The water in the iron tanks becomes very warm, but the water from the cistern is always cool. Willie has a comfortable, convenient, plain, well built house and it is now off my mind.
(12LtMs, Lt 175, 1897, 4)
I think of nothing more that needs to trouble me, but this house has come mainly upon Sara and me to devise and plan in many things. If we had not done this it would have been far behind and many things would not have been brought in that add much to the convenience and at little expense. I never had this to do before, and is it not a little strange that at nearly seventy years old I have this, my first experience in such responsibilities? I hoped to get it done before the winter months came on, but everything had to be done that is possible for the school buildings, and we dropped all our building to help them out.
(12LtMs, Lt 175, 1897, 5)
The sun has set; the Sabbath is here, and I leave this writing. The beautiful golden sunsets make me think of the golden city. Oh, I long to be there and see the King in His beauty and behold His matchless charms! We may never meet again upon the earth, but I do long to see you both so much!
(12LtMs, Lt 175, 1897, 6)
Good night, dear children.
(12LtMs, Lt 175, 1897, 7)
Lt 176, 1897
White, J. E.; White, Emma Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia July 19, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Children, Edson and Emma:
I am anxiously expecting the American mail this day and shall expect to hear from you, and perhaps something from your brother Willie. I know not whether he has left San Francisco. We have missed him very much and we desire his return, and we could wish yourself and Emma would return with him. We should be more pleased than I can express. Willie, I understand, is preparing to enter the ministry more fully and do less sedentary labor. This is better for him. He has used the brain but not the physical proportionately. May will move into her new house the last of this week or the first of next week. We think they are living so near their home that they will move gradually, fitting up one room at a time, cleaning, putting down carpets, and then arranging furniture.
(12LtMs, Lt 176, 1897, 1)
July 22
This morning Brother Coulston came from Dora Creek, running, I think, nearly all the three miles. He is a fisherman and has quite an experience. He gives evidence of being as truly converted as any person we have seen. He was an inveterate tobacco user, but he said he prayed the Lord to take away his appetite for the tobacco and he had no tasted it since. He told Sara that there was a man taken very sick with inflammation of the lungs. This man’s name was Wilds. He would not allow a person of the belief of Seventh-day Adventists to cross his premises; but when he thought he was going to die he sent for a Seventh-day Adventist, and he was, they said, taking on at a great rate. He sent also for another brother, a fisherman, so he has two men, both Seventh-day Adventists. Sara and May White have both gone to see the case. Inflammation of the lungs in this country is not very common, but quite severe when it once gets hold firmly. Coulston is very anxious that everything can be done to relieve and save the man and remove his prejudice. May the Lord work this case to His own name’s glory is my earnest prayer. Poor, ignorant people, they are inspired by their ministers to hatred of the truth, but we will let God work.
(12LtMs, Lt 176, 1897, 2)
May feels very sorry that Willie cannot come home at once, but she will not be unreasonable. I have stood in his place. If you had been here, Edson, I need not have had so many responsibilities to bear, but we have—Sara and I—planned and devised, and we are well pleased with the work and the whole building. We have had to turn and twist every way to keep May and her boys any way comfortable. I gave them the only room I had in the house, which was my parlor, for them to occupy. There is a good fireplace, and in this cold winter weather it was not safe for them to be at home.
(12LtMs, Lt 176, 1897, 3)
Wherever Sara and I go we take the twins; tuck them down on a cushion at the front of us and we go five and six miles and back. This gives May relief, for both Ella and Mabel attend school from nine o’clock until half past one o’clock. I have two children. One, Edith Ward, has been with me three years. Her brother was boarded by a widow woman in Sydney. The boy Ernest was left motherless when a few weeks old. The lady has taken good care of him; but she became overworked, had spasms, and had to live with her daughter. We took the brother, only thirteen years old, only about three months ago, and we find him a treasure. Both Edith and Ernest are good workers. Their father is a canvasser and works in New Zealand. He pays the tuition of the children and I board them and clothe them, and they appreciate what is done for them. The boy is like a little man, pleasant, obedient, and cheerful, discerning everything that needs to be done and doing it.
(12LtMs, Lt 176, 1897, 4)
The two White boys are trotting all over, outdoors and in, and yet up to the present time they do not talk. But they are as sharp and bright little fellows as we could wish to see. As soon as the horses are hitched up they run to me with arms stretched out saying, “Gee, gee, gee, gee.” They must have hold of the lines. If they have hold of the end of them they are not satisfied until they reach and get their hands before Sara’s. Then they suppose they are driving. They will slap the lines up and down and cluck to the horses as nicely as any of us, but words they do not speak. May has her hands full, I assure you, and the girls away all the forenoon.
(12LtMs, Lt 176, 1897, 5)
My editors Minnie Hawkins and Maggie Hare love to get hold of the children at the noon hour. May’s father married Minnie Hawkins’s mother. That brought two families together. There were four girls in the Hawkins family and two boys; in the Lacey family, one boy and three girls—May, Margaret, and Nora. Herbert Lacey has spent five years at the Battle Creek school. But I must not write more now. The dinner bell rings and I must go. Much love to you both.
(12LtMs, Lt 176, 1897, 6)
Mother.
I have a little time yet. Brother Martin from Kellyville left us yesterday. He has been with us from last Sunday until Thursday setting trees—navel orange trees and mandarins and lemon trees. We had the land all prepared for him by my farmer. The great monarchs of gum trees, one hundred feet high with large bodies, came tumbling down with a crash, smashing their branches into many pieces. These trees have to be cut out by the roots and the roots are as large as trees themselves. They take all the moisture and richness from the ground. We had them all dug out and then had the land plowed three times, and rolled after the plowing. Then dressing was brought and the preparation made for the trees.
(12LtMs, Lt 176, 1897, 7)
We shall have a beautiful orchard in our very dooryard. This year they will not bear, but the next year after we shall have some fruit. Navel oranges are the choicest kind of oranges in the world. Brother Martin returns the interest I am taking to send his children to school. In this way he can help me and I can help him. He has planted for me a fine orchard, which he wants should be a sample of what can be done. I am much better pleased with the oranges in front of my home than with native trees that take up all the moisture of the ground and bring me no returns. We have now quite a large number of trees, and we wish you could see them. There are no such orchards in Cooranbong as the school orchard and this orchard at Sunnyside.
(12LtMs, Lt 176, 1897, 8)
Our babies are having a great time just now with Maggie and Minnie, my editors. They are rolling oranges for them to catch. They are very interesting boys and everyone who sees them takes great notice of them. They are saying now “Papa” and “Mama.” They are very smart and so good we all love them.
(12LtMs, Lt 176, 1897, 9)
Mother.
Lt 177, 1897
White, J. E.; White, Emma Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia August 16, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 8MR 257. Dear Children, Edson and Emma:
I shall address my letters to Battle Creek for you. I am very much pleased to find that we can go on with our main school building. Our second was only partitioned of and enclosed, and our funds gave out and we could not go farther. We have used a portion of upper story as a meetinghouse and the other half as sleeping rooms.
(12LtMs, Lt 177, 1897, 1)
After we had struggled and toiled and economized and bond about the edges, and were put to our very wit’s ends, we are informed from Echo office that our bookkeeper has discovered there was eleven hundred pounds that had not been appropriated. The Wessels had sent six hundred of this from Capetown for our school, but they supposed everything must come through Battle Creek. They sent it by the way of Battle Creek, and after some time it was sent to Echo office without one word as to what it was for; and there was also five hundred pounds more appropriated from General Conference fund to help in the school. None of it came to us. But the bookkeeper has investigated the matter and the above has been communicated to us.
(12LtMs, Lt 177, 1897, 2)
I must believe the Lord permitted this blunder to test character, and it has done this effectually in some cases. If we had had this sum in hand, our work done here would have cost us double that which it has, for we could not pay high wages. But now the Lord has brought this to light at the right time, and our third building will now be erected at once. If these buildings had all been put up we should not have had the best ideas of what was wanted. The third building would have been connected with the second. Now we seem to understand better the plans we need to work to. Having the school in operation has improved our methods and plans for the third building.
(12LtMs, Lt 177, 1897, 3)
We feel that the third building must be a dormitory for the gentlemen students and must be in another location, a little distance from the building for the girls. This is, we learn, a positive necessity, and therefore we shall act in building very differently from that which we would have done if we had built at once. Now there are five thousand dollars to make the necessary buildings, and one hundred pounds [for a] school fund dedicated to the building of [a] meetinghouse. The students at the school make the meetinghouse essential.
(12LtMs, Lt 177, 1897, 4)
We shall now begin the work of planning for meetinghouse at once. Last Sabbath the room where we hold our meetings was full to overflowing. We must “Arise and build.” [Nehemiah 2:20.]
(12LtMs, Lt 177, 1897, 5)
We have been charged with wasting means, expending means lavishly on the grounds. But I would say, looking at our buildings, no one could truthfully accuse us in this line. But what has been done with the means? We have just found out eleven hundred pounds have not been used by us at all. And when we come to the necessity to build, when there is not room—after crowding and squeezing our students into the smallest capacity until there is not space for one student more—we find this reserve fund that we can now use to the very best advantage. Oh, how thankful I am to the Lord! I will praise His holy name! The school has been a success, and we are so thankful to our heavenly Father.
(12LtMs, Lt 177, 1897, 6)
We have never had a doubt in regard to this being the right place for us to locate our school. I am trying to get our brethren to get out of the cities on a piece of land and be prepared to raise their own produce. This they will have to do. The Sunday laws have been passed, and just as stringent as a people ignorant of the laws of God can make them. We must be prepared for any emergency. The churches are making history fast. We must be more oft at the footstool of mercy, pleading with God. Walk humbly with God, but do not manifest a craven spirit but a spirit of dependence upon God as one who believes and trusts in God. The Lord is our trust and the crown of our rejoicing. Walk in the way of the Lord and you will walk securely. I must close, for my head will not work.
(12LtMs, Lt 177, 1897, 7)
Mother.
Lt 177a, 1897
White, J. E.; White, Emma Refiled as Lt 151a, 1897.
Lt 178, 1897
White, J. E.; White, Emma Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia October 18, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 3MR 275; 4Bio 321. Dear Children Edson and Emma White:
I arise at half past three to trace a few lines to you. Last evening I ventured to attend the evening meeting, the last closing exercises of the school, and the meeting continued until ten o’clock p.m. I commenced my sleeping [at] half past ten o’clock, but I cannot sleep past half past three o’clock.
(12LtMs, Lt 178, 1897, 1)
These are the last hours to prepare American mail. The post office is one mile from our home. The mail must be in the office at nine o’clock a.m., so you see my time is limited to write you anything.
(12LtMs, Lt 178, 1897, 2)
Yesterday, Sunday, October 17, our meetinghouse was dedicated. Every seat was occupied and some were standing at the door. Between two and three hundred were present. Quite a number came from Melbourne and also from Sydney and from the neighborhood, far and nigh. Elder Haskell gave the dedicatory discourse. Seated on the platform where the pulpit stands were Elders Daniells, Farnsworth, Haskell, Hughes, Wilson, Robinson, and your mother, whom they insisted should make the dedicatory prayer. Herbert Lacey conducted the singing, and everything passed off in the very best order. We felt indeed that the Lord Jesus was in our midst as we presented our chapel to God and supplicated that His blessing should constantly rest upon it.
(12LtMs, Lt 178, 1897, 3)
We have not heard one word of criticism. All are surprised at such a house built in so short a time, and so nice and tasty and presentable. Brethren say it exceeds the meetinghouse built one year ago in Melbourne. The seating capacity is larger. The auditorium is able to accommodate three hundred people, then there are two wings at the back like this:
(12LtMs, Lt 178, 1897, 4)
[small sketch drawn]
(12LtMs, Lt 178, 1897, 5)
Two folding doors open from each of these wings, folding in so that all can see the speaker. Everyone is happily surprised. I cannot give all particulars, for I have not time, but I tell you I am glad in the Lord. I now feel relieved of a great burden.
(12LtMs, Lt 178, 1897, 6)
The inside of the meetinghouse is ceiled and beautifully stained, walnut color and light corn color. It makes a most beautiful appearance. It is arched overhead. The speaking advantages are pronounced excellent. The floor ascends imperceptibly from the pulpit to the outside entrance. The congregation can all see above the heads of those before them. This is the most restful, beautiful picture the students will carry away with them. It is that which the Lord knew would be, if the people would co-operate with God.
(12LtMs, Lt 178, 1897, 7)
We were pleased to hear that this school has borne a most excellent testimony through the students, during this first term, and that many more will be in attendance the second term. Every one of our ministering brethren is delighted with the success of the school and with the tasty chapel built. This we know will give character to our work. Not one word of criticism has escaped the lips of anyone. All who have come in from a distance seemed surprised.
(12LtMs, Lt 178, 1897, 8)
The third building will now soon commence. It is the main building—a dormitory for the boys. There were, I think, eighty-six students on record—far ahead of any of our expectations. Praise the Lord! Praise His holy name!
(12LtMs, Lt 178, 1897, 9)
Lt 179, 1897
White, J. E. Stanmore, Sydney, New South Wales December 6, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Son Edson:
I wish to write you a short letter, because I cannot get this copied. Sara had been working very hard and was ill and could not, I was afraid, copy anything for me. But she has had these pages copied. A sister, Brother Baker’s secretary, copied while she read to her.
(12LtMs, Lt 179, 1897, 1)
This is one of the most desirable locations in Sydney. There is a great interest going forward, resembling that which we saw in 1843 and 1844. Family after family invites the ministers to come and see them and explain the Scriptures to them.
(12LtMs, Lt 179, 1897, 2)
I labored too hard during the camp meeting, and have been compassed with infirmities ever since. I came down by request two weeks ago last Sabbath and Sunday. We travel about seventy-five miles by cars, but, as in the European cities, there are two sets of stairs, elevated so that no one shall cross the track. These two sets of stairs have to be climbed and then down again, making much burdensome work for me. After the Sabbath meetings two weeks ago I returned home very sick, and although I expected to return the following week—appointments were out in handbills—I could not venture. I dared not. But I ventured to come from Cooranbong here last week, Friday.
(12LtMs, Lt 179, 1897, 3)
We found the interest is increasing and widespread among the best class of people—not the wealthiest, but the most intelligent. Forty have accepted the Sabbath with all the important truths connected with it. We have the tent well filled on Sabbath, morning, forenoon, afternoon, and night.
(12LtMs, Lt 179, 1897, 4)
Sunday I spoke again to a large congregation. The peace and blessing of the Lord came to me in the morning, and I was strengthened and revived healthwise. I am now rejoicing in the Lord that He hath strengthened me and sustained me. Yesterday I had a very important message to bear upon the observance of the Sabbath. I expect not less than seventy-five or one hundred will be converted to the truth. My trust is in God.
(12LtMs, Lt 179, 1897, 5)
The morning meetings with the workers are attended by those who choose to come who are convicted of the truth, and those who have recently decided for the truth. I was present Sunday morning. The Lord gave me the spirit of earnest prayer, and several prayers were offered. The blessing of the Lord came into our midst, and we were much strengthened and encouraged in every way.
(12LtMs, Lt 179, 1897, 6)
Our brethren urge me to come again next Friday and I expect to come. They wish me to speak Sabbath and Sunday afternoons. Brother Haskell is highly appreciated. So is Hetty Hurd Haskell. They are both a treasurehouse of the gospel of truth. Those not of our faith will sit and listen to his discourses with great interest. We appreciate him in such an effort as this. Brother Starr thinks he never had such a chance of learning as he has now in being connected with Brother Haskell.
(12LtMs, Lt 179, 1897, 7)
We are now preparing to build a meetinghouse in Stanmore. In a few weeks it will be done. This is our faith. We are trying to get the landholders to give us the grounds. Mrs. Gorrick, who has just embraced the truth, is at work with all her energies. She visits the landholders and trustees and is working in our behalf. If we can get the land without paying a large sum, then we can move forward to build. Last evening, after I had spoken in the afternoon, I told them what we designed to do, to build a house of worship, and invited all who loved the Lord to help us, for we wished to proclaim the last message of mercy to our world.
(12LtMs, Lt 179, 1897, 8)
I advised that a meeting be held after the close of the meeting in the afternoon for those who wished to ask questions and who could not understand clearly the truth as we presented it. Well, about fifty, they say, remained, and a lady who had recently embraced the Sabbath came up and gave two pounds for the meetinghouse. A sister of the Sydney church pledged ten pounds. But I must close, I fear, for this must go into the office.
(12LtMs, Lt 179, 1897, 9)
My son, you cannot think what sadness it brought to my heart because you did not heed the warnings the Lord had given you. Oh, my son, will you again fail to bear the test of God? Owing, as you do, debts to others places me in that position where I feel an unrest and uncertainty for the future in your case that I hoped never to feel again. Satan knows he can do through you more to hedge me about and make of none effect my testimonies to other souls than through anyone else in our world. A perplexity is upon me in your case that I cannot interpret. I would rather die than to go contrary to the advice or counsel of God. What does it all mean that in the face of warnings you go blank against them? You put excuses to fence my way to help the Southern people. My appeals will have no weight. They will point to you, that you cannot be trusted. You would involve means under any and every circumstance.
(12LtMs, Lt 179, 1897, 10)
I feel greatly humbled, and great reluctance in sending testimonies to others when they can have an excuse to point to you and say, “He does not believe the testimonies. I am in the same boat with her own son.” This came to me some months ago. If I could once have the assurance that you would forever heed the counsels given of God and attend to the work of opening the Scriptures to others, then the burden, the heartache, the hopeless feelings that will urge themselves upon me in regard to your being a triumphant victor would be lifted from me. I am in constant uncertainty what will come next. What will come to cut off my testimony and make it of none effect in Battle Creek? But I will say no more. My prayer to the Lord is in your behalf, but I do not, cannot, have as much faith as I have had.
(12LtMs, Lt 179, 1897, 11)
In love,
(12LtMs, Lt 179, 1897, 12)
Mother.
Willie has had but few minutes conversation with me, because I was too reduced to have any talk with him upon any subject that would bring one shade of discouragement. I know next to nothing of his visit to America. He is now in Melbourne. Has been there nearly ever since the close of the camp meeting.
(12LtMs, Lt 179, 1897, 13)
Mother.
Lt 180, 1897
Starr, Brother and Sister [G. B.] “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales January 20, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother and Sister Starr:
Your favor, the bag of nuts, came a few days after your letter. I thought they might have been tampered with but I do not know for certain. The bag was not full by considerable, and it would be so easy for anyone to help himself. If placed in a strong bag sewed up it would not be so great a temptation. I thank you for the nuts. I would be pleased to have a box of them when they can be procured.
(12LtMs, Lt 180, 1897, 1)
We are having very pleasant weather. The rains have come in the dry times, and our vegetables are not doing as well because of the need of dressing which we cannot obtain. The cattle run in the paddocks. The fruit trees are doing well. We would have had a large amount of fruit but some deemed it wise to pick it, and therefore we can have only a taste, samples of what we may expect next year. If the Lord favors us we will not need to buy peaches, nectarines, or apricots. The fruit seems to be of good selections. The first early peaches were very fine and there were enough on the trees to keep me supplied for some weeks.
(12LtMs, Lt 180, 1897, 2)
We have tomatoes in abundance. We have all we need to eat and all we need to can. We raise our beans and peas, potatoes and squash. Sweet corn has done next to nothing. If we could only have such sweet corn as we had in Melbourne under the management of Stephen Belden we should appreciate it very much, but our land is new, and no dressing is the cause of failure.
(12LtMs, Lt 180, 1897, 3)
We miss Willie very much. We need him here. I should not have been left alone to stem the current here. It is hard work. Brother Lacey is in Melbourne to visit several places and try to obtain favor in regard to the school interests. I am left alone, and when I see and understand how few have a live, present experience in the things of God it makes me tremble. How long will the Lord bear with our ignorance? He says, “I am the light of the world. They that follow me shall not walk in darkness but shall have the light of life.” [John 8:12.] Then if all follow Jesus they would be the light of the world.
(12LtMs, Lt 180, 1897, 4)
I have had a hard conflict with men old enough to know better and to do better than they have done. Brethren Shannon and Lawrence have made great trouble and brought upon us great perplexity. There are none here who have an experience, that have the faculty, to help me in this emergency. You will ere long know about this matter and the trials through which we have been passing. The Lord knows all about it and He will work to let the true light shine forth.
(12LtMs, Lt 180, 1897, 5)
Lt 181, 1897
White, W. C. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia March 15, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in 21MR 183-187. [W. C. White:]
I send you, my son, a copy of all that I send to Battle Creek, and I trust you make a right use of this matter. I want that the presidents of conferences shall have the matter I send. You will see that there is need now of the greatest care being exercised. Do not feel anything but sincere pity, and show at this time that you are level-headed because you move by faith and put your trust in God, and that He is your helper, your counsellor.
(12LtMs, Lt 181, 1897, 1)
I feel so distressed over the matter of Elder Olsen going on and on in the face of so great light. How he can be excusable I cannot define. He has acted like a blind man, like a man dazed. There can be no spiritual union between a man who puts his entire trust in God and a man who is walking contrary to God. Their hearts, their sympathies and feelings cannot sympathize upon the most momentous of all topics, the Holy Spirit’s manifestation. “Ask and ye shall receive.”“If ye then, being evil, know how to give good gifts unto your children; how much more shall your heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to them that ask him?” [John 16:24; Luke 11:13.] The Lord was anxious to do more, much more, for His people than they could conceive of, in His benevolence toward man, His unexampled love as opposed to their limited conceptions of His goodness.
(12LtMs, Lt 181, 1897, 2)
I have written very much for Africa. Night after night I have been unable to sleep past 11:00, 12:00, or 1:00 o’clock. Then I have not been able for several nights to get to rest before half past ten o’clock. This morning I am up at 2:00 o’clock a.m. Cannot write much directly to you; I will write a few words.
(12LtMs, Lt 181, 1897, 3)
You will see all this matter I have written under the constraining influence of the Spirit of God. My health is greatly improved but I have not ventured to indulge myself to ride out, because I wanted this to go and it is not all that I must send. Next mail will carry more matter, all written.
(12LtMs, Lt 181, 1897, 4)
I feel deep sorrow of soul that is almost too painful to bear at the state of things that exists in the church at Battle Creek. From the light given me from time to time, altogether too heavy responsibilities are laid upon one man. Whoever is chosen as president, there should be another man who should share all the responsibilities, and they should work unitedly. They should be consecrated men, such as there are in all our ranks, men who shall feel the necessity of communing with God and relying upon a “Thus saith the Lord” rather than putting their trust in men who are deficient and weak in spirituality, who can talk but who seldom pray. The burning desire to bring in something wonderful of men’s devising that will make an appearance has dishonored God and put a complexion upon His work that is a dishonor to God. Oh, that the past record might be blotted out of the books of heaven!
(12LtMs, Lt 181, 1897, 5)
I want you to see Brother Henry and make every effort possible to inspire him with hope, to surrender to God. I am sure he could have been helped if Brother Olsen had not led him to suppose he sustained him. Had Brother Olsen not acted the Aaron and the Eli, but stood leaning upon the arm of God in the place of the arm of man, God would have worked for him and been his strength, his front guard, his rereward. But, oh, it has been so different than this! The eyes of men who have officiated in Battle Creek have been more or less blinded and their whole experience has become so confused they cannot discern light from darkness, truth from error. They do not know many things as they ought to know them, and yet the education of our people has been to look to Battle Creek for guidance, when those in school and in the publishing house have been so destitute of the true light that many consider themselves rich and increased in goods and having need of nothing, and know not that they are wretched and blind and miserable and naked. And all because they did not heed the counsel of the True Witness.
(12LtMs, Lt 181, 1897, 6)
I am surprised and sore displeased as I see the course that many have taken. And then to put their hands into the treasury that God has appointed to sustain the ministers in laboring to hold forth the Word of life to others, the tithe money [which is] to sustain the missionary work, is another evidence of unfaithful guardianship of means. But oh, the death of means to carry forward the work of God in foreign countries, while the large churches in Oakland and San Francisco and Battle Creek are taking from the treasury the means God has appointed [for the ministry, and using it] to defray the expenses of keeping the church building in order and in paying the expenses of fuel and lights!
(12LtMs, Lt 181, 1897, 7)
Where is the straight work being done? Where is the example in self-denial and self-sacrifice? Ministers are not all sufficiently paid. Elder Bourdeau says he has labored and received no wages from the treasury. Others complain of being unable to sustain their families. Where are the men of God’s appointment? When the Lord’s portion, which He has reserved as His own in tithes and offerings, is used for common purposes while the church is displaying a love of self-indulgence and selfish gratification, the Lord will not, cannot bless churches and will withdraw His Spirit from all who serve themselves and dishonor God.
(12LtMs, Lt 181, 1897, 8)
There is a great need of setting things in order. Ministers are becoming discouraged, but their piety has not been of the right quality. A great work needs to be done that has been left undone in both the publishing centers. In the place of talking about hard times, dearth of means, and large expenses, let the watchmen on the walls of Zion, the editors of our periodicals, sound an alarm in all “My holy mountain.” [Joel 2:1.] Let them deny themselves and take up the cross and follow Jesus. Let there be no more complaints of hard times when families and individuals indulge themselves in dress, in eating, in drinking, in obtaining all the enjoyable things that they desire. Let self-denial come in. If times are hard, bring the living expenses to the situation, and do not think they can make the times better by having fewer ministers to support, and using the means the Lord has consecrated for a special purpose to defray common expenses which do not mean souls. The tithe money is God’s. A system of robbery has been going on for years, and men are spiritually blind and do not discern that they are drying up the resources to keep ministers in the field. And what else can the young men do but to unite with the medical missionary workers?
(12LtMs, Lt 181, 1897, 9)
There has been but little encouragement for ministers to be accepted and sent out as laborers, because there is no money in the treasury to give them encouragement. The result is that there is a great dearth of laborers. Men must either enter the canvassing field or unite with the medical missionary workers, and then those who have given them suitable encouragement will blame Dr. Kellogg for gathering up those whom they do not accept and set at work.
(12LtMs, Lt 181, 1897, 10)
When there is a clear-cut testimony borne by men who officiate in Battle Creek, when the live coal from off the altar has touched their lips, the heavenly Watcher will say, “Lo, this hath touched thy lips; and thine iniquity is taken away, and thy sins purged.” [Isaiah 6:7.] There needs to be a deep humiliation, for deeper than has yet been manifest. When men shall come into close relationship with God, when their spiritual vision can discern the things presented to Isaiah, there will be a living ministry that will show results in stirring the hearts of the people that they shall be converted, and then there will be an awakening as men awaken out of deep sleep. The tame, commonplace discourses that have been preached, and have lulled the people to a carnal security, will be broken up. Penitent men, praying men, will bear a living testimony of warning, of reproof, of rebuke of selfishness and pride and covetousness, and God will return to His people.
(12LtMs, Lt 181, 1897, 11)
The warning over the dearth of means shows that sin is upon the people, that selfishness and self-indulgence are eating out the vitals of the people of God. Where is the faith of the people of God? What are they doing? “Sell that ye have and give alms” [Luke 12:33] will be proclaimed, and when the Lord sees that men and women are repentant and contrite of heart, that they are willing to be converted from their sins, God will work with them. Read Isaiah 57:13-20. “For the iniquity of his covetousness was I wroth, and smote him: I hid me, and was wroth, and he went on frowardly in the way of his heart.”verse 17. When the people will humble their hearts by repentance and confession to God and the forsaking of sins which have stirred the wrath of God against them, then the Lord will fulfill His word. “I have seen his ways, and will heal him: I will lead him also.”verse 18. This is the very thing that is needed in Battle Creek and in Oakland and in all our churches.
(12LtMs, Lt 181, 1897, 12)
“I will lead him.” [Verse 18.] Men have been led by men and depended on men and turned their faces from God to listen to the counsel of men. When we all repent of doing this and greatly dishonoring God, [we shall] look higher than human wisdom. Let every one seek God for his individual self. Ministers and people are far from God. The living testimony must be revived, and the message of the Lord will go forth from unfeigned lips, the whole heart contrite and no more lifted up, but humble and meek and lowly. Thus saith the Lord to every person, “Keep ye judgment, and do justice: for my salvation is near to come, and my righteousness to be revealed. Blessed is the man that doeth this, and the son of man that layeth hold on it; that keepeth the Sabbath from polluting it, and keepeth his hand from doing any evil.”Isaiah 56:1, 2.
(12LtMs, Lt 181, 1897, 13)
There has been great dishonor to God by church members engaging in the real estate agent’s business. It is not proper or consistent. In every case there is injustice and fraud, and this has been allowed to do great harm to the cause of God. There is a business that is more nearly like the broker’s business, and many have been deceived, deluded, and brought into want. Widows and orphans have had to suffer. There is fraud and dishonesty and corruption, and these things are carried on without decided measures to purify the church from these things that defile the soul and rob the widow and the fatherless and poor.
(12LtMs, Lt 181, 1897, 14)
The Lord declares, “Neither will I be with you any more.”“Israel hath sinned, and they have also transgressed my covenant which I commanded them: for they have even taken of the accursed thing, and have also stolen, and dissembled also.”Joshua 7:12, 11. All this is defiling the churches throughout our borders—dissembling and theft and robbery. Oh, how things have been left to drift into perverted channels forbidden of God! There must be an awakening to save the situation.
(12LtMs, Lt 181, 1897, 15)
I will write no more now. It is just daylight. I must write a few words to Edson. Be sure and see Edson. Do not neglect this. Please read this to Edson, and please see that he has all the matter I send you to read.
(12LtMs, Lt 181, 1897, 16)
Mother.
Herbert [Lacey] is at the health home. Lillian is with me. He is reduced to skin and bones. The case is critical, but I believe the Lord will raise him up. We are praying for him. He is having everything done for him possible. Sara returned evening after the Sabbath and bears the report I now give you. She could not do anything. Brother Semmens gives his whole time to the sick man, and they are having Dr. Deek, who is watching the case of the hygienic methods of treatment with great interest. He says he is doing just as well as he could possibly do under this attack.
(12LtMs, Lt 181, 1897, 17)
Mother.
Lt 182, 1897
White, W. C. Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia May 6, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 4Bio 305. Dear Son Willie:
Today your boys Henry and Herbert White are fourteen months old. They are toddling on their feet nicely—not very firmly yet; they can only take a few steps. The children all attend school and are, I think, advancing. They are very ambitious. Ernest and Edith are doing well. Ella and Mabel White are in good health. The whole family are doing well. The boys are full of their fun and frolic. I do not worry about them now for the room they have is comfortable and if the Lord prospers us we will have a home all ready for you to go into. We on this side of the waters shall have done our level best. And as we have not your head, there are some things you might have proposed that would suit your ideas better, but it would be very strange if this was not the case. We hope that there will be everything to please your mind.
(12LtMs, Lt 182, 1897, 1)
I have a great desire for the school, that it shall prosper; but I feel troubled because Brother Herbert Lacey has the impulsive temperament to move out after the education received in Battle Creek and would feel perfectly competent to manage everything, when he will have to obtain as a learner [the knowledge of] how things ought to be managed. He has not been to me—who has been through the experience given me of God—to ask advice or counsel as to any light given me of the Lord, that I could suggest safe methods of planning and executing, after carrying the load I have for so long that it has nearly crushed me. To keep everything in the very lines that have been presented before me is the way of the Lord. I cannot see things suggested that would lead to wrong actions.
(12LtMs, Lt 182, 1897, 2)
If he had any confidence in my mission and work as of that character that would be the best to follow, it would be better for him and better for the school. Last Sabbath, after I had spoken, Brother Herbert Lacey as chairman of the committee—which knows no more about the thinking and consideration of plans regarding the school than children—put on the paper two men to be elders of the church. One was Brother James. This I approve. The other was Gregg. Without one word said to me, or seeking my judgment, he read these names before the whole congregation. Now, this brother Gregg may learn considerable if he will place himself as a learner, but to be placed as an elder would be the most inconsistent thing which could be done. He shows he has everything to learn; to place him as elder will be his ruin. Shannon and Lawrence have done us great harm and have so leavened the mind of Brother Gregg that he has been criticizing, and I have worked with all my being to kill this satanic work in this locality.
(12LtMs, Lt 182, 1897, 3)
I was just sick at heart yesterday. Brother Hare is the man for elder, but I suppose the reason that some have preferred Gregg to him is because he has been tried with some of the workers and has spoken sharply to them. Some would have had the matter decided then and there on the spot, and the two men elected. No other names were on for consideration for choice, only these two men.
(12LtMs, Lt 182, 1897, 4)
If our school is to be left to the decision of such a board, who do not understand the work they have to do, then I will not remain in this locality or on this ground. If I am considered a cipher after carrying the load I have carried, if it is considered that everything can be run just as well as if I were elsewhere, then it is time for me to turn my face toward America.
(12LtMs, Lt 182, 1897, 5)
I will lose my life, vexed in spirit, to see the little discernment of men who are called the committee. Far better have the committee abolished than to have inexperienced men who have not depth of thought and give no thought to the work in their hands. To be compelled to have to watch everything as a cat would watch a mouse is more than I at my age propose to do. Now their names have been read before the whole church; should Gregg’s name be dropped and Brother Hare’s name placed on paper for decision, Gregg will be under temptation. The meetings have been wearied with his attempts several times to review the Sabbath school. He would act as a preacher to ventilate his own ideas and specialties. I am about worried out over ignorant, inexperienced men who have not shown ability in decisions, looking beneath the surface.
(12LtMs, Lt 182, 1897, 6)
Herbert is impulsive, and he is not an all-around man. He becomes so officious, and fails to see he has counsellors close by whom he can consult. He would carry things after his own ideas, and here I anticipate trouble. There is a large family that have less experience, and far less ability than Herbert, who will snatch at any idea that he sets before them and any impression, right or wrong, he may make upon them; and as the tongue is a member that has free action, I see trouble ahead. If there is not something done, there will be curious actions here, I am sure. I hope that Brother Hughes will have moral backbone to use his advanced experience to level up things. As for Brother Haskell’s judgment, Herbert Lacey would override it unless I had told him the position Elder Haskell was to occupy, and then it makes little difference. Not one word of advice or counsel has been asked of me by either Herbert or his wife since they have come on this ground. If anything occurs they go to May and tell her of the matter.
(12LtMs, Lt 182, 1897, 7)
Well, I stop here. Will be glad when you come back, and hope it will be soon. But now I have to get the committee together and counterwork their work. I am hoping to have something better to write to you in next letter. I shall get the committee together, and the chairman, and talk with them today after the mail has gone.
(12LtMs, Lt 182, 1897, 8)
Lt 183, 1897
Edwards, Sister “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia May 6, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Sister Edwards:
Your letter in reference to your coming to Cooranbong is received. But the ten pounds you called for could not be sent because we had it not. We have to draw from Echo office. In regard to furnishing two rooms, we could not see how this could be done. There is a hotel where the school was first started in Cooranbong. It is quite a little distance from the ground, but good rooms can be had cheap in this building. They have no young children, only one girl who takes care of the family in doing their housework. They are Catholics but do not disturb anyone with their doctrines, and they do not care to be disturbed with our ideas and doctrines.
(12LtMs, Lt 183, 1897, 1)
We have just learned of another building, the convent which Willie White occupied so long, which is for rent. There are rooms you could obtain in this building for the present. I just heard of this yesterday. Both of these openings are at some little distance from the school. It would be much better if you could be right on the ground. When the main school building is erected then there will be rooms for those who come. The convent may be rented very low, and two rooms would not cost you four shillings. Others could come in and share the building. I think Sister Colcord and her children may wish rooms in the convent, and then you would have company.
(12LtMs, Lt 183, 1897, 2)
In regard to steady employment for yourself we dare not say, because we do not know. There is always need of work being done in a school, and yet at present we see not what you could rely upon, because we have to give the students work in different lines. If you can now come and this is your choice, we can send the means, for I will draw from Echo office and loan it to the school.
(12LtMs, Lt 183, 1897, 3)
Lt 184, 1897
Robinson, Brother and Sister Stanmore, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia December 23, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother and Sister Robinson:
We received your kind letter but were unable to respond to your invitation. I have been very ill. I was affected suddenly last Thursday. Sara thought I was very bad. She says she thought I was dead; under treatment I revived, but was very weak. She sat and lectured me quite eloquently in regard to my idea of my going to Stanmore. She thought it was inconsistent and not required of me.
(12LtMs, Lt 184, 1897, 1)
Next morning, last Friday morning, I left Cooranbong for Sydney and the Lord strengthened me to speak Sabbath and Sunday in [the] afternoon. I spoke very earnestly, but in a very simple manner, and the people seemed to be deeply interested. I find their minds catch the very simplest talks more readily than the argumentative. Those talks on the Sabbath and Sunday they enjoyed very much. I took a severe cold on Sabbath, and I have been unable to do much since. Today the breaking up has come, but I should be in no condition to travel. Sara has left me here to speak to the church upon Sabbath in regard to the offerings brought to Christ, Sunday to speak upon temperance—if my condition is such that I can speak. I have not attended family prayer once yet.
(12LtMs, Lt 184, 1897, 2)
The Lord can give me strength to speak, but as yet it is a matter of faith. The interest is just at that point where I can help them here. There are souls deciding for the truth now, nigh and farther off. The interest is so large that many more workers could be employed to the best advantage. Those who are taking their position for the truth are men and women of intelligence that, soundly converted to the truth, will exert an influence that will draw others. They will be a people that will help with their means and with their influence. The enthusiasm over the matter of building a chapel will lead many to commit themselves, for they will see this is not a mushroom matter but a work that will be enduring. The lot is selected, and the bargain is now being made this day. There are men and women who have not yet decided, who are full of zeal for the church building and are ready to help build a church.
(12LtMs, Lt 184, 1897, 3)
It is only the work of the Lord that so many are interested and so anxious to learn the truth on the Sabbath question. I think twenty workers more than we now have could find enough to do to hurt up the lost sheep. Some persons have been visiting friends in Sydney, and they are about to return home. They entreat that this message shall come to the place where they live. They say, “We want a minister that can explain why they keep the Seventh-day Sabbath. We never heard such things before.”
(12LtMs, Lt 184, 1897, 4)
Oh that every dark place of the earth could be visited! My whole being is hungry to save perishing souls. If the church would only be aroused to be laborers together with God! If they could feel the burden for perishing souls! There are many hundreds who, if they only knew the value of the human souls whom Christ purchased with His own precious lifeblood, would place a proper estimate upon human souls and would do personal labor for those who are in the darkness of error. They would open the Scriptures to the hungry souls; they would feed them with the pure truth; they would increase their own souls’ happiness by letting their light shine forth to others. Every true Christian will live in the light of God’s presence and cultivate every power He has given them to do Him service.
(12LtMs, Lt 184, 1897, 5)
I have written you eight pages that are being copied. This I send to you without copying. Tell me if you can read it without difficulty. I will send again. I will, if the Lord indicates my duty, try to come to Melbourne as soon as it is best to leave here.
(12LtMs, Lt 184, 1897, 6)
Lt 185, 1897
Daniells, A. G.; Palmer, Brother Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia June 27, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 4Bio 305-306. Brethren Daniells and Palmer:
Your letter received evening after the Sabbath needs careful reflection and most earnest seeking of the Lord for counsel. If you could understand all the features in the case of the school, you would then become intelligent to the situation, for there have been some things constantly arising that need just such help as Elder Haskell alone can give. The breaking off from here now, when he is giving the important Bible instruction, cannot be thought of. We are on the ground and know. In this we have had our experience. The board here know just about as much as children in reference to the consideration of important matters.
(12LtMs, Lt 185, 1897, 1)
From the time Brother Lacey came, the board made their decision for him to be principal of the school. Not one of these board [members] thought to counsel with me—Brother Lacey included. On one movement made, Brother Herbert Lacey accepted the position at once. Brother Haskell, with his gray hairs and his long connection with the work, was not once referred to. Now, to take such steps is far more easy than to retrace them. He acted as principal when he knew not more by experience how to save than a schoolboy. All these things had been opened before me and it was a large pill for me to swallow, you may be assured, in my weak condition, scarcely able to get a breath without great pain in my heart.
(12LtMs, Lt 185, 1897, 2)
Well, this kind of management has gone on. No more attention or reference was made to Brother Haskell or Sister Haskell as matron than if they were blocks of wood; not one reference made to me or my judgment or my opinion. And if any word was spoken to counterwork things that were going wrong here, the whole Lacey family were to be handled.
(12LtMs, Lt 185, 1897, 3)
I have not wanted you to know these things, but as sure as Elder Haskell leaves I shall leave also. I will not, dare not, lift the burden. I have been making as diligent work as possible to correct the wrongs, but there must be someone be present to help Brother Hughes carry them through.
(12LtMs, Lt 185, 1897, 4)
There is certainly a grave mistake somewhere in setting the price of tuition so low. Nothing is coming in on anything that is done to peace out the deficient funds. I was much surprised that not one reference was made to me in the decision in regard to this business. Now the tuition has been set so low there will be, Brother Hughes says, a debt left on the school at the very beginning. They have room and board and tuition for too low a sum. How much wisdom is there in setting prices so low when you, and all who are intelligent in this matter, know that living here costs about one or two thirds more than in America? They gave them only two meals in America, and here three, and charge the same price. Here is want of wisdom unless we want to be buried up in debt.
(12LtMs, Lt 185, 1897, 5)
I am responsible for more than eleven hundred pounds, on all of which I am paying interest. Where is the prospect of the school’s ever being able to make even running expenses? They are certainly going behind not using meat or butter, and living economically as they know how. But here is a problem for someone to solve who has had the setting of these prices. I was not aware of this thing. But the principal burden has been that Brother Herbert Lacey has brought an education with him from America that is every little while developing in movements deleterious to the students. In one thing after another he rushes in without forethought as to the result. His taking the school from the first will make it hard for Brother Hughes. He is in many things a boy among boys, and you understand this is the free and easy-going habits of the family generally.
(12LtMs, Lt 185, 1897, 6)
We have to counterwork things that are started. I was much astonished to hear read right out in meeting a recommendation by the committee for Brother Gregg and Brother James to be elders of the church. Not one of the committee had counselled me in regard to this matter. Brother Gregg is young in the faith. He has been leavened with Shannon and Lawrence and has been a criticizer with them. Since they have been set forth as censurable themselves, he has not had so much to say, but he needs experience of a different order before he shall serve in place of elder.
(12LtMs, Lt 185, 1897, 7)
Brother Herbert does not mean any harm, but he shows manifest lack of good judgment—that forethought that is essential in managing matters. Notwithstanding he has been corrected in these things again and again, yet it comes just as natural as his breath for him to move independently. To get an idea and rush it to the front is his way, and makes things hard when his way has to be discountenanced, for the influence on the students is not beneficial. I have told him the light given me of God was that he was not to manage, but keep his hands off the machinery. He proposed to leave the boarding farm and he and his wife take a room outside and board themselves. Well, it would be a relief to the school, to Brother Haskell and Brother Hughes, but if he is to have his lesson and learn, it is now that his methods and his managing powers will have to be converted before he can use them. And if he is apart from the school, the liberty to sympathize with the students in an objectionable course of action would not make things better, but worse, and could not so readily be handled.
(12LtMs, Lt 185, 1897, 8)
This phase of things has been very trying to me. It has cut me to the heart. I called the board and the chairman of the board together, Brethren Richardson, Reekie, Lamplough, and Parcells, and Brother Herbert Lacey, and I showed them where they had made a mistake in not coming to me and consulting me in any of their movements when I had been carrying the whole responsibilities, with Brother Hare. I showed them their judgment was not good in nominating Brother Gregg without saying one word to me in regard to the matter. Brother Parcells could not be present. You can see these men were not sufficient to transact any such business. To have such men make work for us and their head ignorant of the men they nominate was a farce, nothing better than a farce. They judge by circumstances and impression that strike their minds.
(12LtMs, Lt 185, 1897, 9)
I know these men selected are men who mean to do right, but they do not one of them understand the matters they are handling and how much hangs upon the movements they make. We have no objection to Brother James, but we have objections to Brother Gregg, and you see that after such unadvised movements have been made it is liable, if changed, to bring temptation upon the mind of the one refused. So our Brother Herbert Lacey shows himself to be man who has not obtained a deep all-round judgment of matters. You can understand how hard it is for me to have to work and counterwork movements introduced. It just tries my soul. The family connections shall not weigh one straw with me as to the positions I must take, but nevertheless it is very trying to me. It hurts me.
(12LtMs, Lt 185, 1897, 10)
Brother Daniells, when reading the daily Sydney papers this morning, we see store notices marked where important meetings are to be held the first of next month upon this question of putting God and religion into the constitution. Now is our time to work. I cannot see any light in you, my brethren, leaving the Echo office and at this important time going to Western Australia. You could, one of you, run up to Hobart.
(12LtMs, Lt 185, 1897, 11)
Brother Wilson feels that it is his duty to return to Tasmania. He had another attack of spitting blood. A meeting of prayer was convened Friday morning and his case was made a special subject of prayer. All were greatly blessed and Brother Wilson says the congestion he was suffering under was removed instantly. He says he will not go to Hobart and work as best he can to counteract the tendencies to apostasy there. He may go round by Melbourne; he may go direct by steamer to Hobart. But do not leave the work in Melbourne or in Sydney at this time. All should work, and many can work if wisely directed how to work.
(12LtMs, Lt 185, 1897, 12)
Lt 186, 1897
White, W. C. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia February 4, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 4Bio 289-290. Dear Son Willie:
It seems a very long time since you left us and yet it is not so long that we can hear from you of your arrival at San Francisco. The boat from San Francisco has been four days beyond her time. There is anxiety expressed, and a boat has been sent from Auckland to see if she can be found and may need help, or the conviction and fears be confirmed that she may be lost. We feel afraid we shall not receive our mail.
(12LtMs, Lt 186, 1897, 1)
This day Sara, Maggie, Minnie Hawkins, Edith, Ella May and Mabel went to Healy’s Mills to gather blackberries. Connell took Bindy and cart and ladders and prepared the way for the picking of blackberries. Our party brought back about twenty-five quarts, Ella May and Mabel about eight quarts. The sun was very hot and it was rather a task, but all were glad that they went. They are very rich berries but not very large. In two weeks they will go again, for in that time others will ripen.
(12LtMs, Lt 186, 1897, 2)
Sara and I rode down to the station, Morisset, expecting to find fruit—peaches from Radley. But there was no fruit. We brought back bags of chaff for horses. We met there Mr. Pringle, who asked why we did not come out and get blackberries; said there were plenty of them about his place. It was cloudy and we thought it a good opportunity. It has been very hot for several days. All the womenfolk went but May and me.
(12LtMs, Lt 186, 1897, 3)
Brother Connell is helping Brother James to prepare for a barn. We seem to need one. Brother James works. He had done all he could do on school land and our land at present. He said he could put up the barn with mostly round trees. It will be rural but strong and just as good for all purposes as if made of sawed lumber. Brother Hare thought I had better let him have the job.
(12LtMs, Lt 186, 1897, 4)
Well, our mail came, bringing the first intelligence from you since you left Auckland. We were very glad of this little. The enclosed, from Brother Owen, I will consider, and write him.
(12LtMs, Lt 186, 1897, 5)
Five o’clock p.m. Our family have returned with very few berries. The report was exaggerated. The berries were inaccessible although they had ladders. We have been very much in need of rain. We have had a little—soft showers—today and our people had a little wetting. They looked like wet hens, but were very pleasant over the matter, but thought it was not a paying trip. But it gives them a change. I was glad Marian went, for she needs just such exercise. May brought her boys over to our house, and she prepared dinner for Brethren Connell and Tucker and me, and the little girl adopted by Brother Baker.
(12LtMs, Lt 186, 1897, 6)
When you receive our letters you will see that we have changed our minds in regard to building on. The two rooms would be four hundred dollars and that settled the business with me. I said, “I will not build and invest money like that.” This embraced the whole business of panty, plastering, and chimney. We could not build this now because the water has failed, unless rain comes. We have had slight showers today, but we fear this will not relieve the situation. If it shall rain tonight there will be water to run the sawmill.
(12LtMs, Lt 186, 1897, 7)
Brother Hare came to see me this morning in regard to sand to use in building him a house. We then talked over matters, and he is very much pleased with Brother James. He works and accomplishes something. The barn was figured on to cost three hundred dollars. Brother James says it need not cost more than half that sum, and I have let him have the job of putting it up, paying him the wages he has agreed to work for. Not a board can be spared to us until the school buildings are prepared with lumber. Then he says the timbers and boards shall be sawed for the house we wish much to put up for you. We have let Semmens have thirty-five pounds and we can do no more. I have not been able to go to Sydney yet.
(12LtMs, Lt 186, 1897, 8)
The influence of Brethren Lawrence and Shannon has been bad, and we feel sad over this matter. I have done all in my power to change the order of things. I know the Holy Spirit began to work on the mind of Brother Lawrence as never before. He said he meant the work should go deep. He did not want it to stop there. He could see that the cow trade was not on right principles. But it was only a few days until I had another interview with him and he took it all back, and said he could not see that there was anything wrong in the cow trade. Well, he is just where he was before. And she, Sister Lawrence, is a Pharisee and, I think, the daughter of a Pharisee. She is full to the very brim with self-righteousness, and her tongue wags constantly. I think the woman is unbalanced in mind. The sooner they take themselves to regions beyond, the better. They may go to America. They may stop in New Zealand. If they can manage to trade or work so as to benefit themselves they will do so, and will, in their turn, trade with others to get all out of them possible for the very property they have bought at loss to the school.
(12LtMs, Lt 186, 1897, 9)
They have not a sense of what Bible religion requires, and I am sure as far as religion is concerned, they will do harm everywhere they go. They misinterpret, they will misrepresent the character of God and of Jesus Christ.
(12LtMs, Lt 186, 1897, 10)
We had no trouble in regard to the convent place. We have done exactly the work that should be done in moving. We left the posts and other poles enclosing the yard, left the gate, took the wire screening and brought away everything. The bullock team moved the ice chest to the mill. Lillian has your secretary. She has a room at Healy, in the hotel. The Catholic priest says, “His Eminence wants to sell the place.” It is advertised, he says, for sale. May left the house sweet and clean, and the priest says it was in “beautiful order.” Not one objection has been raised to our going in and out of the yard, taking anything we had not removed. Russell gives us all the liberty we want.
(12LtMs, Lt 186, 1897, 11)
Brother Lawrence came to Connell, asking for my horse and cart to move their goods. The horse, hands, and cart, were employed constantly in moving your things, and I told Connell they simply could not have it. Lawrence told Connell, “You know it is not my wish to go,” as though it was his duty to move him. He said his horse, the one bought of the school, did not stand good, but they were out in good time, and the tent is their home while they remain in Cooranbong. They gave him work at five shillings per day, drawing sand from my premises for the school buildings. And now water has to be drawn for the sawmill boiler. We are hoping for rain. If it does not come in a few days the mill must stop. We are having clouds, but very little rain.
(12LtMs, Lt 186, 1897, 12)
I have carried a heavy load and am much better healthwise than when you left, but I become exhausted quickly and suddenly and cannot rally readily. I want to do very much and can do so very little. I am quite free writing the last upon the history of Christ, but it draws upon me. I feel so intensely that I find my strength is spent in a short time. I am left here to carry as heavy a load I have ever carried in my life, to deal with men who think that they know everything when they know nothing as they ought to know it.
(12LtMs, Lt 186, 1897, 13)
Elder Haskell is as far as Auckland, but I know not when he will come here. He may be on the next Monday’s boat. If he does not come I shall do the best I can, but it may finish me up, for there is not a living soul here that can have one spark of influence to help me in my work. I do not exaggerate at all. I have spoken five Sabbaths in succession in Cooranbong, besides having four meetings to see if Lawrence’s case cannot be helped, but I have given that matter up. His selfishness is deeper and his blindness in spiritual things the greatest and most incurable of any case I have had anything to do with.
(12LtMs, Lt 186, 1897, 14)
I dare not leave the place. I feel singular about things, but the Lord is good and I can trust in Him fully. He will not deceive. He will not falsify. He will be truth and we can depend on Him. Oh, when I think how much light these have had who cause me so great sufferings of mind in their selfish, unrighteous practice, I think of our Saviour as a Man of sorrow and acquainted with grief, wounded for our transgressions, bruised for our iniquities; the chastisement of our peace was upon Him, and with His stripes we are healed. I feel that we should not complain if we are made partakers with Christ of His sufferings. If we are willing to stand bravely and unwaveringly, steadfast unto the end, we shall see the King in His beauty. We shall see Him face to face, and His name will be in our foreheads. We must have increasing faith. We must not fail nor be discouraged.
(12LtMs, Lt 186, 1897, 15)
But I felt that it was not a wise thing to do, to leave not one soul in all New South Wales that could help me. If the Lord has thought best to make me to bear to His people the messages He has given me, He means I shall have someone who shall cooperate with me, that such tremendous burdens shall not rest upon me, as have done since coming to Cooranbong. I often can sleep only a few hours. The value of the truth, its exalted character, is ever before me; then the low standard of Christian principles in practice, by those who have been long in the truth, is so painful to my soul. The littleness, the narrow-mindedness, the selfishness, and the destitution of Christlikeness seem so prevalent that I am questioning indeed, When the Lord cometh, will He find faith on the earth? Will He find pure, uplifting, purifying faith that works by love and cleanseth the soul?
(12LtMs, Lt 186, 1897, 16)
I would feel so rejoiced if I could see a growth in principle. But such principles of selfishness as have been practiced and are being practiced have a leavening influence upon the whole class of workers on these grounds. It must not live. It shall not survive. It must be expelled from our borders. Who will work with me to carry forward the work? There is no one here that has spiritual influence. I do the praying as I open the meetings. I do the speaking and carry the load. “God help me” is my prayer.
(12LtMs, Lt 186, 1897, 17)
February 5
I could not sleep after three o’clock. I have been up writing. It is now daylight. I have been out to see whether we have had much rain. I think we may be encouraged. It has rained considerable. The mill will have water for the boiler and can keep at work. I feel that we have reason to praise God that the working hands will not be compelled to stop work. There must be greater efforts made to have water facilities on the school grounds. If they can do no better, they can have large cisterns made, such as I have. I think there should be strenuous efforts made, but when I said this to Brother Hare, he said, “We must do it, but the present funds must go into buildings. We cannot spend a shilling if we can possibly avoid it.” Sand is one shilling per load, but I have told them I would donate the sand they draw for the school buildings. They think it the most precious sand bed for the purposes they could have. This will save them quite a sum. If I had a shilling for every load, I might be able to apply it on interest money, as I have no one to help me in the religious line of labor. This I need.
(12LtMs, Lt 186, 1897, 18)
I have been trying to visit Sydney, but exhaustion comes every night so that I fall asleep in my chair. While Marian was conversing with me last evening before dark, I lost myself every few moments and was dreaming of the plans to create a higher, holier activity in religious things. I think I fell asleep six times before dark, and then had to crawl into my bed before dark.
(12LtMs, Lt 186, 1897, 19)
I wish, if it were the will of God, Edson could be with me. I wish Brother Starr could be here. It is not right to have no more religious help than we have here. It is not as God would have it. I shall do what I can, and if it takes my life, then I have done what I could. The strain is on me every moment. The work is not being done in this vicinity that ought to be done. I dare not visit, and I know of no one that is visiting, to do one bit of good in their conversation. Is this the will of God, that I should go loaded down as I am because there is no means to provide workers in these new fields? One year more, I shall be seventy years old, and yet I never have done more hard, taxing, trying labor in my life.
(12LtMs, Lt 186, 1897, 20)
As a people we must keep the standard high. A practical exhibition of the purity of Christian character and Christian principle is worth more than all the sermons and creeds in our world. The world is watching us and will criticize us in all our temporal affairs, with keenness and severity. That which is spoken in the church is not of half as much value as the right words and the right actions in workshops, in the field, in the buying and in the selling. We must not forget we are making impressions, favorable or unfavorable, in regard to Bible religion, on the minds of others who are watching to find some excuse for themselves, why they are not obeying the truth. Christianity will lead to industry, frugality, economy, while it will not give one inch of encouragement to selfishness. Bible religion extirpates avarice, overreaching, robbery in deal, and every species of dishonesty. In dealing with unbelievers there must be strict principles observed that will honor God’s Word and do service to Christ. “Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.” [Leviticus 19:18.]
(12LtMs, Lt 186, 1897, 21)
Lt 187, 1897
White, W. C. Summer Hill, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia February 10, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 4Bio 326. Dear Son Willie:
Monday I received a letter from Elder Haskell stating that he arrived in Sydney last Sabbath and made a request for me to come to Sydney if it was convenient. So I came, accompanied by Sara. Sister Semmens has a healthy boy weighing eight and one quarter pounds. She worked altogether too hard before her confinement. The child is one week old last Monday.
(12LtMs, Lt 187, 1897, 1)
Elder Haskell is advancing money to furnish that next to the largest room upstairs. He says if it is well furnished and a suitable price put upon it, the furniture will soon be paid for. This is sensible; Sara and I will help in the matter, and it need not be a costly business, we think.
(12LtMs, Lt 187, 1897, 2)
Brother Semmens is hard worked. He needs a hand to help him. He is trying to get along economically, because he cannot go faster than he has the means. I cannot go any further with assisting him just now, because I want that your house shall be started as soon as we can get the workmen and the lumber. All the arrangements that you planned were put in operation before they had been in the house one week. But it will be a loss of money to commence to build with the idea of moving, so we shall begin to dig a cellar under the house, some portion of it, as soon as we can see the lumber is forthcoming from our own mill.
(12LtMs, Lt 187, 1897, 3)
Brother Lawrence expects to take steamer for New Zealand in about two weeks. I want Brother Haskell to go to Cooranbong as soon as possible. Sister Hurd came on the steamer to Melbourne and was thinking her voyage over; [she] was with Sister Ingels and Sister Graham when the boat had passed inspection. But officers and physicians came on board and inspected more closely and say there are cases of smallpox. So the passengers, twenty of them who had left, were searched up and had to go back to the boat. Brother Daniells did all in his power, trying every means to prevent Sister Hurd’s return to the boat, but it was useless. Three weeks they will be held. Brother Haskell can get letters to her, but none from her. She has written she is in perfect health.
(12LtMs, Lt 187, 1897, 4)
I am so thankful that Brother Haskell is here and I shall have someone to help me. There is great need of a manager in the working forces in the enterprises started. I know of no one here. This ought to have been insisted upon from the first, and that would have relieved you, who had twice what one man ought to do. I cannot consent for you to shoulder the responsibilities and every other one stand back and let you do it all and receive all the criticisms that persons may choose, under the inspiration of the devil, to conjure up. For this hurts you, so that the very influence the Lord designed you should hold in this country is weakened and crippled, in order to economize and save money, making as little expense as possible, buying at reduced rates some machinery for the mill. The very best even at double cost would have been economy, the best that could be practiced. But limited as we have been for means, the study has been to save every sixpence and shilling and pound.
(12LtMs, Lt 187, 1897, 5)
Now the men, who have not put in anything and have shown their interest measured with just the benefits they would themselves realize, because they were disappointed have taken the criticizing aftersight position, and tell what should have been done, what they would have done. Lawrence sat on the devil’s stool of idleness to criticize what others had done, and Satan is not slow to take possession of all such minds and so blind their already selfish ideas and perverted judgment that they can be his efficient helpers and do a work exactly in his line. Satan can use them.
(12LtMs, Lt 187, 1897, 6)
I have had these things presented to me clearly. Brother Shannon and his wife have said all they can against Brother Hare, calling him a hypocrite, and everything that an unchristian tongue can devise. You have been handled in much the same manner. Sister Shannon joins her husband in Africa, going on the next boat, second or third class fare. Hardy has sent for his wife to come, but she says no, she has no idea of going.
(12LtMs, Lt 187, 1897, 7)
I have had my hands full of writing and my heart full of distress and pain, for these men who have proved traitors will, if they are in any way connected with the work, when they themselves were not favored, place themselves on the enemy’s side to work against the ones who are carrying the heavy responsibilities. I have had straight testimonies to bear to Brother Lawrence. I question whether he will ever see. He has educated himself in dealing after worldly policy plans in buying and selling. His whole experience is a corrupted mass of self-serving. He has nothing correct in line of principle in deal.
(12LtMs, Lt 187, 1897, 8)
The Lord has permitted these things to occur, to develop the men who have not put anything into the work of God in Cooranbong, but have taken out all they could get. We have a supply of poor families that must be kindly cared for and helped to help themselves. We have these poor as a legacy from God to us. Inasmuch as ye do this to one of the least of these, my brethren, ye do it unto Me. Then we will work on, doing our level best to alleviate the care of the poor, helping them when we can and strengthening them all we can in correct methods.
(12LtMs, Lt 187, 1897, 9)
But Satan is a vigilant foe. He works in his specious, deceptive ways to ensnare the very men who have experience but who have worked that experience for their own benefit until it is the working of selfishness in our various lines. God help us and give us wisdom to know how to conduct matters here. We need heavenly direction and guidance. We need great prudence, for the unconsecrated elements are many, and as soon as one is taken in hand by the Lord and reproof comes, then come the sympathizers who do not know what they mean or what they would do themselves. But they can boast largely of their wisdom.
(12LtMs, Lt 187, 1897, 10)
I told Brother Lawrence he had best cease that kind of talk, for it was not true. It was being proved how large was his wisdom and to what end that wisdom was used to figure for himself, to be very liberal with himself, but very close and trying in his methods of deal with his brethren. He and his wife had worked so long in this line that they have completely perverted ideas of what is Christianity.
(12LtMs, Lt 187, 1897, 11)
Well, I shall be glad to have Brother Lawrence and his wife leave the school grounds, for they will do no good but be a constant source of trial, and if they are not favored as to receive all benefits, then there is dissatisfaction.
(12LtMs, Lt 187, 1897, 12)
Mother.
Lt 188, 1897
White, W. C. Health Home, Summer Hill, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia February 15, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 4Bio 291. Dear Son Willie:
I feel very grateful to God that my health is much improved. Our own family and your family, when I left Cooranbong, were all as well as usual. May writes the family are all well. The babies are well, bringing through their teeth. We know they have suffered considerable in teething, but it does not make them cross and crying. We think they are sample babies. Ella and Mabel White are doing well healthwise. I am glad they are living near us. We share the corn and tomatoes, melons and vegetables with them. Then we can run in any time and enjoy a little visit.
(12LtMs, Lt 188, 1897, 1)
In regard to [the] Health Home, I cannot see anything very flattering in patients as yet. But it is no use to look on the discouraging side. We must walk by faith. We must talk faith and act faith and live faith.
(12LtMs, Lt 188, 1897, 2)
Sister Semmens has a boy nearly three weeks old. I am sorry to say he has a double harelip. She feels very bad about it. I am drawn out to her. I feel that she is indeed a precious child of God. He, I think, is doing all he can.
(12LtMs, Lt 188, 1897, 3)
Brother Jannett’s family were all out to meeting and seem to be all interested. I spoke on Sabbath afternoon at Newtown. We had a good number to speak to. Brother Haskell spoke in forenoon at Ashfield, and helped me also with the services in the afternoon in Ashfield, and he spoke Sunday evening. I have not heard any report of meeting this morning. The daylight is just coming. I have written nine pages and a half of letter paper by gaslight. I am not able to get this copied.
(12LtMs, Lt 188, 1897, 4)
I have received a letter in last American mail from Dr. Gibbs, from 1818 Central Avenue, Los Angeles, California. He writes:
(12LtMs, Lt 188, 1897, 5)
“The health of myself and family never was better. I never suffered so little physically, and keep myself very busy. I have three hygienic babies. Like Daniel, they show their living in their faces. Wherever we go it is inquired, What makes these babies look so fair and bright?
(12LtMs, Lt 188, 1897, 6)
“The last two are twin boys named Stanley and Manly. They are one year old January 4, 1897. Minnie will be three years old in April. They are known all about here as the hygienic babies. They sleep all night and only eat their regular meals by day. They are a world of comfort to us, and wife’s health is much improved. Mother Shand [?] is usually well. Sarah Hunt is a power for truth, and we can secure her when needed.
(12LtMs, Lt 188, 1897, 7)
“Elder McClure said changes must be made at the Retreat and talked with me about my returning there.
(12LtMs, Lt 188, 1897, 8)
“I have been practicing in this city two years and for some time have been using second story as a sanitarium.
(12LtMs, Lt 188, 1897, 9)
“Dr. Burke’s student has failed in Sanitarium work at San Francisco. He ran through in a few months. Dr. Burke failed at Lytten Springs, and his constituents failed with him to the tune of thirty thousand dollars in a period of a few years. So much for his proud boasts of making $75,000 in Napa and one hundred thousand at Oakland. Burke now runs a little wash house in San Francisco. Dr. Maxson told me Burke would even fail at that, from present appearances.
(12LtMs, Lt 188, 1897, 10)
“I am waiting to know what the Lord would have me do.”
(12LtMs, Lt 188, 1897, 11)
I send these few items of a long letter. I wish that this case may be considered. When the question was up in reference to Dr. Maxson going into the Retreat to practice, he said, “You are making a hasty decision. You should consider the case of Dr. Gibbs. The experience of Dr. Maxson is not what it should be. His own ways are perfect in his own mind and judgment, and cannot be corrected or controlled.”
(12LtMs, Lt 188, 1897, 12)
I would have you consider this matter. There has been altogether too much dependence upon meat and drugs by Dr. Maxson. From the light given me it is not possible for the patients to be properly educated to discard meat and drug medication while he remains in the institution. The light has ever been given me that he should not be entrusted as superintendent of any institution, for he had not the all-round eyesight and level head to manage our institution. He knew all this, and others knowing it conceded to his idea and gave the lines of control into his hands and, farther on, his own brother-in-law as manager.
(12LtMs, Lt 188, 1897, 13)
They are neither of them qualified for the position. Dr. Maxson has managed matters to keep meat-eating appetites petted and encouraged by making prescriptions for persons to eat meat. Thus, either he must cease to be a physician [or] else the sanitarium must become demoralized by the liberties given in indulgence of appetite in various lines. The tables are not by any means what they ought to be. I now leave this matter to be managed as is thought best.
(12LtMs, Lt 188, 1897, 14)
I am more than surprised that our people should make Dr. Maxson superintendent and his brother-in-law manager. This tastes too strongly of the dish. The human agencies with their strong tendencies have had things their own way. I am sure this matter has been wrong. I have nothing to urge in regard to Dr. Gibbs further than a fair consideration of the matter. As for drug medications, there should be—and will be if the light which God has given is followed—an educating away from the use of drugs, and hygienic methods will come in most thoroughly. The fevers that have been treated after the drugging principles have lost some of the patients who would have been saved if they had not used drugs. The saving of means largely expended in drug medication means the saving of life in some cases. Strictly thorough hygienic treatment would break up any ordinary case of fever.
(12LtMs, Lt 188, 1897, 15)
This is the fourteenth page of letter paper I have written since I left my bed this morning, [at] half past one o’clock.
(12LtMs, Lt 188, 1897, 16)
I am hoping, Willie, to hear something in regard to my property in Healdsburg. Not a line has come to me in reference to the matter. Please write me.
(12LtMs, Lt 188, 1897, 17)
Mother.
Lt 189, 1897
White, W. C. Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia March 11, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 4Bio 292-293, 324. Dear Son Willie:
We are thankful to our heavenly Father that we are all in good health. Wednesday February twenty-four, a telegram came that Sister Hurd was released from quarantine. Brother Haskell had been with us over the Sabbath up to that time. There were excellent meetings held in early morning. A goodly number attended the meetings and good was accomplished.
(12LtMs, Lt 189, 1897, 1)
Last Sunday, March seven, Brother and Sister Haskell returned from Summer Hill. They were married in the Health Home without any parade at all. I am glad it is thus, for Brother Haskell needs a wife, and the woman he has married is a sensible, intelligent woman [who] can be a great blessing to him. I believe it is as the Lord would have it. He will be a help here, and if there was ever a place where help is needed, it is right here.
(12LtMs, Lt 189, 1897, 2)
Lawrence and his wife left for New Zealand last Wednesday. There was, for a time, a change in him, but as he did not follow the light, he lost all the good impressions he had received and is the same man he was.
(12LtMs, Lt 189, 1897, 3)
Last Sunday Brother Robert Lamplough was taken very sick with all the symptoms of typhoid fever. Sara visited him in company with your wife May, and they both worked over him faithfully, giving heroic treatment. The fever ran very high. We all thought the poor young man was in for a long siege, but they kept at it. They enlisted Brother Hanson. We provided the food he should eat, and he responded to the treatment and yesterday went out to ride. He is quite weak but feeling well. It was a violent attack, and he received the most thorough treatment. I thank the Lord for his recovery, for it would have been a great tax upon us to have treated a case of typhoid through its period.
(12LtMs, Lt 189, 1897, 4)
We were made very sad to hear of Herbert Lacey’s coming down very sick in Tasmania. He walked one day nine miles to visit his old home and to see where his mother was buried, and then, all in a heated condition, he sat on the doorstep of the house where we visited Brother Lacey and became chilled. He came down to his bed. Christine, Sister Lacey’s eldest daughter, took care of him. I directed a letter at once to Brother and Sister Wilson and told them to look after Herbert and see that everything was done for him that could be done and I would meet the expense. But a telegram came one week ago today on Friday, that he would be in Sydney that day. We hurried Lillian off to meet him. He got off at the same time his wife stepped from the train. He is, they say, in for typhoid fever. Brother Haskell was at the Health Home. Brother Semmens was not willing that he should see him. He said he was very weak, but he ought to have seen him. Brother Baker and Brothers Haskell and Semmens prayed for him. Lillian wrote he was very poor, nothing but skin and bones. He lost twenty pounds in one week in Tasmania.
(12LtMs, Lt 189, 1897, 5)
I think it was a very venturesome move for him to come from Tasmania to Melbourne, then take the excursion train for Sydney. All alone in that crowded car was enough to exhaust a well man. Lillian wrote to Father Lacey that Brother Semmens was using ice on his bowels. But in several cases light had been given me that the ice remedy was not as efficacious as the hot water. I was afraid. His vitality, I learned, was very low and to put ice on head and chest I knew was a mistake. It would tax his vitality. I asked Sara if she would go on that morning train. She refused promptly. I then sent a telegram, “Use no ice, but hot applications,” but I felt so sorry I could not help crying. I asked Sara if she would go. She at first refused, and then consented because I felt so bad in regard to the matter.
(12LtMs, Lt 189, 1897, 6)
While in Sydney, Brother _____ from Dora Creek was his [Brother Semmens’] patient. One day he gave him treatment, strong electricity, which injured him and frightened him terribly. One side of him was as if on fire, the other side was icy cold. He made a mistake here, I know, and there must be no risk run over Herbert’s case. I was not going to be so delicate in regard to the physician as to permit Herbert Lacey’s life to be put out. I will enclose that which I sent to Brother Semmens. Sara went down Wednesday afternoon. Today we shall have a report. I am very anxious. We are praying for the young man. God will hear us. He will answer our prayers. I do believe the Lord will restore him to health.
(12LtMs, Lt 189, 1897, 7)
When Sara advocated the ice treatment I told her it was no use. There might be cases where the ice applications would work well. But books with prescriptions that are followed to the letter in regard to ice applications should have further explanations, that persons with low vitality should use hot in the place of cold, but to go just as the book of Dr. Kellogg shall direct without considering the subject is simply wild.
(12LtMs, Lt 189, 1897, 8)
Hot fomentations in fever will kill the inflammation in nine cases out of ten where ice applications will, according to the light given me, tax the vitality unsafely. Here is where the danger comes in of not using judgment and reason in regard to the subject under treatment. But enough of this.
(12LtMs, Lt 189, 1897, 9)
Your two boys are doing well. We have secured several hundred pounds of Isabella grapes from Whitehead, for two and half penny a pound. They make the richest kind of wine. We had just weighed out my one hundred pounds, and a large pan of them was put on the floor to prepare a place for them and lo, Henry spied them. Sara called me to see the picnic. He had crawled with the greatest speed, and there he was, on his knees, picking the grapes from the clusters and putting them in his mouth, but very particular to put his finger in his mouth and take out the skins and put them back in the tub. He worked at this until he was satisfied. They seem to know fruit as soon as they catch sight of it. I purchased a box of rich yellow peaches of Brother Parcells. These I have kept for the babies, for it is the last we shall have. They will each eat one and a half at a time. I went in yesterday morning and Herbert was eating a peach from his mother’s hand. When I came in he made his arms fly up and down to express his great pleasure. The boys are doing well.
(12LtMs, Lt 189, 1897, 10)
Ella and Mabel are in much better health than when they came to Sunnyside. Both are doing well. May says she feels so much better since she has been here and it is such a relief to have no boarders. The children are good-natured and seldom cry and make trouble. In three weeks they will be one year old. Both are very spry at creeping, something you, their father, never did do.
(12LtMs, Lt 189, 1897, 11)
I have last night obtained the figures for a house plan as you suggested and marked out, but Brother Haskell suggested some improvements. May will tell you about this better than I can. The complete work done on the house, including painting, a bricked-up cellar of ten by twelve, will come to two hundred fifty pounds. I can get the lumber at our mill but, closely inquiring, Brother Haskell says the lumber is figured too high. Brother Hare says he can get a bill of lumber for five shillings per hundred. Someone has offered him a bill of lumber at these figures. He asks seven shillings and then the bill of drawing swells the sum. Last evening Lamplough and Haskell and May and I took all into consideration that if the building we decided [on] could be brought within two hundred pounds we would complete the building. Brother Haskell is looking carefully over these things. Now [that] the bill of building is given in, we can know something of how to do.
(12LtMs, Lt 189, 1897, 12)
We cannot call off the workers on the school building; we do not desire to do this. But the cellar can be dug and the foundation laid and everything like lumber brought on the ground, and then we can have everything preparatory to making a quick job and get your family into the building after it is plastered. Brother Hare advises so, also Elder Haskell, to give the job into Lamplough’s hands for him to employ the workmen, the day laborers. This matter is one that must have attention. Your family cannot, with my consent, remain in the small compass where they are any longer than is positively necessary. In the figuring, we cut ten pounds on roofing. The roof will, if made as this on my house is, save ten pounds, and money is too scare to be used up merely for fancy. May is with me in every move. We consult her in everything. We shall have a piazza eight feet wide on two sides of the house, and I think the house will suit you. We shall have a complete plan by middle of the next week.
(12LtMs, Lt 189, 1897, 13)
Now this is the judgment of the men whose judgment I value of any worth. So we shall go straight ahead, when we can have the workers. Worsnop is working on your land, clearing, cutting down the trees you specified to Connell you wished done.
(12LtMs, Lt 189, 1897, 14)
We shall send your mail by this Vancouver boat next Monday. The boat by way of San Francisco will carry something more, but let Edson see the letters I send you, and then I will not be to the expense of paying postage. I have just seen May. She says the children slept all night, excellently well. I read her these two pages thus far. I will write you again soon, to go out next Monday. Marian is in good spirits in regard to the book on the life of Christ. I am now writing on the foot washing ordinance and on the Lord’s Supper. Will send you the matter. I have decided from henceforth no letters go from me only of such a character as Bible subjects so that if I wish to use them in books I can do so.
(12LtMs, Lt 189, 1897, 15)
We all miss you. We have pitched our large family tent and floored it and fitted it up for Brother and Sister Haskell. They live and sleep in the tent. It is carpeted, and they enjoy it. They have also that room you used as an office. Can sleep in it whenever they choose. They seem sensible and seem to enjoy their home.
(12LtMs, Lt 189, 1897, 16)
In much love,
(12LtMs, Lt 189, 1897, 17)
Mother.
Will send letter to Edson next mail.
(12LtMs, Lt 189, 1897, 18)
Lt 190, 1897
White, W. C. Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia April 9, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 4Bio 293-294. Dear Son Willie:
Everything is going forward well on the school grounds. Every available helper is put into service. The cistern is bricked up; next the plastering takes place. Brother Herbert Lacey and his wife and Crissie Hawkins and baby came today. I sent my surrey to bring them up. He is feeling real well and means to engage in the school at its beginning. I am so pleased. Sara and Sister Haskell and Maggie have just come from preparing the room in [the] second building for meeting tomorrow, Sabbath. Next Sabbath it will be in the upper story which will be used as a chapel until we can do better by being able to build one of our own. Elder Haskell may not be able to be here under two weeks. Then he will come, I think. Brother Hare and Sister Haskell will help hold the fort. At present, Elder Daniells and Elder Haskell will keep in Adelaide to see how matters will turn with Hawkins and McCullagh. (But more after the Sabbath.)
(12LtMs, Lt 190, 1897, 1)
April 11
We met in the last new building. What a change for the better! Sister Haskell, Sara, Maggie, and Minnie joined the force and worked to prepare things for the occasion.
(12LtMs, Lt 190, 1897, 2)
May White drove a span of horses before the surrey to meet her dear brother whom the Lord has spared to us, Brother and Sister Herbert Lacey, and Crissie from Tasmania with her boy, a good-looking plump boy, who joined them at Sydney. All went directly to Father Lacey’s. Brother Herbert walked from his father’s to the meeting in the new building. He feels so well and we are so very thankful that the Lord wrought in his behalf, making Brother Semmens His human agent. He carried through the case without drugs. W. C. White, the Lord has opened to me why so many cases are lost who have typhoid fever. They are drugged, and nature has not strength to overcome the drugs given them. Our physicians ought to spend the money invested in drugs to employ the very best class of nurses that will go through the treatment process upon pure, hygienic principles.
(12LtMs, Lt 190, 1897, 3)
Herbert was very low because he was sick one week or more, yet he traveled home. I felt so sad that our people in Melbourne put him all alone in second-class compartment where they were smoking and crowded, and he so sick. But the Lord has been merciful. We prayed for him most earnestly, and he was treated wisely and well and has come up from his sickness, his whole system purified and without a long period of debility to recover from drug medication. He walked from Father Lacey’s to the building, and we thanked the Lord.
(12LtMs, Lt 190, 1897, 4)
The congregation was large, and the blessing of the Lord was upon us. All seemed of excellent courage. Herbert and his wife bore their testimony, and it was full of thankfulness and praise to God. We had the best testimony meeting we have had in Cooranbong. There was an old man present who sleeps out of doors, a tramp, we would call him, who said a few words with the rest. He has not attended a religious meeting for above sixty years, until one week ago last Sabbath he was in the meeting, and last Sabbath. He is eighty years old. Some other strangers were present. There was a wave of thanksgiving to God that He had prospered us to be able to meet in a better situation to worship God. His blessing was in our midst, and we all felt it was a privilege to be there, for we knew that Jesus was present and His blessing was given us, which we appreciate so much.
(12LtMs, Lt 190, 1897, 5)
We have been pressing matters forward as fast as possible. The past week many women and men have given their time, for we had no money to pay them. This week the same work will go forward. The bedsteads were thoroughly cleaned yesterday. Connell has gone over them all with the kind of paint they use for furniture. His pledge is to keep him at the work one week longer. Brother James has given one week, also Brother Worsnop. The girls will do something more after this mail is off.
(12LtMs, Lt 190, 1897, 6)
School will open at the appointed time, the twenty-eighth day of April. Brother Herbert Lacey will be on hand, ready to begin. We hope Brother Haskell may be able to leave Adelaide. He is doing good work. Brother Hare felt so down because he had to leave, but his wife, Sara, and I have tried our best to supply the lack and Brother Hare feels of excellent courage.
(12LtMs, Lt 190, 1897, 7)
I have had much writing to do for Melbourne and Adelaide. I am so sorry I cannot write you for this mail anything in regard to Adelaide since Sabbath and Sunday meetings. I hope Brother Haskell will write you.
(12LtMs, Lt 190, 1897, 8)
Sister Haskell yesterday read the letter to me which she has written to the General Conference Committee and to you. She understands the matter and feels deeply for Brother Haskell’s sake. Let the General Conference carry his case as they have done. He feels every change of this kind, and it hurts him; and when once he gets an unfavorable impression, it sticks in his mind and is hard to remove. Do not make any changes. Let the General Conference take his case for the future and settle his bills as they have done. His help is valuable. And he has the very best woman I know of in the world for him, and she will help him.
(12LtMs, Lt 190, 1897, 9)
We must be very careful, courteous, and tender of the few men who are spared to us who have a long experience in the work of God from its earliest years. Tell them all to deal with Elder Haskell carefully and liberally, for his whole heart and whole being are in the cause of God and its advancement. He has not a selfish thought in his mind. His wife is just the help he needs and is an excellent worker. She is now president of the Sabbath School and a wonderful change has come. She will give Bible readings in the school or anywhere. If he is obliged to be off, as he has been called away, now she can come right in as an instructor.
(12LtMs, Lt 190, 1897, 10)
We are glad that Brother and Sister Hughes are coming. We will welcome them heartily. Brother and Sister Lacey are much pleased that they are coming. We shall begin school without delay at the time appointed. The Lord has means for us somewhere, and He will work with His own power. Satan will make his masterly efforts as he has done, but he will fail, for the Lord can do that which He will for our good and His own name’s glory. I send you letters written for you to do with as you see best.
(12LtMs, Lt 190, 1897, 11)
In reference to Edson White, be sure and meet him and spend enough time with him to find out how he stands. I am of the opinion that the Southern States are not favorable to the health of himself or his wife, but the Lord knows all about this. I merely mention it, that if the health is endangered, they should find places where they can unitedly labor and give all that there is of them without reserve to the Lord. These children lie very near my heart, and all I ask is that they may be just where the Lord would have them in His work. If I never see them in this world, we will meet where there is no separation. If it becomes necessary that they be with or near me, the Lord can bring that about. The will of the Lord be done.
(12LtMs, Lt 190, 1897, 12)
Mother.
Lt 191, 1897
White, J. E.; White, Emma Extract from Lt 147a, 1897.
Lt 192, 1897
White, W. C. Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia July 20, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Son Willie White:
The last mail I ordered to be sent to Honolulu to meet you. Supposed you would be on the next boat, but the last mail gives me no assurance that you will be a passenger on the boat you have expected to come on. So we will send our letters to California, and if you are on your way, no harm can be done.
(12LtMs, Lt 192, 1897, 1)
Your family remain well. May was not well pleased with your short letter, giving her no assurance when you will come. We have made all calculations to see you in August. But we will not make a bad matter worse by complaining. We must be just as happy as we can and lean more firmly upon the Source of our strength.
(12LtMs, Lt 192, 1897, 2)
I shall not be able to write much to anyone for this mail. My labor has been earnestly given to the school, but I feel keenly over some things. The money—what about it? Find out how much Herbert Lacey has drawn from my funds in receiving his education. I am not at all in favor of the students coming from the school as little prepared as he is to teach in regard to the fitting up as a Biblical student. He tells me that for two or three years he has taken no Bible studies. This is all neglect. The last lengthening out of his stay in Battle Creek, from the light given me of God, was a mistake. Had he remained a much shorter period, it would have been better for him and us all around. All who devote three or four or five years to their education make a mistake.
(12LtMs, Lt 192, 1897, 3)
The kind of education they obtain disqualifies them to do God’s service. The time so many spend in classical studies had better be spent in close, diligent study of the Word of God. The knowledge of the Word is of more value than Greek or Latin. He says he has not any use for the largest part of the education he has received in Battle Creek. It makes my heart ache to have one or two or a few receive and absorb money to obtain an education that is not giving them a knowledge of the very kind of work they will be called to do. The case of Herbert has cost me much perplexity, and I would not say a word to you about it, only I sincerely hope not one student shall be encouraged to remain years in the school in Battle Creek, for they come from the school supposed to be prepared to take hold of the work as teachers, according to the years spent in study, but who reveal that they have a one-sided education. I am pained at my heart to think that a few are positively injured with too overmuch of time given to book learning. They would be far better qualified for the work if they knew less, far less, of authors and had a much better knowledge of God and the truth which would make men wise unto salvation.
(12LtMs, Lt 192, 1897, 4)
There are many whose education would be of far greater value if they had even one year in Battle Creek to get a start in school, and then studied out of school and let some others come in and get a start, and they go to work in Christ’s lines and become educated in learning by practice. The warnings and instruction given by the Lord have not been heeded. Years devoted to the studies in school are a decided mistake, time lost, for their minds could not possibly retain one-hundredth part of what they have passed over in overmuch book studies. It is really a surface work. They could have done far better work in teaching in simplicity that which they did learn than to have so much crowded into the mind that they cannot use.
(12LtMs, Lt 192, 1897, 5)
July 19
The cistern is now finished, with the exception of cementing in the inside and removing the timbers and putting in [the] pump. The cistern was dug by Brother Worsnop. The water came in through the night after he had worked at it two days, so that he had to bail it out. It would come in from every side and from the bottom. One large tank was filled, and one not as large, with the water that seeped in, and they had to bail it out with pails. We had a man from Sydney to come up and do the job in laying the brick. We feared it would rain. Brother Richardson and Brother Woodern came in on Sunday and took right hold with the bricklayer from Sydney. Worsnop was in the cistern. Five in all were at work, three laying the brick, Worsnop packing in the earth back of the two layers of brick, Robert McCann mixing the mortar, Robert Lamplough handing it down in buckets. Willie McCann stood in the cellar, catching the brick Sara McEnterfer tossed into his hands, Edith passing the brick to Sara, so the work was nearly finished Tuesday morning. Brethren Richardson and Woodern, worked all day Monday. Tuesday morning the bricklayer left.
(12LtMs, Lt 192, 1897, 6)
We have kept right up sharp to see that nothing was unthought of. One tank is in running order, and if the rain keeps off just a few days longer, then the cistern can receive its treasure of water. We knew this would be a very dirty job. The bricklayer had come up to build chimneys for Lamplough and Brother Hare, so you see it was our object to have all these matters done while the business of the building was in operation. We have boarded the hands, and in building the cistern we have, since the house building, only furnished dinners for the two Lamploughs, Robert and Fred, for nine pence a meal, and we have boarded the chimneybuilder.
(12LtMs, Lt 192, 1897, 7)
Now our settling is going on. Brother Carswell is coming home next week. Brother James will occupy the house that May leaves until he gets a home of his own built. Then he will move into that house, his own, when he can pay for it. He has an idea of having the house placed just where you located it and doing it as he can by odd jobs. Meanwhile his family will be more comfortable in the wash house where your twins were born. There will be an addition to his family shortly. So we are all doing matters like the cistern, fast as we can possibly do it. Other matters move more slowly, but we hope if you come in August that you will see your family nicely settled. It is a nice, convenient place and pleases me very much.
(12LtMs, Lt 192, 1897, 8)
The boys are trotting everywhere. They are well and hearty.
(12LtMs, Lt 192, 1897, 9)
Lt 193, 1897
White, W. C. Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia July 23, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 4Bio 311-312. Dear Son Willie White:
I have been writing since half past three o’clock until breakfast bell rang, then prayed with the family and ate my breakfast. I commence my writing again.
(12LtMs, Lt 193, 1897, 1)
You ask me if I have seen the last edition of the book Mount of Blessing. I have, and am of the opinion that the most objectionable features have been removed. If you ask if I am pleased and satisfied, I am compelled to answer, No, I am not; but I ask them not to be at any more expense. But I can but have settled convictions that their wisdom has departed from those who would put in such a book as Mount of Blessing such illustrations, to send out to the people. Certainly their perceptive faculties were perverted. At the present time, after waiting two years for the book to be prepared to be sent to the people, I would be much better pleased had the book gone forth without illustrations.
(12LtMs, Lt 193, 1897, 2)
The King’s business requires haste. The way this book has been handled, I do much prefer to go to outside publishing offices and engage them to do publishing work for me. My heart is sore and grieved more than I can express. I lift my voice in protest against our publishing houses putting such a mass of cheap deeds of representations of sacred, holy truths. Some illustrations are not objectionable, and some are degrading to the subjects of truth the papers are advocating.
(12LtMs, Lt 193, 1897, 3)
But I am not to worry about things I cannot help. Our trust must be in God and not in man. We cannot make flesh our arm. We must look and live. This is our life, to look and live.
(12LtMs, Lt 193, 1897, 4)
I can see nothing in the manuscript sent but that is right. When yourself, and your brethren in connection with your own judgment, accept anything after this order, do not pay out postage to send the matter to me. Always use your own judgment.
(12LtMs, Lt 193, 1897, 5)
In regard to Sister Ings, I would be pleased to have her in my home as matron if she will come because she chooses to come. I do not want her to come unwillingly. I should be very much pleased should she have a mind to come. You can tell her this is a beautiful country. Now, you understand the situation, and if you, after your visiting America, think the Lord would have me go to America and again stand in the field of conflict and battle, I will consider the matter and pray over it. I am willing to go or stay as God may direct. I have no light as yet to leave Australia.
(12LtMs, Lt 193, 1897, 6)
Well, I have been broken off. Sara was just starting over to the school grounds to see about your pump to put in the cistern. They have not said one word to me, but put it in the school cistern; but when she had reached the gate, Brother Coulston came running, all out of breath, from Dora Creek. There is a man there by the name of Wild who has been one of the bitterest opponents of our faith. He would not allow one of our people to cross his premises. He is taken suddenly with inflammation of the lungs, and Sara is solicited to go immediately to see if she can do anything to save his life. May and she are now going, and left alone once more, I will finish my letter.
(12LtMs, Lt 193, 1897, 7)
If this letter reaches you, I wish you would look and see the things that belong to me at the Rural Health Retreat. I sent for a footstool, which is a box with a lid and very handy. Then there is a lounge there. See if it is best to bring it as household goods.
(12LtMs, Lt 193, 1897, 8)
In reference to the school, there are now seventy-five in the primary department and the higher grades. There are some excellent students. Brother Goodheart is one of the best students, nephew to Sister James. He told me with great gladness two mornings since, that the sister who was so bitterly opposed, and who burned her mother’s letters and papers, has fully taken her position for the truth. There are now to be about five more students, so there is no more room for an increase until we shall have means to put up building.
(12LtMs, Lt 193, 1897, 9)
One thing we are seriously considering, that the building for the boys shall be entirely separate from that of the girls, a distinct building. There is going to be the difficulty. I have spoken and read five mornings in succession in the school, and after talking with the whole school, I then took the girls by themselves and talked with them seriously and charged them to keep themselves sacredly to themselves. We would not, could not, allow any courting or forming attachments at the school, girls with young men and young men with girls. This I said before the whole school, and then to the young ladies.
(12LtMs, Lt 193, 1897, 10)
I entreated them to be reserved, to be delicate and refined and not be forward and bold and inviting the attention of young men; that they should consider it an honor to cooperate with their teachers and seek to please them in everything. The teachers have had experience and should be honored as educators. They could sustain their teachers and make their work as light as possible and not have their teachers constantly in perplexity and sadness because one and another of the students shall be unguarded and act as unbecoming to Christians.
(12LtMs, Lt 193, 1897, 11)
I asked them if they would make every effort in their power to help sustain the teachers in their work of maintaining discipline and order. In the act of so doing, they would elevate and ennoble themselves. They would feel a happy satisfaction in doing their best to influence others by their words. Their line of conversation should not be in complaints and talking to one and another and expressing dissatisfaction.
(12LtMs, Lt 193, 1897, 12)
“If you will only do your duty,” I said to them, “and reveal that you have too much respect for yourselves to wish to maintain a low level and will seek to help other students, the moral tone of the school will be above par.”
(12LtMs, Lt 193, 1897, 13)
They could, by doing right themselves, make it in every way better for themselves and for their teachers, and they will have the approval of God. It depended upon the pupils of the school whether the school will be of lasting advantage to them or not. The teachers could not possibly make them a new heart, but the Lord has said to all who seek Him diligently, “A new heart will I give you.” [Ezekiel 36:26.] When the heart is under the Holy Spirit’s molding influence, every one would know this because of the influence they exerted. The Lord God Omnipotent reigneth, and sees all the works of the children of men. I can write no more on this point.
(12LtMs, Lt 193, 1897, 14)
But there is a very great mistake made in setting the price of tuitions so low. It cannot be thus. It is a wild movement. If I had known it before the matter had gone out, I would not have consented to have any such prices. I have had the matter presented to me that one cause of the debts accumulated in Battle Creek has been low tuition and rates for rooms and board, and then not proper management to bring the outgoes to harmonize with such prices. The Lord would have His people act sensibly. They cannot possibly keep from sinking under the outgoing expenditures. When they have tested this way of management long enough to see the outcome, why do they repeat the same thing term after term? You will have less students—that may be and may not be. But whichever way it shall turn, there must be wise managers in every school who understand the practical workings of the expenditures and the income, and the outgoes must harmonize with the income. Therefore, do not dishonor the educational interests with mismanagement.
(12LtMs, Lt 193, 1897, 15)
Let there be careful tact and wisdom in all our school arrangements and place the tuition sufficiently high to make ends meet. The Lord is not glorified by any such unwise managing. If the correct management of the school in setting the tuition at a figure to clear expenses shall bring in less students, then let the risk be run on the safe side and there will be a better class of students. All this accumulation of debts should be avoided. I am more astonished than I can express that the tuition here was placed as low as, yes, they say lower than, the tuition at Battle Creek, where the expense of living is about half what it is here in Australia, and the expense in building is one-half what it is in Australia. Now, our brethren know this very well. Then why is it that such short calculations are made? May the Lord inspire every mind who handles His goods to deal wisely.
(12LtMs, Lt 193, 1897, 16)
When in Europe the Lord gave counsel in reference to this matter, and that the tuition of students in Battle Creek was placed at too low figures. Always they would be under the discouragements of debt unless they changed their methods in this respect.
(12LtMs, Lt 193, 1897, 17)
I must close this. Brother Haskell just returned from Sydney. I am conversing with Elder Haskell. Elder Wilson is here, brought to the school building in bad throat difficulties.
(12LtMs, Lt 193, 1897, 18)
Mother.
Lt 194, 1897
White, W. C. Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia August 1, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Son Willie:
I have not much courage to write to you, for I know if you are on the steamer you will not get it, and where you are I cannot tell. If you are in America, this will reach you, probably, in Oakland, California. If you are there, I wish that you would bring me my volumes of Barnes’ notes. I believe there are five volumes, large size; a book [by] Horace Mann, and any old Bibles you may find of mine.
(12LtMs, Lt 194, 1897, 1)
In regard to any of my furniture, you may do as you please in bringing it, if you think it could be transported without much expense. My books you could put in the goods if I have any to be brought. If you think best, you could bring my sofa stored in Healdsburg. I have a bed lounge in St. Helena, but I will leave all this to your judgment. Do just as you please with those things.
(12LtMs, Lt 194, 1897, 2)
We had two more students come to the school yesterday. Brother Schowe came with his son and his daughter and leaves them in the school. It would have surprised you to see the congregation out on Sabbath. The upper story of the dining room, our meeting room, was full, and I spoke to them with freedom. The Lord’s blessing seemed to be in our midst. There are now seventy-five pupils including the primary school. I do hope you will arrive before this first term of school closes. We have had most earnest work to do in order to bring two young men, Judd and Jones, into order, but they may make something yet. Jones is from Sydney. His mother is a teacher and this, her only boy, has been left without discipline or restraint, but he has been a wild chap. Although he is a man grown, he is a boy in understanding. We feel deeply earnest that these young men shall reform and come under discipline. They are certainly improving, because they have the matter laid plainly before them: it is quiet gentlemanly behavior or dismissal. We hope that there will be no dismissals.
(12LtMs, Lt 194, 1897, 3)
Brother and Sister Haskell [and] Professor Hughes and his wife are all doing good work. This first term is the most trying, because all the wild, untamable elements have to understand that they cannot do just as they please, that they must come under control. I have had much of the burden of this upon me and I have presented before them that nothing can be tolerated like forming attachments, courting or being in the society girls with boys. This we could not have.
(12LtMs, Lt 194, 1897, 4)
We have a much larger number at the school than we expected would be here. Brother and Sister Haskell are doing important work. She is matron and fills the bill nicely, besides teaching Bible lessons. All enjoy her lessons much. Brother Haskell’s lessons are good and are much enjoyed. He shows he has ploughed deep in the Scriptures to find the hidden treasures of truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 194, 1897, 5)
Brother Schowe is most desirous that his children shall be benefited with the Bible studies to be qualified to become workers in the cause of God. He detained me from my writing more than one hour to converse with me. He leaves this morning. He has expressed a strong desire that his children might be in my family, but I cannot consent to any such thing. I have plenty of cares upon me and wish I had less.
(12LtMs, Lt 194, 1897, 6)
May is keeping house now in the new building. Everything is convenient. She has slept here for the past week and this week, to make sure the plastering is dry.
(12LtMs, Lt 194, 1897, 7)
This must go this morning. I am writing while others are eating. I have had hope that Edson and Emma might come back with you. The light given me so many years back was that yourself, Edson and your mother could, in getting out books, do a good work; that Edson, if he would consecrate his heart to God, would use his talent in a conception of the Word of God that would do much good. Satan has worked to hinder this, but I have thought it might yet be brought about.
(12LtMs, Lt 194, 1897, 8)
May and the children are well. They will probably sleep in their own home tonight. But the school problem is the one the most difficult to settle. In regard to the vacation, I am sure the primary department should have but short vacation. In regard to whether it is wisdom to have the school continue for some students through vacation is yet to be considered.
(12LtMs, Lt 194, 1897, 9)
I must close.
(12LtMs, Lt 194, 1897, 10)
Mother.
Lt 195, 1897
White, W. C. Summer Hill Health Home, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia August 5, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in 20MR 35-36. Dear Son Willie.
I left my fountain pen at home, and it is a sad mistake for me. But then I have been overtaxed with writing and my head refuses to work, so it is not much writing I can do. All day yesterday was spent in Sydney. We were very tired when we returned home.
(12LtMs, Lt 195, 1897, 1)
We met Brother Davis in Sydney. He has worked very interestedly to get petitions before the Council, but they carried out their determination. The most influential among them told those who presented their petitions that their arguments were unanswerable but, notwithstanding, the majority ruled and carried the people. Thus it will be to the end. God will not forsake His people. He will be their shield and buckler and their exceeding great reward.
(12LtMs, Lt 195, 1897, 2)
There is not much progress in the sanitarium. I do not think there are the elements in Brother Semmens to manage the matter. The Lord has men that can make a success of this work. He cannot do it. I have ever been of this opinion, but hope we would be happily disappointed. We feel encouraged in regard to the school. Sister Haskell says they have room for only one more student and that a girl. But a woman and a young lad will be at the school this week from Sydney, and they will have to have room somewhere.
(12LtMs, Lt 195, 1897, 3)
The burden is upon me, Arise and build. We must have a meetinghouse on the school grounds opposite Hanson’s, somewhere there, and that will be more central for all. We have but very little outside attendance. Brother and Sister Haskell are doing good work, and both are excellent workers. Brother Haskell takes right hold, not only directing but working with the workers.
(12LtMs, Lt 195, 1897, 4)
The last rain washed away the bridge made between the Sunnyside home and the school, but it has been built again. The lawyers you and I visited did our business in Sydney; said they would send the documents direct to you. We gave them your address and our address here in Summer Hill.
(12LtMs, Lt 195, 1897, 5)
We are now where we can spare Connell. I think he has no special religious influence, and I shall feel relieved when he is disconnected with the place. In many things he is, when he chooses, very useful in taking care of horses and cows, but there is not any aptitude in him as manager. He has been a continual worriment to me. I think our brethren, many of them, feel as I do in the matter. If he has ever been converted, he certainly has not stayed converted.
(12LtMs, Lt 195, 1897, 6)
Sara and I have had the planning to do and we are very willing to lay it down. Your house is built. You have a good cistern full of water. We need you here very much, but do not want you to come until your work is done. Another boat has gone down between Gisborne and Auckland; only two persons lost.
(12LtMs, Lt 195, 1897, 7)
In regard to the book on Christian temperance, that portion that was expressed in reference to drug medication as though it was recommended by me is not according to the light that I have been given to present to the people. I must, if I made this statement, have done so in expressing the idea of working away from the use of all drugs concocted at the apothecary. We have no use for them. We should not vindicate the use of drug medication. I did not wish to prejudice the medical fraternity that I could not in my writings approach them, therefore have kept quite silent in reference to the sharp points which I can express. If it is thought that the sentence will not mistake my position, let it stand. But if, knowing of my true position in reference to drug medication, any statements in the book that contradict it would be meaning me to say [Yea], and Nay. I do not know as that expression will do any particular harm, but would rather it would have been left out. This is a reform which will be made by Seventh-day Adventist practitioners. I feel deeply over every matter on which warnings have been given us.
(12LtMs, Lt 195, 1897, 8)
I have written to the doctor in reference to this matter. When the young, inexperienced doctors begin their work as practitioners, they feel generally it is no great harm if life is sacrificed in experimenting.
(12LtMs, Lt 195, 1897, 9)
Lt 196, 1897
White, W. C. Summer Hill, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia August 6, 1897 Previously unpublished. [W. C. White:]
I have just received a steel pen that Sara has brought me, and I will try to write a few words. I have just had a short conversation with Brother Semmens, and this is what he tells me: he cannot pay me the one hundred and thirty dollars loaned him or the one hundred and twenty-five dollars invested to furnish the larger front room next to my hired room, but he only can pay the rent of the house, gas bills and taxes. He has had a patient from Clark Howdens’ establishment. He has now occupied that room we furnished for some two months. He was afflicted with paralysis. He had visited the physicians who said they could not help him, and finally he came here and is greatly improved by his treatment, and this will give him influence. Brother Semmens is not disconcerted. Says he cannot pay me now. Fifty dollars came in as a donation to the Health Home. I needed the money and shall credit it to the money invested in furniture.
(12LtMs, Lt 196, 1897, 1)
Brother Baker moved last Wednesday. He needed more room. That leaves ten shillings more rent on Brother Semmens to pay. Brother Semmens does not feel overmuch pleased with the prospect possible for Brother Brandstater’s coming to the Home to unite with him. The daughter of Edwin Hare he does not consider the best material for city work. He is very modest in that which he says about this subject, but he wants one who can give treatment.
(12LtMs, Lt 196, 1897, 2)
A physician would please him—man and wife both with a medical education. He loses much because the patients need treatment in surgical operations that he does not give, and it is this kind of treatment that would bring in means to the sanitarium, but now they have to send them to hospitals. Do not get any man or woman physician that is not of solid experience and well balanced judgment. A woman physician that can treat women, this is that which is needed. I beg of you to get someone from America. A man and his wife would be the best. We know that this would give character to our medical work. Do not bring in anyone of inferior experience.
(12LtMs, Lt 196, 1897, 3)
Brother Martin has called on me in my room. He has been paying high interest, eight per cent, on three hundred pounds. He was full of gratitude to God and wished me to know that a friend has loaned him the money at five percent as long as he wants it. He knew I had an interest in his affairs and was pleased to tell me his success.
(12LtMs, Lt 196, 1897, 4)
I speak tomorrow in Ashfield and Newtown. I spoke last Sabbath in Avondale where our people were assembled together. I had much freedom and we had a very interesting social meeting.
(12LtMs, Lt 196, 1897, 5)
I am not able to write much. I have altogether too much weariness of the brain, which I did not realize until I came here and then found I had no power to write. I will now halt.
(12LtMs, Lt 196, 1897, 6)
Mother.
Lt 197, 1897
White, W. C. Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia August 30, 1897 Previously unpublished. W. C. White:
I have just put my name to the papers you have sent in regard to the shares in the sanitarium. I would say Edson White, twenty-five shares. Dr. Kellogg will carry shares sufficient of his own, so that I appoint you to choose the division of the remaining shares you propose Dr. Kellogg shall have. I can divide the remaining shares with Brethren Tenney, Rousseau, and E. A. Sutherland.
(12LtMs, Lt 197, 1897, 1)
I cannot see that Dr. Kellogg should have any more shares than he already carries. The men specified, Tenney, Rousseau, and Sutherland, can carry shares that will consume the forty shares specified for Dr. Kellogg, unless you have some special reason that he should carry a portion; but I think Edson can carry twenty-five shares, and the remainder go to these brethren specified.
(12LtMs, Lt 197, 1897, 2)
I do not see what is the inwardness of this, but I will subscribe my name to the papers as I have stated.
(12LtMs, Lt 197, 1897, 3)
Willie, cannot you encourage a good dentist to come to this country? There was a brother in connection with Atherton, Harvey, I think was his name. He was a good practitioner, and I understand dentists can set up anywhere and do their work without any interference. We need a dentist very much.
(12LtMs, Lt 197, 1897, 4)
Your family are all well. I do not address letters to you. I learn from Brother Brandstater that you are surely to be here on this next boat after the one now in, but we have nothing definite from you, so we know not what to expect. We certainly hope that we shall not be disappointed in the matter, for we want you now at the close of the school, and at the Sydney camp meeting. I have so little expectation that you will receive this that I have little courage to send it, but I will send it nevertheless.
(12LtMs, Lt 197, 1897, 5)
Mother.
Lt 198, 1897
White, W. C. Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia September 21, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Willie:
I have not been able to write for some days. I have had one of my spells of heart difficulty. I will write but a few lines, saying Elder Daniells is much distressed over your delay. He has deferred the camp meeting in Sydney one week, hoping you will certainly be here before the school closes and the dedication of the chapel. All would have been finished had it not been for the delay of boat to bring the siding. Boat left Sydney last Tuesday, one week ago. Workmen are waiting for the siding.
(12LtMs, Lt 198, 1897, 1)
We have now only four weeks more of school. We decided best as Elder Daniells declared he would not commence Union Conference without you being present. Do not let things detain you in Wellington or Auckland one day. Come as soon as the boat can get you here. I want you to not be delayed. Many things of importance are to be considered. Elders Daniells and Palmer are to be here at Cooranbong, Brother Daniells to remain two weeks, hoping to see you as early before the camp meeting as possible. I understand that Brother Baker has secured grounds for the camp meeting.
(12LtMs, Lt 198, 1897, 2)
Elder Haskell, Sara, and I went down to Sydney on evening train. I had overdone and was very weak. Nervous prostration was upon me. Friday I thought I could speak on Sabbath but knew it would not be safe for me. I did not recover strength. We came back Sunday morning. Mrs. Martin came into the compartment where we were en route for Cooranbong. Chrissie and her next eldest sister have attended the last part of the school. Mrs. Martin had her youngest girl with her, a very nice little girl. We entertained her while she was in Cooranbong. She spent some time in visiting the school and seemed very much pleased with her visit. We had Chrissie and her sister that have been at the school come to our place with her mother and younger sister to dinner. She made a very short visit—came in to Sunnyside on Sunday forenoon and left the next day, evening.
(12LtMs, Lt 198, 1897, 3)
Sister James has a nice little boy now nearly two weeks old, and she is up and around. Sara was her nurse, doctor, and all by herself. Sara and I went down to Morisset yesterday; took the babies. They do not delight much in the scenery, for they go fast asleep, and [they] slept both going and coming. Today we rode down again and they slept only one way. Coming back they wanted to enjoy themselves. They made no trouble. We are glad to relieve the mother and we like to have them go with us as they make no fuss. They were in such ecstasies today as they saw our horses and carriage that they just screamed with delight. They are now nearly eighteen months old.
(12LtMs, Lt 198, 1897, 4)
I hope you will come without delay. As the Union Conference will be held in connection with the camp meeting, you need to hasten on the way at once. Do not delay.
(12LtMs, Lt 198, 1897, 5)
Elder Daniells wrote me he was thinking of coming to Cooranbong, pitch a tent, and take care of himself and have a change. Said he was quite wearied and wished to get freshened up.
(12LtMs, Lt 198, 1897, 6)
He was, when there some weeks since, quite anxious to have the school close two weeks earlier than their appointed time, to commence the camp meeting in Sydney so early that they could avoid the flies. They wished to take advantage also of Cooks’ Excursion, which would save much expense for those who attended the Melbourne camp meeting. We all tried to meet his plans. This would necessitate, it was thought, arrangements to take the students to Sydney to be under the supervision of the teachers, but let it be a change to the Bible instruction and they be provided for in board as in the home. His letter tells us that his fears that you would not be here in time have led him to put off the camp meeting to begin in Sydney one week later. He says Cooks’ Excursion will be one week later; thus it is published in the paper.
(12LtMs, Lt 198, 1897, 7)
That brings things around so that the term is only one week short and Brethren Hughes and Haskell and wife have talked with me in regard to the advisability of closing the school here in Cooranbong only one week earlier than the appointed time. The whole matter was canvassed, and the decision we made [was] that it was our best judgment to give up the idea of supporting the school during the camp meeting, for it would bring grave extra responsibilities upon teachers that their time would be fully occupied in council meetings, beside the general religious exercises that must be held which cannot be avoided. There would also be a large expense in feeding the students, which cannot be done with that economy that it can be done here. The transportation of material to furnish beds and bedding for so large a number would be a breaking up of everything here to accommodate the students, and the close of the school would be in the middle of the camp meeting.
(12LtMs, Lt 198, 1897, 8)
The plan now is to make everything right with the students, paying back to those who have paid for the full term the funds of one week, close the school here, and let all take their chances or return home. They have had, you may say, a continuous religious drill in Bible studies and in religious exercises. If these do not serve their purpose, they will not be so largely benefited by camp meeting. The previous plan would have secured probably the attendance of more students, but the exposure to temptation that Sydney will present will make its mark on some. There will be the baptism of several before the school closes.
(12LtMs, Lt 198, 1897, 9)
The Lord has wrought on many hearts. The school has been excellent, and we are much gratified. I never have seen a school better conducted. Sister Haskell is a treasure for the situation, and I must tell you, everything in the education of Herbert Lacey is superficial. He will, I fear, never be a proper educator in the school. Therefore, there will be serious matters to consider as to what shall be done for them, for their religious experience is of the same character. This has been one of the greatest burdens I have had to carry. If he was entirely out of the school it would be easier work for all. My soul is sick and tired of these superficial characters. It is pain and burden to me.
(12LtMs, Lt 198, 1897, 10)
September 22
I send you this letter, and I hope you will not think of spending one day longer than you can possibly help in Wellington or Auckland. I shall certainly try to be excused from attending the camp meetings in Sydney and in Melbourne. I must have quietude and rest. I long for it, and these attacks of exhaustion must be avoided. I look over the congregation when I am at these meetings and see there persons whom I know will be lost unless they repent and are converted, and I am then to carry the load. I cannot rest day nor night. The two last camp meetings have been meetings that have worn me terribly. I want now to complete my book if possible. But, I tell you, not another book will I ever consent to work as this Desire of Nations has been worked. If there is no person of a healthful mind to take the charge of my books, if I must be left with the help I now have, I am done. I am now having this one burden; to get through with that book, and I pray daily for help, but this is my one burden now.
(12LtMs, Lt 198, 1897, 11)
I have placed myself in the most miserable positions to get out books, and if the Lord has not help for me, He does not mean I shall carry this load myself. I am simply done.
(12LtMs, Lt 198, 1897, 12)
We expect delegates to the camp meeting will visit Cooranbong before the meeting. We hope they will come to see what has been done. We knew a chapel we must have, and without delay, so the work has gone forward with a zeal and willingness that has made it pleasant all around, and the blessing of the Lord has been upon the workers. Everything would have now been completed if we had the material to work with. But we have done all we could do in walking out by faith, and the next wise thing to do was to quietly rest in the Lord, and not fret. We need not waste our energy in fretting in regard to results which we could not change. It is our part of the service to do our best and leave the results with Him who is infinite in wisdom. We need not so much a Week of Prayer as we need to daily empty ourselves of all uncleanness of spirit, of our self-sufficiency and importance. Although we belong to God by creation and redemption, yet there is a most thorough surrender to be made to God every day of our life, to be employed by Him as He thinks best. Then we will work usefully and hopefully and happily, not to glorify ourselves, but to glorify God.
(12LtMs, Lt 198, 1897, 13)
September 24
Connell tells us the boat is nearing the lake and will be at the landing place at four o’clock p.m. I am sorry it could not have been in Friday. Just what they will do now I know not, but the coming week the work will advance rapidly and the house be enclosed. The house has been ceiled within and is now being painted. The outhouses are both built. The house will go forward rapidly now to its completion. Oh, how glad I am that it will be done without delay. We ought to have a thanksgiving season to God every day for a place where we can worship Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 198, 1897, 14)
You will be interested in the enclosed. Brother Baker has had a trying time to find a piece of ground that we could get at any terms. These parties that are united now in renting the land utterly refused to let us have it for any price, not for one hundred pounds, but there has been much prayer offered to God, and he tried again last week, every trustee. And all agreed to let us have the land. It is the Lord’s doings. We rejoice that this success has been given us, for we could not well wait another week. The writings are all made, the land secured.
(12LtMs, Lt 198, 1897, 15)
Now we are to place ourselves in position to understand the voice of God to us individually. I am disgusted and heartsore when I see young men, ministers, who are lifted up in self, and I know they have not an abiding Christ. They do not walk tremblingly before God. They have much more faith in what “I” can do than in what the Lord can and will do for us if we will humble our hearts before Him. When our faith shall lay hold on God and we shall trust Him entirely and believe Him, that He wants to work mightily in our behalf for good and His own name’s glory, then His salvation will be seen. His righteousness will go forth as a lamp that burneth.
(12LtMs, Lt 198, 1897, 16)
But oh, how I desire to see a growing faith! We are so ready to halt after we gain a partial victory. The kingdom of heaven is like unto leaven that leaveneth the whole lump. God will do great things to all who believe. But I hope to see you soon now and will write no more.
(12LtMs, Lt 198, 1897, 17)
May the Lord bless and sanctify you is my prayer. We hope and pray that this camp meeting will be, through the blessing of God, as a light shining in a dark place. He will work if we will prepare the way, that He can use us and that we can cooperate with God, but self must not swell into large proportions because one is favored with success in any line. It is not the human agent that gives the grace and the power. All, every jot and every tittle, is of God. We must humble ourselves, that the Lord may be exalted.
(12LtMs, Lt 198, 1897, 18)
Your family are all well, May and all the children. I have been over to the house, and both children were having a play wholly with themselves, amusing themselves and then laughing at their own pranks. It is quite a circus when they get their play spell on.
(12LtMs, Lt 198, 1897, 19)
School closes October 13. Hurry along as fast as possible.
(12LtMs, Lt 198, 1897, 20)
Mother.
Lt 199, 1897
White, W. C. Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia November 6, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Son Willie:
This morning I commenced writing important matter at two o’clock, to be used as shall seem best. It is not finished. If it was, would send you a copy. I send you here an article. I wish you to see that it is put in a little tract at once and copies sent to me, and you have copies to distribute. I have been unable to write on any subject, but I shall now write again if the Lord will.
(12LtMs, Lt 199, 1897, 1)
Such matter as I now send you on Christmas offerings will do good. Put it in the hands of someone who will see it put through at once and copies sent to me. I will pay the expense of publishing if that is best. If it is best for the Echo office to handle it, doing with it as they think best, they can do so. Follow your own judgment, but have no delay in getting it out. Can write no more.
(12LtMs, Lt 199, 1897, 2)
All your family are well.
(12LtMs, Lt 199, 1897, 3)
In love,
(12LtMs, Lt 199, 1897, 4)
Mother.
May went with Jessie to post office for letters, and she was very much disappointed. Although it would please us to hear from you, yet I know there is so much going on, that you cannot always attend to writing.
(12LtMs, Lt 199, 1897, 5)
Mother.
Lt 200, 1897
White, W. C. Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia November 26, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 4MR 44; 11MR 271. Dear Son Willie:
Brother Tucker has just brought the mail and I have read your little bit of a letter. I am glad you are well and having good meetings. I do not cease to pray that the Holy Spirit will work both speakers and hearers. Without that there will be great loss. We are of excellent courage. Brother Wilson has left for the point of interest. There are so many drawings for the ministers to visit and labor personally that we felt there was not a moment to be lost. The Holy Spirit is convicting the minds and moving the hearts.
(12LtMs, Lt 200, 1897, 1)
Brother Wilson and wife can do excellent work in Sabbath School, in visiting, in giving Bible readings in the tent, holding meetings Sabbath and Sunday and every evening in the week except one, and heeding the calls of invitation to go out to homes where they collect in their neighbors. All this makes most constant labor. Brother Haskell and wife frequently go together. When only ladies are collected, Sister Haskell goes alone, and he visits some other parties. This seems to be a sound interest. Mrs. Gorrick I believe to be a converted woman. I would not feel at liberty to leave this work in Sydney. I hope to be stronger when the weather gets cooler. I feel sweet peace and joy in the Lord. Elder Haskell has all he can possibly do.
(12LtMs, Lt 200, 1897, 2)
The meetings are well attended. At the evening meetings all cannot be accommodated under the enlarged tent. Extra seats have been made and crowded as close together as possible and then from ten to fifteen seats are placed outside the tent. All are filled and a wall of people standing. Brother Haskell keeps up well and is of excellent courage.
(12LtMs, Lt 200, 1897, 3)
You have many laborers in Melbourne, and we cannot be drawn upon here. It is not ill health altogether, the reason I did not attend the Melbourne camp meeting. I felt the Lord would not require me to go to Melbourne. After that Friday morning meeting a revelation was made to me, while I was speaking, of the true feelings and sentiments of some, and that God did not require me to bear my testimony there now. When He saw my testimony would be received, He would clear my path before me. I have no more to say to those who think they understand the work of the Spirit of God and have no need of help. I know what I am doing. I am not to place myself in positions that are hard and trying as I have done, while our own brethren in the ministry walk in the light of the sparks of their own kindling. They must have a chance to develop.
(12LtMs, Lt 200, 1897, 4)
Jesus, our world’s Redeemer, could not do many mighty works in certain places because of their unbelief. I have interest for them all in Melbourne, but no further work for some whom I have given all the warnings that God has given me. I declare as did the apostle Paul, I have not shunned to declare to them the whole counsel of God, and I am free from the blood of souls. I shall know when the Lord would have me visit Melbourne. I am sure it is not at this camp meeting, for He seems to withhold me.
(12LtMs, Lt 200, 1897, 5)
Today I am seventy years old. I thank and praise my heavenly Father for the clearness of mind and the peace and grace of Christ I enjoy. I am relieved, for the present, of battling, and of having to rein myself up to meet and speak plain things to my ministering brethren. They have had the light and some of them act as if they were spiritually blind. They misinterpret my words just as they have done at Battle Creek. They cannot understand my work, but counterwork the very things God has given me to do. I love them all, but for a time my pen and voice will not disturb them. They would not understand, in the right way, anything the Lord has given me to do. Until they have less confidence in themselves, I cannot help them. I have light and I shall follow it to the letter, and when my way is made hard, then I am to rest the whole matter with God. I hope you will not be perplexed over this communication, but my way was made plain that Friday morning, and the Lord helping me, I will work in any place where the Lord gives me work to do.
(12LtMs, Lt 200, 1897, 6)
One thing I know: my wrestling in Australia has been as severe as any place I was ever in. Now my work is not to attend large meetings and wrestle as I have done. The publication of books is urged upon me. That, with the articles for the papers, is enough. I have so much precious matter. Light came to me, you remember, before you left for America, “Gather up the fragments. Let nothing be lost.” [John 6:12.] Much matter should be before our people that they do not have, and I can use up my vitality in breasting difficulties that are not after all cured, but have to be met again and again. If I keep away from the large gatherings, I can preserve my vital energies to work where I can accomplish threefold more than meeting the peculiar attributes in the responsible ones who are leaders in our cause. May the Lord work them by His Holy Spirit. I have no more words to speak.
(12LtMs, Lt 200, 1897, 7)
I write this to you. I am of excellent courage. The work in Sydney needs my testimony. I find that I can bear testimony to unbelievers with much greater freedom and joyous satisfaction then before those who have been so little benefited with the light God has been pleased to give me. I do not go to Sydney this Sabbath, but next Sabbath and Sunday, and may remain there as long as I think the Lord would have me. I know not any of us can do the work of God in self-sufficiency. There must be the emptying of the soul of self, and then there is room for the Holy Spirit to work. We make altogether too little of the working of the Holy Spirit. When we shall hear the dying groans and death struggle of dear, inflated self, then the Holy Spirit will come in and mold the mind, the thoughts, and transform the whole man.
(12LtMs, Lt 200, 1897, 8)
I am, Willie, determined to find quietude in God and commit the keeping of my soul to Him as to a faithful Creator. If the Lord will strengthen me, I would be pleased to complete some works for the press and shall pray for the proper help to be sent to me in the providence of God. I now withdraw myself from the strife of tongues and opinions. I hide myself in Jesus Christ my Saviour. The battle will wax stronger and stronger. Satan will press everything possible upon us, and we need every hour a close communion with God. I know that every agency Satan can set in operation to discourage, he will.
(12LtMs, Lt 200, 1897, 9)
I am now determined to use my means, as it comes in, to seek and save them that are lost. I can talk to companies who have not a knowledge of the truth with freedom and clearness and joy. Here in Newcastle that must be worked. Maitland must be worked, and many places on the line of the railroad. I feel it is time they were worked. My message shall not be so fully confined to those who know the faith. They have had so much light they are glutted with it and do not relish anything that shall come in lines of reproof and warnings, and there are those who are hungry for the Word of life and who will appreciate the light. These I will work for if the Lord will open the way. Oh, Willie, how much time and labor, heart-sickening, discouraging, wearing labor has to be given to those who know the truth and do not practice the truth as it is in Jesus! Do not think I am in any way discouraged.
(12LtMs, Lt 200, 1897, 10)
In much love,
(12LtMs, Lt 200, 1897, 11)
Mother.
I wrote this in great haste to get in the mail, or office. Minnie takes it tonight.
(12LtMs, Lt 200, 1897, 12)
Lt 201, 1897
White, W. C. Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia December 1, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Son Willie:
African mail. I send letters to Brother and Sister Lindsay and to Brother Olsen. I also send letter to Brother Haskell. I send you a copy of the letter sent to me yesterday. I am seeking to close up the book. I think I have about done this. It is a tax on me, but I have courage and faith in God. Marian is about done now, is on the last chapter, I think.
(12LtMs, Lt 201, 1897, 1)
Your children are not as bad as they were. Sara gave Henry treatment night before last, then we took them yesterday morning for a ride and they acted very much that day as though they never had approached sickness. I was over to the house several times, my head refusing to work. Of all the antics that could be performed, they entered into with a surprising zeal.
(12LtMs, Lt 201, 1897, 2)
We leave here Friday.
(12LtMs, Lt 201, 1897, 3)
One window is made in the chamber, and it makes a surprising difference. This will indeed be a wonderful improvement. You will see by the letter sent to me by Elder Haskell that there is no release for them or for any one of us. I dare not leave at this time, and I feel as one forbidden to go to Melbourne. On that Friday morning, when I read those matters to those assembled, I have done, I sincerely hope, [with] the wrestling and the meeting of minds that pretend to receive light but do not in their movements show any such thing. God will not be trifled with. I am ready to do if I know what to do, but I cannot walk contrary to the light God has given me.
(12LtMs, Lt 201, 1897, 4)
Yesterday Brother Goodheart came from Sydney. He has commenced now, this morning, to take his meals with us. Sara says not another minute.
(12LtMs, Lt 201, 1897, 5)
Do tell us when you are coming home.
(12LtMs, Lt 201, 1897, 6)
Mother.
Lt 202, 1897
White, W. C. Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia December 2, 1897 Previously unpublished. Willie:
I wrote in a great hurry yesterday afternoon and yet I was treating on important matters. You know we are all very anxious to get the last message of mercy before the world as fast and far as possible. Now the work has begun in Sydney. Thirty-five are keeping the Sabbath. At the mission home there is a morning prayer at five o’clock in the roomy parlor. Elder Haskell then gives a Bible reading and asks questions to instruct the workers. Then Sister Haskell gives them lessons for one hour. Sister Robinson was very much down, but our going there when we did and talking courage and faith brought her up out of her despondency. She thinks she will never be unbelieving again. These tender souls need gentle dealing, and they have it.
(12LtMs, Lt 202, 1897, 1)
After breakfast there is a going out into the work and no one is left in the house but Brother Haskell. Everyone is at his line of work. Elder Starr says he cannot be grateful enough for this privilege of being united now with the Lord’s honored servant, Elder Haskell. He says he is a rich treasure house of truth. He says he has never had such a privilege before in his life, where he can learn so much. He appreciates this highly.
(12LtMs, Lt 202, 1897, 2)
Elder Wilson has joined the workers in Sydney. He can, we believe, safely do this, but you can see how difficult it would be to follow out your suggestions. If he could have one year’s release from all preaching, it would be much better for him. After careful consideration of the case, he decided that the work in Tasmania in summer would be safe, but we dared not venture it. Queensland is not a very encouraging field to a strong man, but take a man whose throat and vital organs have been hard used, and he has come very near losing his life, and that man should not be placed alone to bear responsibilities in any part of the field. Especially would it be unwise to send him to a new field where he would feel himself embarrassed if he could not preach to them. They want a man who can do full work, and to send him to any field alone, at the present time, would be unwise.
(12LtMs, Lt 202, 1897, 3)
We ventured to advise him to unite with them in Sydney and he could visit and give Bible instruction. He could be a great help in their Sabbath school, and this part of the work is essential. To have the Sabbath school conducted just as it ought to be is of highest importance. It is essential that every stroke now made be correct and educating. Elder Wilson and his wife will be just the kind of laborers essential to bind off the work, that it shall not ravel out.
(12LtMs, Lt 202, 1897, 4)
I suppose I am responsible largely for his being in Sydney, and, if it is necessary, I will be responsible for all above the sum the New South Wales Conference has seen fit to appoint him. If he does the work, which I sincerely hope he can do without injury to himself, he should have the same sum for his labor he has had, or that other laborers have.
(12LtMs, Lt 202, 1897, 5)
I look now upon the work being done in Sydney as just the kind of work that should be done in Melbourne, after the camp meeting closes. It is not wise when there are indications that the Lord is moving upon hearts to allow the interest to diminish in the least. The Lord is at work in Sydney, and just as long as the interest holds good, there should not be a breaking up of meetings, although the camp meeting is at an end. If the people will come to the tent, the meetings should not be cut off, for there are many souls who might hear, and the seed sown spring up and bear fruit. Sometimes it has been the case that they heard only one discourse and they carried the impression with them into other localities and countries. They may have an opportunity to hear in that country again, and the truth finds a lodgment in the heart, and they are converted.
(12LtMs, Lt 202, 1897, 6)
There has been too much preaching the truth and not blending with it the work essential of teaching the truth by personal efforts. The idea has to a large extent entered into the minds of our ministers that they can create that which only cometh down from heaven. A Paul may plant, Apollos water, but God giveth the increase. A variety of gifts are to be brought into exercise. This is the plan of God, and if these gifts are brought into the work, looking unto Jesus, exercising faith in His promises that are full of light and truth and hope, the Lord Jesus gives the increase.
(12LtMs, Lt 202, 1897, 7)
The Holy Spirit will work with consecrated men, and they are not reproved in cherishing superior and largest hopes, because they are God’s entrusted stewards, watching for souls as they that must give an account. The atonement of Jesus Christ has been made for these precious souls that are living in transgression and sin. Our work is to save the perishing. In these large gatherings, many will hear and close applications will be made, or should be made, of the truth.
(12LtMs, Lt 202, 1897, 8)
I was sorry to hear that the camp meeting was to be held at Napier. Why is it not held in a new place? Why was it not held at Christchurch? Our camp meetings should go into new places. Let a new class have the privilege of hearing the truth. Nothing calls them out like a camp meeting. Our own churches are not the ones alone to be benefited. Every effort possible should be made to reach classes that have never heard. Those who do believe the truth are not united as they ought to be. When Christ is not abiding in the heart by faith, there are discord and strife and but little effort made to get near to each other where we can be one in Christ Jesus. As we approach the great center, Christ Jesus will be our Unity, which is as a wheel within a wheel. The nearer we come to Christ, the nearer we come to each other. Those who live in Christ realize the greatest harmony, heart with heart. Discord and strife are not found in that company who are sanctified through the truth. We need faith and love. Let us seek for it.
(12LtMs, Lt 202, 1897, 9)
I am desirous that nothing shall divide the interest now existing in Sydney. The Lord help, the Lord bless you in Melbourne. I must close.
(12LtMs, Lt 202, 1897, 10)
In love,
(12LtMs, Lt 202, 1897, 11)
Mother.
You know how abruptly the camp meeting closed in Wellington and opportunity was lost, a work, at considerable expense, left incomplete, to ravel out. I wish that work had been followed up. Wrong ideas and plans were made. Two weeks’ more labor would have been of more value than gold or silver. Having these things set before me frequently has led me to write as I have done. Oh, how my heart aches at these things failing. God help us is my prayer.
(12LtMs, Lt 202, 1897, 12)
Lt 203, 1897
White, W. C. Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia December 2, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Son Willie:
I am sorry that you are so free to invite persons to Cooranbong to your house. May dreads this. Her children demand her attention. They have had serious difficulty with their bowels and this makes her considerable work. Then, you know, your boys are quite noisy and their busy hands and feet make those who have the care of them much work. It is not, it appears to me, doing justice to your family. If May has anyone in her home, it should be persons that can help her and not tax her. When the little ones are older they will, we hope, be less noisy, but this warm weather is a great tax. I advise you to consider that every additional member to your family is a tax. Your children need instruction, and if they improve as I am very desirous that they should, they must have every help possible in this line. But weak and nervous women could not improve in your family. Your children are lively boys and make a great deal of clatter and noise, which would set a nervous person out of their mind.
(12LtMs, Lt 203, 1897, 1)
And you must not make it a necessity for me to take these persons to care for. I have only Edith now to do my work, Sara helping her to plan. It would not be wisdom to have feeble persons that must be cared for in my home. The only place for them to sleep is in the parlor, the only room that visitors can occupy. The typewriters constantly in motion are not agreeable for one who has not strong nerves.
(12LtMs, Lt 203, 1897, 2)
Visitors do not receive a favorable impression to visit us when there is not anyone who can visit with them. I served my time quite fully when at Granville and now myself am not strong. I am trying to gain a little strength to take hold of the work I desire to do in book making.
(12LtMs, Lt 203, 1897, 3)
Well, I have said enough on this point, but I know May’s mind. She speaks to me about these things. “Oh,” she says, “I hope Willie will not bring visitors here now, because I cannot get along with my work.” The discipline she has had in this line is not the right kind, that she can carry the things of the household with systematic plans, and the less your family is encumbered with visitors, the better it will be all around. Now her children require much greater care than when they were younger. She began with giving them things which would make the most clatter and noise, and being two of them, it is considered the one who makes the biggest noise is doing the best things. I know that there should be a different order of discipline, but when it has not been brought into the training process, how can it be cured? There is a great amount of undisciplined movements that might be avoided, but how to reform these things is the question.
(12LtMs, Lt 203, 1897, 4)
Government must be in one, in order to work on right lines. Now is the time the training will have to be done. But May knows not how. You would be pleased to help all you see needs help, but please remember the cautions and warnings given you and work at the point. Your children are greatly in need of the help their father can give them, and you must take time for this, for your children will have a very poor start in obedience and being under control unless you shall bind them to your heart and then work with them to bring about a change of things.
(12LtMs, Lt 203, 1897, 5)
Mother.
Lt 204, 1897
White, W. C. Stanmore, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia December 4, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Willie:
We left Cooranbong Friday morning. We had a breakdown. The back gearing of the poll broke. I had anticipated a good ride with May and the babies in the surrey, but this brought us up very suddenly. We could see no way out of our difficulty, but Brother Hughes came along with his team. He had three passengers and he saw our situation and notwithstanding our load, put us on board his carriage, sending one of the passengers back. He drove up sharp and we would have been in plenty of time but the cars were twenty-five minutes late. We left Ernest and May and the boys to wait until Brother James, who had carried our luggage, came back and took them home.
(12LtMs, Lt 204, 1897, 1)
We came very comfortably. All are working here very diligently. There are all of forty, they say, keeping the Sabbath and it is now the trial comes. Brother Sharp has been convicted of the truth a long time, and when he at last decided, he was discharged from the firm where he had done good work for fourteen years. He feels this keenly. His wife is not a Christian and she has no faith and she sees before them starvation. When he told her he was discharged she went into a fit and it was a very critical case for some time, but her life was spared. We think he is just the one who will do good work in the Health Home as bookkeeper and as general agent, as manager, for this is the work he has been doing. The wages will probably be less than he has hitherto received, but he has no money laid by and his case demands attention now. We think he might connect as manager of the Health Home.
(12LtMs, Lt 204, 1897, 2)
I do not think Brother Crothers will be a proper representative of the Health foods. After the Sabbath morning meeting, Brother Sharp called at the mission home and I had an interview with him. He seems really in earnest now, but very much disappointed in being discharged, because there was very little work he has done on Sabbath, but the separation has come between him and the firm after a month’s notice. He is a musician; plays the organ, and is a superior performer. His case demands attention.
(12LtMs, Lt 204, 1897, 3)
This morning, Sabbath, there was the largest number in attendance that there has been on the Sabbath since the camp meeting. In the afternoon there was a tent very well filled, more than any Sabbath afternoon. It was a large congregation. There was a social meeting after the discourse. Many good testimonies were borne and quite a number testified that had just commenced to keep the Sabbath.
(12LtMs, Lt 204, 1897, 4)
This evening Elder Haskell and wife and Brother Starr and his wife are filling appointments for visiting. Brother Starr and his wife have an important invitation to visit a family this evening, also Sunday morning to visit and take breakfast with a family who are interested. They want the Scriptures explained, which our brethren are very glad to do. Invitations are coming in, and the interest seems to be extended. One dozen more workers can find plenty to do. The work is of that kind now that requires experienced workers. Brother Starr thought Sister Walker could help some here in the mission. He proposed this to me as soon as we came here. She will be a good one to give others the benefits of her experience. They thought she would be better pleased with this than to go to Cooranbong at present.
(12LtMs, Lt 204, 1897, 5)
I wrote this hoping to get it copied but cannot. Read it if you can.
(12LtMs, Lt 204, 1897, 6)
Lt 205, 1897
White, W. C. Stanmore, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia December 6, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 4Bio 339. Dear Son Willie:
I have now spoken twice to a well-filled tent. The Lord has led me out to speak very decidedly upon the Sabbath. Yesterday afternoon, Sabbath, there were more than there have been on the Sabbath heretofore. I have spoken today to a large audience. The tent was well filled. A number more could have found seats. In the morning, as soon as I was dressed and seeking the Lord in prayer, I had a most precious evidence of the peace of God in my heart, and strength of body came to me. I felt revived; I had freedom in speaking this afternoon again upon the Sabbath question, and all listened with the deepest interest. I had the power and Spirit of God upon me while I was speaking. The invitation was given to those who were troubled on any point, who would be pleased to have a Bible reading, to tarry and ask questions. About thirty tarried and Brother Starr gave them a Bible reading. I have not yet heard the result. Elder Haskell just came in and he says about fifty remained. An Israelite struck in with his quoting many texts, rather confusing, but it came out all right.
(12LtMs, Lt 205, 1897, 1)
There were two meetings, one for the Newtown church to see what they would do towards building a church. Brethren Haskell and Baker were carrying that meeting in the little tent, Brother Starr carrying meeting in [the] large tent. The subscription paper has not yet been presented, but one woman pledged two pounds, another ten pounds, and Mrs. Gorrick’s papers, only one out a day or two, brought three pounds.
(12LtMs, Lt 205, 1897, 2)
I am go glad, so very glad, to see so large a number have taken their stand. Forty new ones are now keeping the Sabbath, and every day there are appointments made to visit different families. These are, most of them, men who are in good business. They are gathering up one truth after another and studying the doctrines point by point. One family of influence Brother and Sister Haskell visited this forenoon by invitation. They had an interesting time. Brother and Sister Starr visited still another family. They are among the first-class people. They wished to know in regard to hygienic coffee. They do not use tea, coffee, tobacco, wine or meat. The man is a Greek scholar, and they are receiving one point of truth after another. He is a man of influence. He is searching the Scriptures and as fast as he can understand from Scripture, he takes his stand firmly. He has not yet decided on the Sabbath. Many are watching him to see what he is going to do.
(12LtMs, Lt 205, 1897, 3)
There are many that are being visited personally who are just in the crisis period. Brother and Sister Wilson visit and are having good success. They think they could find work for more than one dozen to labor from house to house. It seems that believers and unbelievers are deeply interested in the work of Brother Haskell. They enjoy his talks very much, and his wife seems to be in her very sphere. She gets right hold upon hearts. They visit, they then find out the points of truth that have been presented which it is hard to receive, then they cover point by point until they do see and acknowledge that they see. Then they wait till their next visit to advance. I have not seen anything like this interest after the camp meeting has ended, that has reached anything like the proportions of this. The Holy Spirit is working on hearts.
(12LtMs, Lt 205, 1897, 4)
Mother.
My heart is filled with thankfulness and gratitude to God. The little children are deeply interested. I will send you a copy of cards Mrs. Gorrick has prepared for the children, and the same plan for older solicitors. Mrs. Gorrick’s son of about eight years old is working with other lads. He has been sick today and could not go out to solicit. He said, “Father, you had better give me two shillings to fill out my card because I am sick.” His father’s heart was softened and he gave the two shillings.
(12LtMs, Lt 205, 1897, 5)
With those who have decided, and with those who have not decided yet, to keep the Sabbath, the first words are, “What about your meetinghouse? Are you deciding to build?” I am sure now is the time to arise and build. Those newly come to the faith are very much interested and all will do what they can. There is constant earnest work being done, just as always should be done, even if there were some camp meetings dropped out one year. Then the next year take up these places and always have the afterworking.
(12LtMs, Lt 205, 1897, 6)
The teaching of Christ was the inculcation of the nature and necessity of that moral excellence which the Lord requires, that they may inherit the mansions He has gone to prepare for those who are loyal and true to the God of heaven. The truth presented in our camp meetings makes an impression, but the birds come and, by some false teachings, pick away the seeds sown. Their minds easily become confused with old errors hoary with age, and the truth is buried again beneath the mass of rubbish that they have heard from their teachers. The important points of truth must be repeated line upon line, line upon line and precept upon precept, precept upon precept, here a little and there a little.
(12LtMs, Lt 205, 1897, 7)
This can be done when the prejudice is removed by our camp meetings, and for this reason camp meetings should be held in new localities and not less than two or four weeks, personal labor being mingled with the camp meeting efforts. But there should be no scattering of the forces to little churches who know the truth. Every facility, every jot of influence, should be exercised right upon the grounds in preaching. Then after a discourse, inquiry meetings should be held, and the Bible lessons should be given to those souls who know not how to seek the Lord and what they must do to be saved. The simplicity of the truth is brought out in the plainest, simplest language. Set them on the track of searching for truth as for hidden treasures, for truth is like treasure hid in a field which, when a man hath found, he hideth it and for joy thereof goeth and selleth all that he hath and buyeth that field in order that he may ransack every portion of it and make himself master of all the valuable treasures it contains. In searching for the treasures, he comes upon the most precious veins of valuable ore.
(12LtMs, Lt 205, 1897, 8)
The purpose has been here in Stanmore to make the visiting the principal matter. The ministers and their wives are solicited to sit at their tables, and they talk the truth one with the other. The darkness of error is seen to be error, and the truth shines forth in clearness and in power. This is the work that needs to be done, to reveal truth and the righteousness of Christ in true conversion.
(12LtMs, Lt 205, 1897, 9)
No more now.
(12LtMs, Lt 205, 1897, 10)
Mother.
Lt 206, 1897
White, W. C. New South Wales, Australia December 7, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 4Bio 340-341. Dear Son Willie:
We are home again, and I am pleased that we came home last night. Brother Starr was kind and attentive, seeing to our baggage until we were safe upon the train leaving Strathfield for Cooranbong. We rested in the cars until we reached Dora Creek. There was Brother James with the surrey, waiting for us. The rain was pouring down. We were glad for the shelter. The wind blew hard. We found all well at home.
(12LtMs, Lt 206, 1897, 1)
We have the American mail. There are some things of special interest; reports from medical missionary workers excellent. The matter of several chapters came from Battle Creek for me to read. Edson writes well. I have an idea not to accept Reaser as my artist. I do not accept his pictures you brought, and I do not and have not felt confidence in his taste. I send these pictures without looking at them, for they are brought to me too late.
(12LtMs, Lt 206, 1897, 2)
I think you should be with me and not spend weeks just now in Melbourne. One thing, the Lord has not appointed you to be an agent in the manufacturing of home health foods. You have other work to do. I seem to be hedged about on every side.
(12LtMs, Lt 206, 1897, 3)
In regard to the manuscript for Life of Christ, it is done, waiting for you to look it over. There are several chapters on temperance waiting for you to look over. The next mail goes one week from next Monday. I have no objection to your staying in Melbourne two months if you know if it is the Lord’s will. But there are matters on this end of the line fully as urgent as the matters on that end of the line. But I have no more to say. You do not intimate when you will be at home. From letters received by Brother Starr and Brother Haskell, you expect to remain in Melbourne three or four weeks.
(12LtMs, Lt 206, 1897, 4)
Our team went to depot for the girls you said were coming, but they were not there.
(12LtMs, Lt 206, 1897, 5)
Your family are quite well.
(12LtMs, Lt 206, 1897, 6)
Mother.
Lt 207, 1897
White, W. C. [Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia] December 8, 1897 Previously unpublished. [W. C. White:]
Brother James went for the sisters to Dora Creek and they were not there. We have not seen or heard anything of them. Where are they? I have written considerable today, twenty-five pages, and I cannot write much. Our workmen could do nothing this week until today; began their plastering the rooms above the woodshed. It is well we were here, for there would have been blunders made if we had not been here.
(12LtMs, Lt 207, 1897, 1)
Edith does the cooking with Sara’s directions; did very nicely, the family say, like a little woman, when we were gone from Friday morning until Monday evening. Sister Lucas went with us to unite with the Mission. If we keep our family small, we will not need to pay, every week, ten shillings for hired help besides room and board. Brother Goodheart boards with us; occupies the parlor of your house through the day.
(12LtMs, Lt 207, 1897, 2)
December 9
I awoke, astonished to find it was daylight. I arose and dressed; looked at my watch. It was just a quarter to one o’clock. It was the moon made my room so light. I had slept nearly five hours. I am feeling much better healthwise and I hope to remain stronger. Sent letters yesterday to Sister Wesley Hare and Maggie’s mother.
(12LtMs, Lt 207, 1897, 3)
Have received letters in American mail to be answered; received a letter from Brother Pallant to be answered. I am praying for health and believe the Lord will answer my prayer. The letter enclosed I wrote Wednesday. Maggie copies it this morning.
(12LtMs, Lt 207, 1897, 4)
I have received from Edson a large batch of matter on temperance for the book that still hangs unfinished. I shall do nothing with it until you come and look it over yourself. I think it would make me wild to wade through all this manuscript, and I do not dare venture. I have to go through all the manuscripts for papers, and with the writing I have to do, it is tiresome. I expect Sister Peck will come some time, but just as long as they can keep her they will not seek to get one to supply her place. She wrote Sister Haskell that Elder Olsen said she must not leave, so I suppose that ends that matter as far as she is concerned.
(12LtMs, Lt 207, 1897, 5)
You speak of educating persons to do my work. I do not see that this is the best way. If I cannot obtain persons that are educated, I shall not feel any courage to take in persons on trial. There are not the suitable ones to educate. I will not think it my duty to experiment in this line. If you could not find any persons in America, I think you will have no better success in Australia. I shall not make one draw for Sister Peck again. All my efforts have been unavailing. I may decide that my work will close up in America. It is certain that the prospect here is not flattering in regard to the work before me. It looks just as hopeless, and impossibilities just as large, as it has done for years. I am resolved to do what I can, and leave what cannot be done.
(12LtMs, Lt 207, 1897, 6)
I have not from the first counted on you. I do not now. I question about it being your duty. Other things will be constantly drawing you away and my dependence on you is like leaning on one I cannot depend on, even in the very largest crisis that can come to me and my work. It is not your forte. You will not act the part that one must act for me. Your whole nature needs a different line of work, and I do not count on you, notwithstanding all the resolutions of any conference and board. Resolutions—I have had enough of these. And if a large share of the time spent in board meetings and committee meetings were devoted to seeking counsel from God, His wisdom would be of more value than the best council and committee meetings. We want so much more of God and far less of the wisdom of men.
(12LtMs, Lt 207, 1897, 7)
Well, I think I have said enough, but I want you to plan in the line of work you are best fitted for, for which you are best adapted and can accomplish the most in the general work. I will now commit my case to God and say with my whole heart, I have done my best. The farce of providing me so large help in coming to Australia amounted to just nothing, and now I shall do what I can and no more. God helping me, I stand alone as I have done.
(12LtMs, Lt 207, 1897, 8)
I do not want you to suppose I feel tried with you, for I do not. You have been educated to a different line of work altogether. Take up your line of work. Do that work in which you can do the most for the interest of the cause, and I will be satisfied. But I feel little confidence that you can be the help I must have, for you will be called here and there, and the demand is imperative; and I could not say, Do not go, for I would not interpose, you well know, to restrain you in any way. I write now that you may consider these things in relation to the work and cause of God and adjust yourself to it where you can accomplish the most good in various lines, and I will not say anything to bias you in this matter.
(12LtMs, Lt 207, 1897, 9)
May the Lord direct in all things is my prayer, but let us not make a mistake in this matter.
(12LtMs, Lt 207, 1897, 10)
Mother.
Lt 208, 1897
White, W. C. Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia December 10, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 4Bio 341. Dear Son Willie:
I have been in great perplexity what to do. I cannot say anything more to you in reference to our work here. There is need enough of help, but the situation of things in Melbourne has been opened to me, and I have no more to say. If you have any words to write in regard to this large package that has come to me for temperance book, do speak. I have not strength to go through it and read it and pass judgment upon it. I have letters I must respond to which I would be pleased to bring before you. The last chapter of the book will be completed and will go to artist in next mail. If you would tell us when we may expect to see you, then we could know better how to act. I shall, I think, advise Marian to send at once all the matter in this next mail.
(12LtMs, Lt 208, 1897, 1)
It has been raining since last Friday, soft, gentle rain. This forbids my going to Sydney, for it would not be advisable. I have no one to consult about various matters. If you do not come before the mail goes, will you think best for me to send you any of the communications from Battle Creek? I have not sent anything, supposing you would be at home.
(12LtMs, Lt 208, 1897, 2)
There are some things in regard to medical missionary work that I purposed to take with me to Sydney. There is a large package of matter I do not consider would be of any use to send, giving a recital of what is being done in the office, through every department. It does not seem essential for you to have this. Let us know what you propose to do.
(12LtMs, Lt 208, 1897, 3)
There is nothing new from Sydney, no land as yet selected for meetinghouse although the matter is a live subject.
(12LtMs, Lt 208, 1897, 4)
What can you say encouraging in regard to Brother Sharp? The businessmen are watching to see this test case, how the man will live cut off from his source of income. I want you to consider, Is it best to advise he be connected with Health Home as a bookkeeper and as a business agent to deal in the health foods? He has been in this kind of business, and his employer has kept him fourteen years on a salary of three pounds ten per week. Now, if he should come into Health Home as bookkeeper, and take upon him the responsibilities as business agent at less wages, would it not be advisable to employ him? This man is a good musician. He could be, I believe, the right man in the right place. Brother Crothers will be so slow and his appearance would not recommend any health institution. Our interest here demands men who have business knowledge. Sharp could come in, for he understands all the business firms. Some time ago he was drawn into a flattering representation to invest means and he lost all.
(12LtMs, Lt 208, 1897, 5)
I would be pleased to see him established in some situation very soon, for there are others who are deeply interested in the truth and about deciding, and if Sharp is left stranded without a situation, it will be used as an obstacle to those who are now deciding. Brother Sharp has taken his position firmly after hesitating two years. What shall we do with him? His employer says he has been the most faithful man, in all his work, that he has had in his firm. But he wants to show in this case what any others who embrace the seventh-day Sabbath may have reason to expect. Shall Satan triumph or shall we make a place for this man Sharp?
(12LtMs, Lt 208, 1897, 6)
There is another family; the man is a superintendent of the Sunday school. He understands Greek and is an intelligent man. He has a business that does not interfere with the Sabbath, as he has that day to himself to keep his carriages in repair. He is receiving point after point of truth and is now, I believe, convinced upon all points of truth. He has been studying and mastering these things by himself. He finally invited Brother Starr and his wife to breakfast with them. They learned he is a strictly temperance man. He uses neither liquor nor tobacco. He uses neither tea, coffee, nor meat, and this is in his favor. This man will have his wife with him, for she is just as diligent in searching the Scriptures as himself. We want everything done that can be done to prepare the way for these souls that are trembling in the balance.
(12LtMs, Lt 208, 1897, 7)
This storm coming in, I know not whether it is favorable or unfavorable. I learn Sister Haskell goes her rounds giving Bible readings all the more zealously, rain or shine.
(12LtMs, Lt 208, 1897, 8)
Your family are usually well. May says tell you she will do her best with Mrs. Walker, if she must come.
(12LtMs, Lt 208, 1897, 9)
Mother.
Lt 209, 1897
White, W. C. Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia December 12, 1897 Portions of this letter are published in 4Bio 391. Dear Son Willie:
Your letter received today and telegram this morning. I have not looked through the manuscript for the book on temperance. I supposed you would be here and we could read it together. We will follow your directions. You, in that case, remain as long as you feel the work requires you, for the stress of preparation for matters for mail will be ever. I shall, if the Lord will, be at Sydney over Sabbath and Sunday, for this they request.
(12LtMs, Lt 209, 1897, 1)
I am very thankful the blessing of the Lord came upon me before speaking on Sunday, and I have had much more strength. Although it was rainy Sunday, I attended meeting, and I spoke for the first time since the dedication of the chapel. There were about fifty out.
(12LtMs, Lt 209, 1897, 2)
There was a death at Dora Creek. Sara was sent for, to see if she could help the sister of Mr. Healy, but she was dying when she entered the house, a most revolting death from spasms. Sara laid her out. Oh, if ever there was a place where work needs to be done, it is here in Cooranbong and vicinity, but there are not men to do this work. Brother Goodheart told me he would like to go out with Mackintosh and get the run of things. I was willing, I told him, that he should go and see what kind of a state the people were in. I think the ignorance upon religious subjects is just fearful. The time is not far off when something must be done in Cooranbong and Newcastle and Maitland. May the Lord help us is my prayer.
(12LtMs, Lt 209, 1897, 3)
We have much to praise the Lord for in the sweetest and gentlest showers or steady rain a portion of the time, for about ten days. We learn we can get no peaches or any fruit at Radleys. They have no fruit this year. They had an abundant crop of oranges and lemons, which brought a high price. I wish to get fruit if we can. We have a few peaches, which we shall share with May when ripe. A few were ripe very early. These I took to the children, one apiece. You should have seen them lay into them. They screamed with delight. They enjoy bananas, and they have plenty of them.
(12LtMs, Lt 209, 1897, 4)
If it was not for the interest in Sydney, I would now visit Melbourne. In my present state of health before this, I would not have dared to leave on the cars—heart exhaustion, kidney difficulties. I could go as far as Sydney but would have to return just as soon as I could get home; but my health, through the blessing of God, is improved.
(12LtMs, Lt 209, 1897, 5)
Marian seems cheerful. The last chapters are done. “Oh,” she says, “I could never, never have completed the book had you not been right here where you could supply the live links necessary. Now the life of the book is fully kept up to the close.” And I feel very much relieved and do not feel as if I am stealing if I take up other subjects before the book is closed. But nearly everything I could write has been on the matter which concerned the book, that she could select some things for the book and Maggie make articles of the subjects for papers.
(12LtMs, Lt 209, 1897, 6)
I shall now breathe more freely.
(12LtMs, Lt 209, 1897, 7)
Mother.
Lt 210, 1897
White, W. C. Stanmore, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia December 16, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Son Willie:
From a letter received from you to May Lacey White, you have not, I think, understood me in reference to your working with me, but we will talk in regard to this when we see you the first of the week. Yesterday I had another ill turn when I had a struggle for life. It lasted me, through the day, and Sara said, “You cannot go to Sydney tomorrow, Friday.” I said, “I shall go, Sara, by faith,” and every preparation was made in the morning for me to go. We rode to Morisset and we had a second-class compartment, just as comfortable as the first class, and I lay down and rested all the way. They were all glad to see us. Appointments were out and every preparation made for me to act my part, which I hope to do in the strength of the Lord.
(12LtMs, Lt 210, 1897, 1)
Now, you write in reference to Brother Herbert Lacey coming into the school next term. He knows well what I have written to him. The school is not the place for him next year. Let him learn and obtain an experience. He has not a fitness to deal with young men and women. He made it very hard for the teachers to counterwork his influence. And Lillian declared she would not teach the children. They are neither of them in a situation to teach. They had better go in the field with Brother Robinson and his wife, and let them be tested. If they were my own children, I could not advise their connecting with the school. Their religious knowledge of the Word is superficial. Their managing with the students made it very hard to counterwork their influence.
(12LtMs, Lt 210, 1897, 2)
We have been over the ground and it is not wise in you to give encouragement in this line until you understand the minds of those who are to associate with them. I know, from the light God has given me, he is not fitted, as he should be in influence and spirituality, to teach such a school. He cannot see this; but you should not have unguardedly. I understand what I am talking about. Let them have an experience in the field with a man like Elder Robinson and he may become converted. I will read you that which I have written to him when I see you. My labor and burdens were made tenfold harder by the view he takes of matters, because they are misleading.
(12LtMs, Lt 210, 1897, 3)
We hope to see you first of the week—will remain till you come.
(12LtMs, Lt 210, 1897, 4)
Your family is well.
(12LtMs, Lt 210, 1897, 5)
Mother.
Lt 211, 1897
White, W. C. Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia December 31, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Son Willie:
We leave for Sydney this morning. I should be pleased to meet you in Sydney, but do not expect it. The last chapters of the book will be finished, but you must see them, for the mail goes Monday and the regular main in two weeks from Monday. I have had some most precious things for the book, the last chapter. My part is done now. Oh, thank the Lord! Praise His Holy name that He has spared my life to see the closing up of the book!
(12LtMs, Lt 211, 1897, 1)
Tell Brother Farnsworth I thank him for his letter. It will do me good. Willie, will you please to write May more than you do? Were I in her place I should feel you were neglecting your duty. It is a great trial to be left alone as she has been for nearly one year, and I am not pleased that you write her so little. I want you to comfort and bless her, for if she had not married, she would now be in the Bible work. May White has said naught to me of this, but I have discernment to know she feels it. Will you please do this? She has an appreciative mind and loves you and her family. I love May and I want you to show her every attention. If she had only one little one she could manage better, but to start in with the management of two is a double portion. (Burn up the last letter written to you on this subject.)
(12LtMs, Lt 211, 1897, 2)
In regard to bringing visitors to your home who need care in the place of helping, I object, too. I know how the matter has been presented to me, of the many extra burdens brought upon your dear Mary through your care and benevolence to others, even in Basel, Switzerland. The Lord is a just God and He requires all of us to consider before it is too late. This mistake has been plainly revealed to me. Now I want sunshine brought into the life of May. She is young and needs tenderness and care. With these two children she has sufficient tax. Do not feel it is your duty to relieve others by putting burdens on your family that should have no extra burdens now. I know what I am talking about. Will you consider that it is not your work to gather in the invalids and the worn-out in your house? May dreads it. She has only half the experience in life that you have had, and this must be considered. Your two boys are precious treasures and must give vent to the life and joy of their hearts. Three days ago is the first time I have been in your home since you came home. Reason, I could not walk so far. Kidney difficulty has been very severe upon me since the camp meeting.
(12LtMs, Lt 211, 1897, 3)
Now, dear Willie, I write because it is my duty to write. I must speak in behalf of May. She has not a Mother Kelsey to be with her, to converse with her and advise with her. She has four children to care for at once, and I am surprised that you cannot take in the situation. But it is my duty to speak to you. When you are at home she wants and should have your society. But when away, do write to her letters that are not mere copies of letters. I should not, in her place, feel satisfied. I write this not from impulse but from a pure sense of duty. I know that there were the same things [before]. In your desire to help others, you did harm to your own flesh, to your wife. I decided it would never be again if I could help it.
(12LtMs, Lt 211, 1897, 4)
You have duties to your family that are not to be ignored. This is your property, and no others can act as a substitute for you. The Lord does not require this of you. You have duties to do in the work and cause of God. That is your duty, but it is not your duty to bring visitors to your home to spend days and weeks, especially those who are feeble and worn down, needing care. The greatest watchful care is now to be exercised for your two lively boys, and it takes the almost constant attention of the mother.
(12LtMs, Lt 211, 1897, 5)
Now, Willie, do not think I am severe, for I am not, but I do protest in the name of the Lord against a thing that I know is not right and just, and now I will say no more. May the Lord bless you. But bear in mind you must impart blessings to your wife, bone of your bone and flesh of your flesh.
(12LtMs, Lt 211, 1897, 6)
Mother.
Lt 212, 1897
Starr, Brother and Sister [G. B.] Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia April 30, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother and Sister Starr:
Last evening Elder Haskell put in my hands the testimonials of members of the Adelaide church of the statements McCullagh and wife have made concerning Cooranbong and the workers here. I could not sleep and arose and wrote out some things to be presented to the church, but this cannot be copied this morning. I lay down upon my bed at two o’clock a.m. and slept about three hours.
(12LtMs, Lt 212, 1897, 1)
Brother Starr, what is the sin against the Holy Spirit? These reports have not been made in ignorance. He has an opportunity to see the fruits of my labors. I have treated him tenderly, and also Sister McCullagh. I have not one action to reprove me, and every member in my household has every reason to know that I have given them no occasion for this tirade and the unreasonable, inconsistent falsehoods borne against me.
(12LtMs, Lt 212, 1897, 2)
When he was laboring in Ashfield in the tent, also at Petersham, I have been sent for by him to come and help them. This I have not failed to do. I have, after working all day, ridden ten miles and spoken to the people and then ridden back the ten miles after nine or nearer ten o’clock, arriving at home and getting to rest at midnight. I will not enter into details. I will send my response and answer to these foul statements.
(12LtMs, Lt 212, 1897, 3)
How the Adelaide church could listen to such wicked things is a mystery, a complete mystery to me. “By their fruits ye shall know them.” [Matthew 7:20.] I am willing to be judged by the fruits of my labor. But every one of these statements, professing to be so wonderfully wise, in regard to my work—which is not mine, but the work the Lord has given me—he must confront again. I ask, Who hath bewitched them, to make such terrible, lying statements? Did they have any grounds for doing this? Not any. Why did they do this? Because I have told them that which was the truth. And this is called the work of the inspiration of the Spirit of God. Ezekiel 33:6-16 and 20.
(12LtMs, Lt 212, 1897, 4)
The warning has been given and been despised, to make of none effect the truth given in love, in reproof, and warning. Under the pretense of angel garb has the work been carried, while he was under pay of the conference, until the flock of God was misled and imbued with the root of bitterness against the one who felt that their souls were in peril and gave them the Word of the Lord.
(12LtMs, Lt 212, 1897, 5)
I cannot regard the case of Brother and Sister Hawkins as I do that of Mr. and Mrs. McCullagh. His defection is in the sight of the Lord in accordance with the opportunity he has had of knowing me and my work. The other party have known that the Lord has cooperated with me in my work. They have full knowledge of those we labored for in every way possible to save them. We fed them that came to the camp meeting; we clothed them; we moved them to and from the meeting. We put money in their hands, and this is a work that they are not ignorant of. The work in Ormondville, and the help I rendered them there, he highly appreciated. He appreciated the money to free from debt the church in Prospect, New South Wales, and selected Mrs. White to give the dedicatory discourse. [Remainder missing.]
(12LtMs, Lt 212, 1897, 6)
Lt 213, 1897
Hall, Sister New South Wales, Australia May 5, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Sister Hall:
I received a package—a nice pieced comfortable. In it was a bottle in [a] basket or wicker work, containing two quarts of more of witch hazel for me to use, which is valuable here as it is expensive. There was also a small box containing letters, old manuscripts. It was somewhat more valuable than the previous bundle, which was mostly old, dead copy.
(12LtMs, Lt 213, 1897, 1)
Now I write to you to tell you that there is valuable matter in a box. Marian says it is in a box and was put in that little room where we enter the loft. It must be there, for no one could think of disturbing the things I placed there for safekeeping. But this manuscript is valuable to me. “Mother’s Influence” is the subject and I shall need it very much. Will you have a search there now and see if it can be found? I have written to Addie several times but nothing comes of my writing. Now I want you to see if you can find the said writing and send it to me in the first box of books that comes to Melbourne, unless someone is coming. If Willie has not left when this reaches you, please send it by him or anyone who shall come from America.
(12LtMs, Lt 213, 1897, 2)
I want everything in my writings except dead copy. Please do me this favor. Addie’s time is so precious she can scarcely do me a favor. I would like to have everything of my writings. When Willie comes, if I have any hair mattresses, let him take them with him to make his berth comfortable on the steamer. I have asked several times what became of my goods, especially my easy folding chairs. I bought three from Sister Miller before she moved to California. Two folding chairs were sent but not the best ones. These are cheap, frail chairs. I thought now would be a good opportunity, with so many coming this way, to send some articles. I would like that chair that belonged to my husband, newly covered, sent to me. I would like the melodeon, if Willie thinks it best, to come to me as household goods; and that bed covering if it will not be too expensive getting it to California. Please read this to Willie, if you see him.
(12LtMs, Lt 213, 1897, 3)
I am in very good health at present. If I was not so blessed of the Lord, it would be difficult to bear the strain that comes upon me. I retire early but ofttimes I awake at eleven o’clock, twelve o’clock; night after night, rise at two o’clock and dress and seek the Lord in prayer and then attend to my writing. But for several mornings I have slept until half past two o’clock, and for two mornings [until] half past three, and this morning till four o’clock.
(12LtMs, Lt 213, 1897, 4)
There has been a great burden upon me to write very much to Africa, America, New Zealand, Adelaide, Melbourne, Battle Creek, California, London. The Lord has wonderfully sustained me, and I am so thankful and praise His Holy name.
(12LtMs, Lt 213, 1897, 5)
I wish I could see you; I wish you could come to me, but I understand the situation and I hope I shall ever feel reconciled to the will of the Lord, whatever it may be. I would be gratified to visit old places but above all to see old friends again, with whom I have been familiar and with whom I have taken sweet counsel. Something seems to bind us away from each other, but I am pained more than I can express at times to see the superficial faith of those who have embraced the faith in this country. There have been those who have appeared to believe the truth and to love it, turn from it when no occasion whatever can be assigned.
(12LtMs, Lt 213, 1897, 6)
Was taken ill, heart exhaustion. Much love. Write Again.
(12LtMs, Lt 213, 1897, 7)
Lt 214, 1897
Farnsworth, Brother and Sister Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia June 16, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother and Sister Farnsworth:
This morning the regular steamer goes to England and I have not written you. Yesterday I intended to write you, but I had visitors, making it impossible. First, Brother and Sister Wilson, then Brother Herbert Lacey came in, and the day was completely used up. But I must write a few lines this morning.
(12LtMs, Lt 214, 1897, 1)
I have been quite ill for weeks with heart difficulty, which oppressed my breathing and brought on general weakness. After Brother and Sister Haskell came in to connect with the school, great relief came to me, but I had braced up too long, and as soon as I felt the load lifted I found myself so weak I knew not how to rally, but for five days I have been improving, and feel more natural. Three or four weeks I could not sit at the table or have any matters that would require thought brought before [me]. I could scarcely remember the names of my workers to speak them. The sound of the human voice seemed a great way off, and I was generally weak in physical strength. Now I am coming up, for which I am very thankful.
(12LtMs, Lt 214, 1897, 2)
The school is, considering the discouragements we have had before it commenced, doing well. I know the Lord provided us special help in Brother [Haskell] and Sister Hurd Haskell. Brother Herbert Lacey was sick with fever in Sydney. Brother Hughes had not come, and Brother Haskell was called to Adelaide. The Lord saw fit to lay upon me, under the circumstances, a great burden from the commencement of the work here in this locality. Those brethren who should have stood by us faithful and true, Shannon and Lawrence, did us great harm. These men yoked up together and stood under the banner of the power of darkness to murmur and speak evil and to report falsely as they see in their perverted judgment. Shannon went further than Lawrence, for himself and wife did us every possible harm their tongues could do, and Brother and Sister Lawrence were in harmony with them. The Lord wrought through me in behalf of Brother Lawrence, but nearly his whole life practice was working upon wrong principles. His wife’s tongue is the great talent she possesses, and it is not sanctified but is a member that, actively used, is not calculated to benefit anyone.
(12LtMs, Lt 214, 1897, 3)
I carried the load for the soul of Brother Lawrence. He did break, and his heart was touched by the Spirit of God, but notwithstanding he made his confession to me, under the home influence, when next I saw him, his own perverted ideas were as strong as ever. Money is his god, and if you have anything to do in the securing of means from him, I shall be disappointed. The practice of a lifetime is not easily overcome. I have little hope in this case.
(12LtMs, Lt 214, 1897, 4)
As far as Sister Lawrence is concerned, her tongue needs to be treated with the hot coals of juniper before it will be exercised to do good, and only good. The same selfish principles that have controlled the father will be a power of control over mother unless she is daily converted to God. If you can in any way break up this terrible selfishness, there is some hope of them. Unless it is broken up, cut out by the roots, they will do harm wherever they may be. But be assured we are relieved of a great burden here on this ground. But I have much distress of mind in regard to their influence wherever they may locate. They need a transformation of character.
(12LtMs, Lt 214, 1897, 5)
Brother Lawrence has had many words to say in regard [to] his helping with his money in Cooranbong, but he did not help with his money. I tried to hire money and pay interest on the same before I sent to South Africa for the loan of money. But I could not obtain it. If you can get him to invest means in Christ’s church to build a sanitarium, do it, but we see that every point is well guarded.
(12LtMs, Lt 214, 1897, 6)
In all my experience I have never met men or women that were more self-centered. Self, self, self is the theme of their conversation. He has not an experience in spirituality. He can say our words of prayer, he can understand portions of Scripture, but he has no sense of what it means to practice the principles of genuine Christlike love for doing good. He was, I said, broken in spirit. “Oh,” said he, “just as soon as I decided to surrender wholly to God, I felt light and His blessing. Now tell me, Sister White, step by step, what I must do. I now see how miserable, blind, and naked I have been. I have had my mind so trained in buying at low figures and selling for increased sums that this has become an all absorbing [occupation], and religious work I could not do. I had no light and tact and ability in that line.” And yet he was chosen as an elder of the church, but was so only in name.
(12LtMs, Lt 214, 1897, 7)
“I hope you will not let me alone. I hope you will show me what my duty is. Oh, I do not want to stop here. I have just begun to see my whole life has been a selfish, self-centered life, but it shall be so no more. I want to change my whole manner of life, and if God will accept me and give me something to do for Him, then I will thank Him.”
(12LtMs, Lt 214, 1897, 8)
But all her efforts were, at this time, to justify herself as doing and being just right in all things. She was a Christian, but if so, her tongue was never converted. She talked and talked and talked, and said nothing [that] would be the least help to any poor soul that needed help.
(12LtMs, Lt 214, 1897, 9)
Willie thought we must keep him upon the ground here and perhaps we could help him, and he had so much to say of his experience in working lands and cultivating orchards we hired him for six shillings per day, but his experience was no more than men whom I paid three and four shillings per day. When that wicked tongue was working in Sister Lawrence, I decided the woman must be insane. She would repeat the same things over and over again and again with as much earnestness and vim as she could possibly put into her words. I let them have a house of two rooms close by me for two shillings per week, one room sealed up—that room where the twins were born. There was a pantry and wide piazza, two tanks for water.
(12LtMs, Lt 214, 1897, 10)
Brother Lawrence desired to have the piazza enclosed. I should have let him do this at his own expense, but I foolishly thought he would understand the proper thing to do, and would have at least said, “I will do the work if you will find the lumber and windows,” but I knew the power of her tongue and paid him his full wages and did not increase the rent on the house. The expense of that addition to me I could ill afford, but he did not pay me one penny more for all this outlay of means, and then she was telling everyone the rent was too high.
(12LtMs, Lt 214, 1897, 11)
I [was] paying him six shillings per day for his work until I could not stand it any longer and told him I could not employ him. But she kept her tongue in lively action. She told me her husband said if Sister White would build cottages all over her place and rent them for two shillings per week, she would become a rich woman. But I tell you this that if she does report in regard to matters here, tell her she is being [a] false witness, and do not heed her stories.
(12LtMs, Lt 214, 1897, 12)
If she had been away from the place and Brother Lawrence had been free from her everlasting clacking tongue, then the work that we labored to do for his soul would have been, I believe, a savor of life unto life, but her talk would counteract all we could do. She bore testimony in Sabbath meeting, after he made some confession, that she had written to Battle Creek that if they had any money they wanted wasted to send it here to Cooranbong; and after long labor with her in regard to such statements, she repeated, “I shall tell them at Battle Creek if they had any money they wanted wasted to send it here, for they could do this, and were doing it.” Then I said, “If you must, expect me to write to them of the course you both have pursued and that God will judge you as one who bears false witness.”
(12LtMs, Lt 214, 1897, 13)
Every move we made that she knew anything about was criticized. Now she may, when she becomes acquainted, use that unruly member to present matters as she views them and [this] is why I write to you. I think all his talk about a sanitarium is [only] talk. If he could see how he could get two pounds for one invested, I think you would have a sanitarium. But it should not be under the jurisdiction of either of these: Brother or Sister Lawrence. This work we tried to do for Brother Lawrence was counteracted by her tongue influence. And when they left this locality, we were relieved, and hope our experience with them is at an end. The selfishness we have seen is not possible [to] trace upon paper. But if anything can be done to save his soul, for Christ’s sake do it. If he is in earnest and has money to invest in a sanitarium, by all means accept it, but be sure your papers are in definite black and white.
(12LtMs, Lt 214, 1897, 14)
Did I send you the testimonies that I gave to Brother Lawrence? Please say so if I did not, and I will send them to you. After I had let them have the testimonies for three weeks, then they were returned to me with no response. Whether they were received or refused I shall, if I have a copy, put them in the hands of Brother Teasdale. If you have a copy, will you please to do this: let him read them and his wife. They may need them. I feel sorry for him. I am sorry for Sister Lawrence. They stand in each other’s way and make no advance in spirituality. The interest of the church should not be entrusted to either of them, for they will do nothing to advance the work, but will leave their mold upon it which will be deleterious. I leave this matter now for your own special benefit, and, unless necessary, you need not let them know that I have written to you this letter. If it is essential, I have no objection.
(12LtMs, Lt 214, 1897, 15)
Brother Farnsworth, Brother Haskell favored me with the privilege of reading your letter to him. I am very glad you have pushed through the meetinghouse. And I am sorry that there is a debt hanging upon it. If I had the means at my command, I would help you. But here is the main building of our school to go up, and a meetinghouse we must have so that we can have a suitable place to worship God. The students have come in far beyond our expectation, and the building is becoming crowded. More students are coming from Sydney. One came yesterday. Three more will come in about one week. Brothers Daniells, Baker, and Palmer were here to visit the premises. They were delighted with the improvements.
(12LtMs, Lt 214, 1897, 16)
I mentioned to you how hard it had been for us to work and become established in this locality when we knew Brethren Rousseau and Daniells had no faith in the success of locating a school here. Brother Rousseau was converted on this subject before he left for America two years ago last July. Brother Daniells has said nothing until recently. He wrote me a letter of confession that he now could see he had not come up like a man and helped us to carry the heavy load. He simply had no faith in the location or in the favorable prospects of a school. But he was now seeing he had done wrong, and had left us [to] push, when he did not stand by us (Willie and myself) and push with us.
(12LtMs, Lt 214, 1897, 17)
But Farnsworth, now he would do his best and throw his whole interest in with us. When these brethren came here about two weeks ago they were fully satisfied, and Brother Daniells confessed to me that he had done wrong, that the Lord was not pleased [with] the position he had taken, and with tears in his eyes he expressed his grief. “And now,” said he, “I take my position fully with you, and I will work with you and strain every nerve and muscle to make this school a success.” I thank the Lord for this, for we do need all the encouragement that there is for us. The students are a good class, generally. There are some not as we would be glad to have them, but they will need help, and we sincerely hope that they will have it here.
(12LtMs, Lt 214, 1897, 18)
You speak in regard to the teachings in organization. Yes, it was every word of it correct, but when organization [has] become, through the administrations, so mingled with the imperfections of human agents, we had best have our eyes anointed with the eyesalve that we may see. We have now to follow our Leader Jesus Christ individually, and withdraw our implicit confidence in the organizations that are handled by men who know not the voice of the true Shepherd. “My sheep hear my voice and they follow me, but a stranger will they not follow.” [John 10:27, 5.] You, nor I, need not become confused, my brother. You or I need not to learn our duty from Battle Creek. We have our Bibles, the Word, and a living Saviour at hand. We can gain the most precious experience when we shall rely upon One who never makes a mistake—our hearts softened and subdued, humbled under a sense of His compassion and His great love wherewith He hath loved us. We will seek light from God, and it will come to us in individual experience. Be of good help and good courage in the Lord, for He will be your helper and our God. Praise His holy name.
(12LtMs, Lt 214, 1897, 19)
My brother, my sister, looking unto Jesus who is the Author and Finisher of our faith, we will catch the divine rays of light and advance, walking in the light as He is in the light. I am seeing many good things coming out of great disappointments and great trials. How glad we ought to be that this first great apostasy has, in this country, not done us much greater harm. How thankful we should be that the secret working of the enemy was revealed and the enemy’s work exposed. These things may and will come here in this country as we have had in America, but we must rivet our souls to no sand mountains lest the wind will blow them upon us and bury us beneath their rubbish. Fasten our souls to the eternal Rock of ages. Help them in any and every country to be true to principle, but when the Word of the Lord to His people is only a jest and by-word, we will not expect such to be our safe counselors.
(12LtMs, Lt 214, 1897, 20)
It is best for us [to] follow the Light of the world and obtain fresh and new experience every day. What saith the great apostle? “For the which cause I also suffer these things. Nevertheless, I am not ashamed, for I know whom I have believed, and am persuaded that he is able to keep that which I have committed unto him against that day.” [2 Timothy 1:12.] That which we commit to Christ Jesus is beyond the reach of time’s changes and the apostasies of poor, fallen humanity. Our interest for time and for eternity is safe with Him who hath loved us. The Lord will deliver us from every evil work, and will preserve us unto His heavenly kingdom, to whom be glory forever and ever. We will look unto Jesus, our only hope.
(12LtMs, Lt 214, 1897, 21)
In love.
(12LtMs, Lt 214, 1897, 22)
I have much to say but this must go. Please write us [as] often as you can. We will be pleased to hear from you. I feel so thankful to God that I have better health. My soul is often bowed down with inexpressible anguish as I realize how few know my Saviour.
(12LtMs, Lt 214, 1897, 23)
Lt 215, 1897
Farnsworth, Brother and Sister Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales August 18, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother and Sister Farnsworth:
We are doing well here in Cooranbong. Students have come in until there is not space for one more that can be lodged in the schoolrooms. But if there should more come, they would have to be lodged in the families somewhere. We have taken care of several that have come up here, and will have to do so still.
(12LtMs, Lt 215, 1897, 1)
Brother Bond from Oakland was our guest last night. His wife and two children are in Sydney. Brother Bromatter and wife are at the Health Home. They came in the steamer that arrived on Monday from Auckland. Brother and Sister Nicholas, a missionary, and a young man that is traveling on his own account, came last evening, and it was a job to find a place for them. Brother Bond said he was anxious to see Cooranbong. He was wonderfully surprised to see the buildings already erected, and the location pleased them all much.
(12LtMs, Lt 215, 1897, 2)
One week ago Sara and I spent in Sydney. I spoke to the people in Ashfield in [the] forenoon, and we felt the Spirit of the Lord was in our midst. I also spoke in Newtown in the afternoon. It rained in quite heavy showers all day, but we were favored to get to and from the meetings without getting wet. We found a large number in Newtown. The hall was full, and we had an excellent testimony meeting after the discourse. Brethren Daniells and Baker have been visiting us in Cooranbong to arrange for camp meetings and in reference to erecting the third school building, a dormitory for gentlemen students. Our council meetings were good and harmonious in all but the subject of immediately erecting a meetinghouse.
(12LtMs, Lt 215, 1897, 3)
The room we have used in chamber of upper story of second building is full—about two hundred were convened in it last Sabbath. The school seats are used, and there is not a favorable chance to kneel down. It is impossible for them to kneel in occupying [i.e., since they are using] the school seats. But when we suggest the necessity of building a church at once, there is not much enthusiasm. We have not urged the matter because we know not where the money could be had, but more recently we have felt it must be done and means would come in to make it possible. Brother Daniells thought one hundred pounds could be appropriated to this purpose, and if the people in Cooranbong would help, a shell might be provided which would answer. I am assured we shall build and shall have more than a shell, a thoroughly good chapel and entirely finished and free from debt. This did not seem possible. Brother Hare is not in favor of building now. Brother Daniells has not given much encouragement, but the word comes to me in the night season, “Arise and build.” [Nehemiah 2:20.]
(12LtMs, Lt 215, 1897, 4)
I send you a copy of a letter to Willie, so I will not write more on this subject. We find the churches throughout Sydney and suburbs are in a _____ condition than they have been in while under the administration of McCullagh. These recent apostasies do not shake their faith, but establish them in the faith. We invite you and your wife to make us a visit in Cooranbong en route to Melbourne.
(12LtMs, Lt 215, 1897, 5)
In much love.
(12LtMs, Lt 215, 1897, 6)
Lt 216, 1897
Farnsworth, Brother and Sister Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia September 7, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother and Sister Farnsworth:
I have some things I wish to write you. We have reason to be encouraged in our school. There has been success with teachers and students. There are fifty students in the home, one hundred students in the school, twenty in the primary department. Brother Budd has just moved his family up here to Cooranbong. He means to get him a piece of land and build him a home if he can get means to do this. Our advantages for room are now quite limited.
(12LtMs, Lt 216, 1897, 1)
We felt the burden, Arise and build. We are doing this. Ten carpenters are now on the work, giving either time or money. The frame is going up, the foundation is laid, and everything is moving as fast as possible, that the house shall be prepared to be dedicated just before the school closes. Two weeks is to be cut off from the school term in Avondale and completed at the camp meeting in Sydney. In four weeks we expect the home will be done, if the Lord favors us.
(12LtMs, Lt 216, 1897, 2)
I have now spoken to the people four Sabbaths in succession, and besides speaking to the students in the morning at nine o’clock several times, have attended one early morning meeting. I now feel I must stop this constant labor in speaking and in writing. I wish I could have the next two months on my book work. Both speaking and writing is becoming too large for me. I question whether it be my duty to attend the camp meetings. I cannot do this without being reined up to an intensity of feelings in behalf of souls ready to die. I have had a long, hard pull here, and have had in every sense of the word to watch for souls as they that must give an account.
(12LtMs, Lt 216, 1897, 3)
They would have their committee meetings and make propositions for Gregg to be elder of the church with[out] intimating a word to me. This name was read in the meeting on Sabbath when we were in a fix. The vote would have placed him in office at once if carried through, but we thank the Lord that part of the business was delayed for consideration. I then had an interview with the brethren and plainly stated I would not consent for Gregg to be elder of the church, for he was not proved, and no man should be placed in such a position without the most careful investigation. He was, to my certain knowledge, unfitted for the office of responsibility, for he was one who would do after the example of Shannon and Lawrence. He is a profane man. The swearing comes from his lips as a man that had been habituated to such exhibitions, damning this and that, and especially the horse Lawrence sold to him. He becomes very passionate. He is not a converted man, and yet he places himself in as high a place as he can get. These things have been a trial to my soul, to see how little our brethren know of how to move discreetly.
(12LtMs, Lt 216, 1897, 4)
Brother Hardy is here living in Cooranbong. Shannon filled his mind with bitterness by his false reports, but he attends our meetings, paid one hundred dollars tithe, and has given two weeks’ work to the church as first carpenter. Twelve carpenters are now at work. All are full of zeal and earnestness to make every stroke count. We have had some pulling back, but the ones pulling forward are strong and do not mind them.
(12LtMs, Lt 216, 1897, 5)
We cannot stop for palavering. Onward and upward; Arise, and build, is our watchword. The Lord is indeed good and merciful, and He knows what we need here; and I am so thankful that at this time we have a fine number of first class carpenters. The light has come to me, Arise, and build, and we expect in four weeks to have a meetinghouse completed for dedication. We could not but see the providence of God in this matter. All donate something in work, or in building, or in money. We are crowded in the room we now occupy for a place of worship.
(12LtMs, Lt 216, 1897, 6)
There are about one hundred students in the school, and the power of God is at work upon hearts, and has been at work ever since the school started. We have felt as did Jacob—“The Lord is in this place.” [Genesis 28:16.] We will give His name all the glory.
(12LtMs, Lt 216, 1897, 7)
We sincerely hope that you and your wife will attend our camp meeting; it will be an important meeting. Come [with] time enough to attend the closing of the school and the dedication of our church. We want you to act a part in the services. We expect the delegates will be at the meeting in Cooranbong in our church. The Lord’s house will be built. You come to our house as our guests while you shall remain here.
(12LtMs, Lt 216, 1897, 8)
I am so glad, so glad, that we would not listen to delay. Not one day had we [to] lose. The frame is all up. Everyone who is at work feels they must put in all the time possible and make every stroke tell. Had we waited until after the camp meeting, the workers would have been scattered, working away from this place. But they were, in the providence of God, right on the ground and ready for action. Some of the carpenters had personal interests, building houses for themselves, but they do not need any urging. They are working on the house for the Lord.
(12LtMs, Lt 216, 1897, 9)
You will see some changes when you shall visit us. Our peach trees are again (some of them) in bloom, and the school ground has its two buildings up. Willie has his home built, and his family in it. Brother James, elder of the church, is my farmer now. Connell leaves me in one week to go canvassing. His arm is not sound for hard work. The twins are two healthy, sturdy boys, sixteen months old, trotting about everywhere.
(12LtMs, Lt 216, 1897, 10)
Sara has her cases of medical missionary work to do. Women send for [her] to prescribe for sick babies. No sooner was one case off than before we reached our home we learned a messenger had been sent [for her] to come as soon as possible to their house to visit a boy eight years old. He was running to drive a calf out of the yard. He was barefoot, and one foot stepped into a hole where there was a broken bottle, and [it] cut his foot in a most terrible manner. Two weeks he had been suffering until, obtaining no relief, they sent for Sara. The poor little fellow they thought was going to die with blood poisoning. He could not eat, and this was the only favorable feature in the case. When Sara looked at the foot, the cut wound was most horrible. She felt faint and sick, but she went [to] work, cleansed the wound and put on poultices after fomenting the foot with hot water. We saw no favorable chance for the lad to recover where he was, and the question was, will there be any chance for his life anyway? But we thought it worth trying.
(12LtMs, Lt 216, 1897, 11)
We had the lad brought to our house in May White’s parlor. His mother and aunt took turns in caring for him constantly. But no one could touch the foot but Sara. She got Maggie Hare to go with her, and as soon as she looked at the foot she fainted dead away. All who look at [the] foot care not to look a second time. They turn white and go out of the house. May has given up her parlor to the sick boy. We take him and his attendant food. Yesterday was the first real meal he has eaten. The foot, under hygienic treatment is doing excellently well.
(12LtMs, Lt 216, 1897, 12)
The poor boy had suffered so much pain he could not sleep or eat. He has no pain now, but itching of the wound which means recovery. He is a little bunch of skin and bones, but he is doing well. His father and mother live 12 miles from here, but his mother is with him. The boy lives with his grandfather and grandmother. They all think much of the boy, and they are so astonished that we have taken hold of the matter and done so much and so interestedly. It is to them a marvel of wonders. This missionary medical work will do more to convert the people than all the sermons could do without this work being done. This case has, coming in just now, been rather of a drawback, for Sara has to give [it] her entire time. Then the aunt of the boy poured boiling water on her foot by accident, and Sara had that case, which was quite serious. Another aunt has, just now, a foot swollen terribly, and Sara has that to foment and bandage and work over. Well, I let her take these cases, for it is ministry—just what our Saviour would have done were He on the earth. His mission was to bless and restore suffering humanity to health.
(12LtMs, Lt 216, 1897, 13)
What can be done for Brother Hickox? Do you hear from him? Is he doing anything to free himself from debt? Is he getting deeper into debt? I wish it was possible for them to come to our camp meeting. I fear one of his temperament might become tempted and separate his soul from God. He is one who wishes to take the lead, and he often, when crossed in his ideas, is unreasonable. The Lord forbid that he shall give place to the devil. I fear he has not cultivated the grace of patience but too much the objectionable feature of stubbornness and accusing and retaliation. Unless he becomes as a little child, willing to be taught, he will, I fear, make crooked paths for his feet.
(12LtMs, Lt 216, 1897, 14)
Can nothing be done to help him? Can you see anything that you can do in New Zealand to help him? Is he not one that is almost in the position of a lost sheep that must be hunted up and rescued? Will you consider this matter carefully? Every soul is precious in the sight of God and He wants us, His workers, to do our best to save any souls ready to die. [Please do] anything you can do to help him. If it is to pay his fare to the camp meeting, I will help do that, only you are nearer him than we are. Any arrangement that seems to be advisable to be done, I will do a part if it takes money to do it. I now can write no more. But I do want that Brother and Sister Hickox shall come into the work if they have learned the humble lesson of wearing the yoke of Christ and surrendering all to Him.
(12LtMs, Lt 216, 1897, 15)
In much love.
(12LtMs, Lt 216, 1897, 16)
Sara is called out again this morning to attend the confinement of Sister James. She seems to have enough cases. We could establish a hospital.
(12LtMs, Lt 216, 1897, 17)
Lt 217, 1897
Brethren Sunnyside, Cooranbong, New South Wales December 10, 1897 This letter is published in entirety in 1888 1652.
Worldly Plans in the Publishing Work
Dear Brethren:
Many things of a corrupting nature, which should not be sanctioned for a minute, have entered into the office at Battle Creek. These were of a character to eclipse the sacredness of the work. Men who had no experience in the earlier history of this work, men who knew so little of the building up of our institutions especially of the Publishing interests, seemed to have a superficial experience.
(12LtMs, Lt 217, 1897, 1)
Notwithstanding all the instruction and warnings and appeals given, they went directly contrary to them, because they were not converted and were not prepared for the position they occupied in the office of publication. They were apparently interested in the work but did not disinterestedly labor for its advancement. Their selfish interests led them to bring in the worldly policy plan, and to work in cheap, human principles, from a worldly standpoint. After the enemy came in at Minneapolis was the time for more pronounced reforms to be made in the publishing work.
(12LtMs, Lt 217, 1897, 2)
Lt 218, 1897
Tait, A. O. “Sunnyside,” Cooranbong, New South Wales September 12, 1897 Previously unpublished. Dear Brother Tait:
I have written to Brother Prescott, also Brother Tenney, in reference to Christian Education. I do not think the way in which that book is managed is in the order of God. We struggle here in this new field, trying to make advancements. By hiring money I have been able to advance the work, but how am I ever to pay this money I have invested? We could not put up a building for school purposes until I had borrowed of Sister Wessels one thousand pounds, with interest at four and one-half per cent. One building is finished, and the second building only enclosed, but it has served us well up to this time as meeting room, chamber, and sleeping rooms for the young men. But the room is too small and unbearably oppressive in summer, for the iron roof is very hot. Well, we have been stirred up by the Spirit of the Lord to arise and build. We mean that the meetinghouse shall be built and dedicated in the next three weeks without a debt against it. A donation of two hundred pounds came from Brother Lindsay and Sister Wessels, and with this we are working.
(12LtMs, Lt 218, 1897, 1)
Our school, under its present supervision, has been a success. I commenced to say a complete success, but I want to see more depth of piety. But we have seen the deep moving of the Spirit of God. We are so thankful, and our hearts are full of His praise, for His Holy Spirit has worked upon the hearts of the students, and there is no rebellion in the school. There was some rebellion at first, but we moved steadily and firmly, holding the line, telling the students what they must do and what they must not do.
(12LtMs, Lt 218, 1897, 2)
The Lord has been our strength, our helper, in every emergency. We would maintain order and Christian discipline. We would not lower the standard to meet any deficiencies. We have carried heavy responsibilities, but have laid the burden upon our Redeemer, and the toughest, hardened cases, who were unconverted, are now penitently seeking the Lord. From their lips came precious testimonies last Sabbath. The past week has been the happiest week of our lives. There are young men grown who have always done just as they pleased, but they have come to the foot of the cross, and now we see great changes in them. They will return to their homes to be Christ’s witnesses.
(12LtMs, Lt 218, 1897, 3)
Oh, I am so thankful to God for what we do see of the manifestation of the Spirit and power of God! Oh, how earnestly have we sought the Lord, and pleaded with Him to work in behalf of these youth, who needed a deep and living experience in the things of God. We have said over and over again, O Lord, we hang our helpless souls on Thee; teach us, lead and guide us. The Bible lessons have been the rock upon which we have been guiding our youth to plant their feet. I know that the Lord has helped us. Before this reaches you, we shall have a commodious church that will convene four hundred people. Good is the Lord, and greatly to be praised!
(12LtMs, Lt 218, 1897, 4)
In regard to Christian Temperance, I want a royalty on that book. I need it. I cannot see how my brethren can think we are to get along in this country. I have hired one thousand pounds of Sister Wessels, upon which I pay four and one-half per cent interest. I have hired two hundred pounds of another individual, on which I pay five per cent interest. Brother Haskell loaned me one thousand dollars soon after I came to this field. This I used in beginning the work on our first school building. Since that, he has put in my hands six hundred dollars. All his wages that he could spare he has loaned to me to invest. Now Brother Haskell needs this money, although he does not ask me for it. I feel it my duty to pay him back his money, which up to this time I have not been able to do.
(12LtMs, Lt 218, 1897, 5)
I want a royalty on Christian Education. If Brother Prescott wanted to help the cause of God, I think he could have done so better by donating his work to this foreign mission field than by giving it to the publishing association. But I must begin to do justice to others. I do not want any more of my writing handled in the manner Christian Education has been handled. I now ask my brethren to take the book, with the additions I shall send them, and allow me a royalty on the books they have sold. I want them to take the additions of valuable matter, and get out a new, enlarged edition, and give me my due. I have need of it.
(12LtMs, Lt 218, 1897, 6)
I send this to you and ask you to present it to the proper ones. Let me know what they will propose to do. They need not publish any more books [like] Christian Education, unless they will do something about this. Right is right. I will now leave the matter, and hope something will be done in regard to it.
(12LtMs, Lt 218, 1897, 7)
In haste.
(12LtMs, Lt 218, 1897, 8)
P. S.—-Please put the enclosed before the ones who should have it, for I have been warned that the Lord is displeased with those who have been in many respects as guilty in wrong doing as Brother Henry, and who carry out in regard to him the very same condemnatory spirit they have, with others, acted toward their brethren. There are things that God hates, and every one who practices them will have the same spirit, and God will bring them over the very same ground that Brother Henry is passing over. There would better be humiliation and fasting and prayer that the Lord may remove His displeasure from themselves for their own unfaithfulness and neglect of doing those things they ought to have done.
(12LtMs, Lt 218, 1897, 9)
Lt 219, 1897
White, J. E.; White, Emma NP September 27, 1897 Previously unpublished. Children:
I wish to inquire in regard to Fannie Bolton. What is she doing? I want you children to have no connection with her whatever. She has claimed to be converted very many times, but she does not retain that conversion. Her opinion of herself will wrestle until it obtains the mastery. I have known that she will make every effort to have us suppose she was thoroughly changed, but self would come in and seek for supremacy and Fannie Bolton was the most talented person that had life. While she was manufacturing the most positive deceptions and falsehoods, she would talk that she was inspired of God, and our sisters thought she was, but she was inspired of certain spirits that would lead her to lie and deceive and do all manner of evil things under a delusion of the devil. You just keep clear of her, give her a wide berth. You want nothing to do in connection with her in any line. When tempted in regard to her talents being of a superior order, she has no power to keep her from the snare. Poor creature, I am sorry for her, sincerely sorry.
(12LtMs, Lt 219, 1897, 1)
Now, Edson, I have but little confidence in the work of reformation in the management of the office. There has been so much dishonesty and a false work carried on there that is not seen, not understood, because the grace of Jesus Christ is not cherished and a living abiding principle maintained. There is written with their dealings with men, “Robbery and deception.” If it is not searched out now and clearly discerned and repented of and restitution made, those poor souls will never see the kingdom of heaven. A. R. Henry is not the only man that has not walked and worked in business lines for his own good or for the glory of God; but the very men who have been linked up with him are not in many respects guiltless before God. And if they suppose the Lord will excuse and pardon their transgression and guilt unless they rend the heart and not the garment, they will go out from us, because they are not of us. These very men who have been pleased with many unjust things that Henry has done, and have strengthened him in wrongdoing, now occupy positions not just or praiseworthy. They do not themselves fall on the Rock, and be broken. They are of that class that are specified of our Lord, uncircumcised in heart and not true in character. While they are thus, they will do Henry no good. They will only stir up in him the worst passions of the human heart and confirm him in his wrong spirit. How little is Jude heeded in warnings given, verses 16-25. We are certainly doing up our work for eternity.
(12LtMs, Lt 219, 1897, 2)
I would inquire in regard to Miss Holden. Ask May Walling where she is; she was with us in George’s Terrace. I let her have money to pay her passage to America, and if she can replace the money, I would be very grateful to receive it. I do not want to trouble you, but Edson if you can get that money due me, you may keep it to use in your work. She has written me several times, but I have not answered her letters. She may have returned to Australia, but any portion you can obtain use it for your work.
(12LtMs, Lt 219, 1897, 3)
I wish to hear that you are receiving the blessing of God and that your steps are ordered by the Lord. Elder Haskell came in last evening to see me. Our campground is secured. It is a good location. Brother Haskell says that Brother Farnsworth and wife will be here to the dedication of the chapel, also Brother A. T. Robinson and family. We are now in expectation of quite a number of people to view Cooranbong. It is a most beautiful place, and I am thankful for a home here. Brother and Sister Starr will be here soon.
(12LtMs, Lt 219, 1897, 4)
Much love,
(12LtMs, Lt 219, 1897, 5)
Mother.
Lt 220, 1897
White, J. E. Cooranbong, Australia September 27, 1897 Previously unpublished.
I decided, Edson, I could not send you anything at all this mail. This is the only letter I have written. For three nights I have unable to sleep past one o’clock and have tried to do something on The Life of Christ, but when writing on the subjects, I feel so intensely in reference to the points I am writing upon I have to stop and rest. It taxes nerve and brain and my heart. The mock trial of Christ, the crucifixion, the resurrection I have been writing upon, and I am now strengthless. I thought it impossible to write it all, but you see I have written quite a letter. It is disconnected, but you have to have this or nothing. O, how intensely I feel over this subject. Shall I see His face? Shall I dwell in His presence?
(12LtMs, Lt 220, 1897, 1)
Edson I want to say, Be steadfast, true as steel to principle. Depend on this, that just in proportion as you love Him and go forth in His strength of love and principle, your course will be marked by unrelapsing, undeviating activity to advance the work and cause of God for His name’s glory. The welfare of the church will be wholesome because healthful under your labors. The good of your fellow men will be your purpose.
(12LtMs, Lt 220, 1897, 2)
In your labors day unto day, you will in words bring from the treasure house of the soul things new and old of the most precious things of God. You will communicate whatsoever things are good and lovely. Directed by the finger of God, defended by His providence, and upheld and sustained by His Holy Spirit, you will walk both unitedly and securely, for you will move in the straight line of duty and of safety. The mark of the high calling of Christ Jesus is before you. Keep the thoughts elevated, the eye upward. Tempests and storms will beat upon you, but keep the eye single and fixed upon Him who is the Author and Finisher of your salvation. Press onward, catching the bright beams of the Sun of Righteousness, singing unto the Lord a new song even of praise and thanksgiving.
(12LtMs, Lt 220, 1897, 3)