WHY THEY ARE DESPERATELY NEEDED
Warnings and Reproofs
- 2
DATE
OF PUBLICATION: MAY 2002
WHY THEY ARE NOT WANTED
During
these years of apostasy [during Solomon's reign], the spiritual
decline of Israel progressed steadily. How
could it be otherwise when their king had united his interests with
satanic agencies? Through these agencies the enemy worked to confuse the
minds of the Israelites in regard to true and false worship, and they
became an easy prey. Commerce with other nations brought them into intimate
contact with those who had no love for God, and their own love for Him
was greatly lessened. Their keen sense of the high, holy character of God
was deadened. Refusing to follow in the path of obedience, they
transferred their allegiance to the enemy of righteousness. Prophets
and Kings, 58-59.
The reproofs, the cautions, the
corrections of the Lord, have been given to His church in all ages of the
world. These warnings were despised and rejected in Christ's day by
the self-righteous Pharisees, who claimed that they needed no such reproof
and were unjustly dealt with. They would not receive the word of the Lord
through His servants because it did not please their inclinations. Should
the Lord give a vision right before this class of people in our day,
pointing out their mistakes, rebuking their self-righteousness and
condemning their sins, they would rise up in rebellion, like the
inhabitants of Nazareth when Christ showed them their true condition.
If
these persons do not humble their hearts before God, if they harbor the
suggestions of Satan, doubt and infidelity will take possession of the
soul, and they will see everything in a false light. Let the seeds
of doubt once be sown in their hearts and they will have an abundant
harvest to reap. They will come to mistrust and disbelieve truths which
are plain and full of beauty to others who have not educated
themselves in unbelief. Those who train the mind to seize upon everything
which they can use as a peg to hang a doubt upon, and suggest these
thoughts to other minds, will always find occasion to doubt. 5
Testimonies, 689-690.
Those who valiantly take their
position on the right side, who encourage submission to Gods revealed
will and strengthen others in their efforts to put away their wrong
doings are the true friends of the Lord, who in love is trying to
correct the errors of His people, that He may wash them and, cleansing
them from every defilement, fit them for His holy kingdom. 1
Testimonies, 181.
The great sin of the Jews was that of neglecting and
rejecting present opportunities. As Jesus views the state of His
professed followers today, He sees base ingratitude, hollow formalism,
hypocritical insincerity, pharisaical pride and apostasy.
The
tears which Christ shed on the crest of Olivet were for the impenitence
and ingratitude of every individual to the close of time. He sees His love
despised. The souls temple courts have been converted into places of
unholy traffic. Selfishness, mammon, malice, envy, pride, passion, are all
cherished in the human heart. His warnings are rejected and ridiculed, His
ambassadors are treated with indifference, their words seem as idle tales.
Jesus has spoken by mercies, but these mercies have been unacknowledged; He
has spoken by solemn warnings, but these warnings have been rejected.
I
entreat you who have long professed the faith and who still pay
outward homage to Christ: Do not deceive your own souls. It is the
whole heart that Jesus prizes. The loyalty of the soul is alone of value
in the sight of God. If thou hadst known, even thou, at least in this
thy day, the things which belong to thy peace! Thou . . even
thou, Christ is at this moment addressing you personally,
stooping from His throne, yearning with pitying tenderness over those
who feel not their danger, who have no pity for themselves. 5
Testimonies, 72-73.
If Gods people would
recognize His dealings with them and accept His teachings, they would
find a straight path for their feet and a light to guide them through
darkness and discouragement. David learned wisdom from Gods dealings
with him and bowed in humility beneath the chastisement of the Most High. The
faithful portrayal of his true state by the prophet Nathan made David
acquainted with his own sins and aided him to put them away. He
accepted counsel meekly and humiliated himself before God. The law of the
Lord, he exclaims, is perfect, converting the soul. 4 Testimonies,
14-15.
Judas had the same opportunities
as had the other disciples. He listened to the same precious lessons. But the
practice of the truth, which Christ required, was at variance with the
desires and purposes of Judas, and he would not yield his ideas in
order to receive wisdom from Heaven . . He [Christ] presented before Judas
the heinous character of greed, and many a time the disciple realized that
his character had been portrayed, and his sin pointed out; but he would
not confess and forsake his unrighteousness. He was self-sufficient
and, instead of resisting temptation, he continued to follow his
fraudulent practices . . He [Christ] presented before him the highest
incentives for right doing; and in rejecting the light of Heaven, Judas
would be without excuse.
Instead
of walking in the light, Judas chose to retain his defects. Evil
desires, revengeful passions, dark and sullen thoughts, were cherished, until
Satan had full control of the man. Judas became a representative of the
enemy of Christ . .
All
the disciples had serious faults when Jesus called them to His
service. Even John, who came into closest association with the meek and
lowly One, was not himself naturally meek and yielding. He and his brother
were called the sons of thunder. . Jesus reproved His disciples,
He warned and cautioned them; but John and his brethren did not leave Him;
they chose Jesus, notwithstanding the reproofs. The Saviour did not
withdraw from them because of their weakness and errors. They continued to
the end to share His trials and to learn the lessons of His life. By
beholding Christ, they became transformed in character. Desire of
Ages, 294-296.
Those whom God has chosen for
an important work have ever been received with distrust and suspicion.
Anciently, when Elijah was sent with a message from God to the people,
they did not heed the warning. They thought him unnecessarily severe.
They even thought that he must have lost his senses because he denounced
them, the favored people of God, as sinners, and their crimes as so
aggravated that the judgments of God would awaken against them. Satan
and his host have ever been arrayed against those who bear the message of
warning and who reprove sins. The unconsecrated will also be united
with the adversary of souls, to make the work of Gods faithful servants
as hard as possible. 3 Testimonies, 261.
All your efforts to save the
erring may be unavailing. They may repay you evil for good. They may be
enraged rather than convinced. What if they hear to no good purpose
and pursue the evil course they have begun? This will frequently occur.
Sometimes the mildest and tenderest reproof will have no good effect. In
that case the blessing you wanted another to receive by pursuing a course
of righteousness, ceasing to do evil and learning to do well, will return
into your own bosom.
If
the erring persist in sin, treat them kindly, and leave them with your
heavenly Father. You have delivered your soul; their sin no longer
rests upon you; you are not now partaker of their sin. But if they
perish, their blood is upon their own head. 2 Testimonies, 53-54.
It is a fearful thing for a man
to set his will against the will of God, as revealed in his specified
requirements. All the honor that a man could receive on the throne of a
kingdom, would be a poor compensation for the loss of the favor of God
through an act of disloyalty to heaven. Disobedience to the
commandments of God can only bring disaster and dishonor at last. 2
Bible Commentary, 1018.
Jesus is coming; and will He find
a people conformed to the world? and will He acknowledge these as His
people that He has purified unto Himself? Oh, no. None but the pure and
holy will He acknowledge as His. Those who have been purified and made
white through suffering, and have kept themselves separate, unspotted from
the world, He will own as His.
As
I saw the dreadful fact that Gods people were conformed to the world,
with no distinction, except in name, between many of the professed
disciples of the meek and lowly Jesus and unbelievers, my soul felt deep
anguish. I saw that Jesus was wounded and put to an open shame. Said
the angel, as with sorrow he saw the professed people of God loving the
world, partaking of its spirit, and following its fashions: Cut loose!
Cut loose! lest He appoint you your portion with hypocrites and
unbelievers outside the city. Your profession will only cause you
greater anguish, and your punishment will be greater because ye knew His
will, but did it not. 1 Testimonies, 133.
Why do not men, who are wholly
dependent upon God, seek to be at peace with Him by willing obedience?
He is infinite in wisdom, and there is no limit to His power. He controls
the heavens with their numberless worlds. He preserves in perfect harmony
the grandeur and beauty of the things which He has created. Sin is the
transgression of Gods law, and the penalty of sin is death. There
would have been no discord in heaven or in the earth if sin had never
entered. Disobedience to Gods law has brought all the misery
that has existed among His creatures. Why will not men be reconciled to
God? Sanctified Life, 75-76.
The spirit of opposition to
reproof, that led to the persecution and imprisonment of Jeremiah, exists
today. Many refuse to heed repeated warnings, preferring rather to
listen to false teachers who flatter their vanity and overlook their evil
doing. In the day of trouble such will have no sure refuge, no help
from heaven. Gods chosen servants should meet with courage and
patience the trials and sufferings that befall them through reproach,
neglect, and misrepresentation. They should continue to discharge
faithfully the work God has given them to do, ever remembering that the
prophets of old and the Saviour of mankind and His apostles also endured
abuse and persecution for the Words sake. Prophets and Kings,
437.
Saul endeavored to vindicate
his own course and blamed the prophet instead of condemning himself.
There
are today many who pursue a similar course. Like Saul, they are blinded to
their errors. When the Lord seeks to correct them, they receive reproof
as insult, and find fault with the one who brings the divine message.
Had
Saul been willing to see and confess his error, this bitter experience
would have proved a safeguard for the future. He would afterward have
avoided the mistakes which called forth divine reproof. But feeling
that he was unjustly condemned, he would, of course, be likely again to
commit the same sin. 2 Bible Commentary, 1014-1015.
They are transgressors of the
law of God, and they will be punished for the sins which they commit and
for those which they have influenced others to commit through the
temptations which they have placed in their way. 5 Testimonies,
359.
Repentant sinners have no cause
to despair because they are reminded of their transgressions and
warned of their danger. These very efforts in their behalf show how
much God loves them and desires to save them. They have only to follow
His counsel and do His will, to inherit eternal life. God sets the
sins of His erring people before them, that they may behold them in all
their enormity under the light of divine truth. It is then their duty to
renounce them forever.
God is as powerful to save from
sin today as He was in the times of the patriarchs, of David, and of the
prophets and apostles. The multitude of cases recorded in sacred
history where God has delivered His people from their own iniquities
should make the Christian of this time eager to receive divine instruction
and zealous to perfect a character that will bear the close inspection of
the judgment. 4 Testimonies, 15.
Paul commanded Titus: These
things speak, and exhort, and rebuke with all authority. Let no man
despise thee. There are ever those who will despise the one who
dares to reprove sin; but there are times when reproof must be given.
Paul directs Titus to rebuke a certain class sharply, that they may be
sound in the faith. Men and women who, with their different organizations,
are brought together in church capacity have peculiarities and faults. As
these are developed, they will require reproof. If those who are placed
in important positions never reproved, never rebuked, there would soon be
a demoralized condition of things that would greatly dishonor God. But
how shall the reproof be given? Let the apostle answer: With all
long-suffering and doctrine. Principle should be brought to bear
upon the one who needs reproof, but never should the wrongs of Gods
people be passed by indifferently. 3 Testimonies, 359.
It is not alone those who openly
reject the Testimonies, or who cherish doubt concerning them, that
are on dangerous ground. To disregard light is to reject it.
Some
of you in words acknowledge reproof, but you do not in heart accept it.
You go on the same as before, only being less susceptible to the
influence of the Spirit of God, becoming more and more blinded, having
less wisdom, less self-control, less moral power, and less zeal and relish
for religious exercises; and, unless converted, you will finally yield
your hold upon God entirely. You have not made decided changes in your
life when reproof has come, because you have not seen and realized
your defects of character and the great contrast between your life and the
life of Christ. What do your prayers amount to while you regard iniquity
in your hearts? Unless you make a thorough change, you will, not far
hence, become weary of reproof, as did the children of Israel; and, like
them, you will apostatize from God. 5 Testimonies, 680.
When men's hearts are softened
and subdued by the constraining influence of the Holy Spirit, they will
give heed to counsel; but when they turn from admonition until their
hearts become hardened, the Lord permits them to be led by other
influences. Refusing the truth, they accept falsehood, which becomes a
snare to their own destruction. Prophets and Kings, 425.
The Lord is testing and proving
you. He has counseled, admonished, and entreated. All these solemn
admonitions will either make the church better or decidedly worse. The
oftener the Lord speaks to correct or counsel, and you disregard His
voice, the more disposed will you be to reject it again and again,
till God says: Because I have called, and ye refused; I have stretched
out My hand, and no man regarded; but ye have set at nought all My
counsel, and would none of My reproof: I also will laugh at your calamity;
I will mock when your fear cometh; when your fear cometh as
desolation, and your destruction cometh as a whirlwind; when distress and
anguish cometh upon you. Then shall they call upon Me, but I will not
answer; they shall seek Me early, but they shall not find Me; for that
they hated knowledge, and did not choose the fear of the Lord: they would
none of My counsel: they despised all My reproof. Therefore shall they
eat of the fruit of their own way, and be filled with their own devices.
5 Testimonies, 72.
God always has men to whom He
intrusts His message. His Spirit moves upon their hearts, and constrains
them to speak. Stimulated by holy zeal, and with the divine impulse
strong upon them, they enter upon the performance of their duty without
coldly calculating the consequences of speaking to the people the word
which the Lord has given them. But the servant of God is soon made aware
that he has risked something. He finds himself and his message made the
subject of criticism. His manners, his life, his property are all
inspected and commented upon. His message is picked to pieces and
rejected in the most illiberal and unsanctified spirit, as men in
their finite judgment see fit. Has that message done the work God designed
it should accomplish? No; it has signally failed, because the hearts of
the hearers were unsanctified.
If
the ministers face is not flint, if he has not indomitable faith and
courage, if his heart is not made strong by constant communion with God,
he will begin to shape his testimony to please the unsanctified ears
and hearts of those whom he is addressing. In endeavoring to avoid the
criticism to which he is exposed, he separates from God, and loses the
sense of the divine favor, and his testimony becomes tame and lifeless.
He finds that his courage and faith are gone, and his labors are
powerless. The world is full of flatterers and dissemblers who have
yielded to the desire to please; but the faithful men, who do not study
self-interest, but love their brethren too well to suffer sin upon them,
are few indeed. Review, April 7, 1885; 2 Bible
Commentary, 1034.
God had pleaded with Judah not to
provoke Him to anger, but they had hearkened not. Finally sentence was
pronounced against them. They were to be led away captive to Babylon.
The Chaldeans were to be used as the instrument by which God would
chastise His disobedient people. The sufferings of the men of Judah
were to be in proportion to the light they had had and to the warnings
they had despised and rejected. Long had God delayed His judgments,
but now He would visit His displeasure upon them as a last effort to check
them in their evil course. Prophets and Kings, 425.
Many are going directly
contrary to the light which God has given to His people, because they
do not read the books which contain the light and knowledge in cautions,
reproofs, and warnings. The cares of the world, the love of fashion,
and the lack of religion have turned the attention from the light God
has so graciously given, while books and periodicals containing error
are traveling all over the country. Skepticism and infidelity are
increasing everywhere. Light so precious, coming from the throne of God,
is hid under a bushel. God will make His people responsible for this
neglect. An account must be rendered to Him for every ray of light He
has let shine upon our pathway, whether it has been improved to our
advancement in divine things or rejected because it was more agreeable
to follow inclination. 4 Testimonies, 391.
We
do not know what great interests may be at stake in the proving of God. There
is no safety except in strict obedience to the Word of God. All His
promises are made upon condition of faith and obedience, and a failure
to comply with His commands cuts off the fulfillment to us of the rich
provisions of the Scriptures. We should not follow impulse, nor rely on
the judgment of men; we should look to the revealed will of God and
walk according to His definite commandment, no matter what circumstances
may surround us. God will take care of the results; by faithfulness
to His Word we may in time of trial prove before men and angels that the
Lord can trust us in difficult places to carry out His will, honor His
name, and bless His people. Patriarchs and Prophets, 621-622.
The very beginning of the evil
was a neglect of watchfulness and secret prayer, then came a neglect of
other religious duties, and thus the way was opened for all the sins that
followed. Every Christian will be assailed by the allurements of the
world, the clamors of the carnal nature, and the direct temptations of
Satan. No one is safe. No matter what our experience has been, no
matter how high our station, we need to watch and pray continually. We
must be daily controlled by the Spirit of God or we are controlled
by Satan.
The
Saviour's instructions to His disciples were given for the benefit of
His followers in every age. He had those in view who were living near
the close of time, when He said: Take heed to yourselves. It is
our work, each for himself, to cherish in the heart the precious graces of
the Holy Spirit.
Satan
is working with unfailing perseverance and intense energy to draw into his
ranks the professed followers of Christ. He is working with all
deceivableness of unrighteousness in them that perish. But Satan is not
the only worker by whom the kingdom of darkness is supported. Whoever
solicits to sin is a tempter. Whoever imitates the great deceiver becomes
his aid. Those who give their influence to sustain an evil work are
doing Satan's drudgery.
Actions
reveal principles and motives. The fruit borne by many who claim to be
plants in the Lords vineyard shows them to be but thorns and briers. A
whole church may sanction the wrong course of some of its members, but
that sanction does not prove the wrong to be right. It cannot make
grapes of thorn berries.
If
some who profess to believe present truth could understand their true
position, they would despair of the mercy of God. They have been
exerting all their influence against the truth, against the voice of
warning, against the people of God. They have been doing the work
of Satan. Many have become so infatuated by his deceptions that they
will never recover. Such a state of backsliding cannot exist without
causing the loss of many souls.
The
church has received warning after warning. The duties and dangers of
Gods people have been plainly revealed. But the worldly element has
proved too strong for them. Customs, practices, and fashions which lead
the soul away from God have been for years gaining ground in defiance
of the warnings and entreaties of the Holy Spirit, until at last their
ways have become right in their own eyes, and the Spirits voice is
scarcely heard. No man can tell how far he may go in sin when once he
yields himself to the power of the great deceiver. Satan entered into
Judas Iscariot and induced him to betray his Lord. Satan led Ananias and
Sapphira to lie to the Holy Ghost. Those who are not wholly consecrated to
God may be led to do the work of Satan while yet they flatter themselves
that they are in the service of Christ. 5 Testimonies, 102-103.
The obedient ear will receive
reproof with humility, patience, and teachableness. Sons and
Daughters of God, 166.
Moses did not feel the guilt of
sin and did not hasten away at the word of the Lord and leave the
congregation to perish, as the Hebrews had fled from the tents of Korah,
Dathan, and Abiram the day before. Moses lingered; for he could not
consent to give up all that vast multitude to perish, although he knew
that they deserved the vengeance of God for their persistent rebellion. He
prostrated himself before God because the people felt no necessity for
humiliation; he mediated for them because they felt no need of interceding
in their own behalf.
Moses
here typifies Christ. At this critical time Moses manifested the True
Shepherds interest for the flock of His care. He pleaded that the
wrath of an offended God might not utterly destroy the people of His
choice. And by his intercession he held back the arm of vengeance,
that a full end was not made of disobedient, rebellious Israel. 3
Testimonies, 357-358
With one accord, Satan and his
host threw the blame of their rebellion wholly upon Christ, declaring
that if they had not been reproved, they would never have rebelled.
Thus stubborn and defiant in their disloyalty, seeking vainly to overthrow
the government of God, yet blasphemously claiming to be themselves the
innocent victims of oppressive power, the archrebel and all his
sympathizers were at last banished from heaven.
The
same spirit that prompted rebellion in heaven still inspires rebellion on
earth. Satan has continued with men the same policy which he pursued
with the angels. His spirit now reigns in the children of disobedience.
Like him they seek to break down the restraints of the law of God and
promise men liberty through transgression of its precepts. Reproof
of sin still arouses the spirit of hatred and resistance. When Gods
messages of warning are brought home to the conscience, Satan leads men to
justify themselves and to seek the sympathy of others in their course of
sin. Instead of correcting their errors, they excite indignation
against the reprover, as if he were the sole cause of difficulty. From
the days of righteous Abel to our own time such is the spirit which has
been displayed toward those who dare to condemn sin. Great
Controversy, 499-500.
Let ministers and people
remember that gospel truth ruins if it does not save. The soul that
refuses to listen to the invitations of mercy from day to day can soon
listen to the most urgent appeals without an emotion stirring his
soul. As laborers with God we need more fervent piety and less
self-exaltation. 5 Testimonies, 134.
Reproof is more to be prized
than flattery. Not all who are preaching the truth realize that their
testimony and example are deciding the destiny of souls. If they are
unfaithful in their mission, and become careless in their work, souls will
be lost as the result. 2 Testimonies, 338.
It is not pleasing to human
nature to receive reproof, nor is it possible for the heart of man,
unenlightened by the Spirit of God, to realize the necessity of reproof
or the blessing it is designed to bring. As man yields to temptation,
and indulges in sin, his mind becomes darkened. The moral sense is
perverted. The warnings of conscience are disregarded, and its voice is
less clearly heard. He gradually loses the power to distinguish between
right and wrong, until he has no true sense of his standing before
God. He may observe the forms of religion and zealously maintain its
doctrines while destitute of its spirit. 5 Testimonies, 682.
When obliged to declare the
messages, I would often soften them down, and make them appear as
favorable for the individual as I could, and then would go by myself
and weep in agony of spirit. I looked upon those who had only their own
souls to care for, and thought if I were in their condition I would not
murmur. It was hard to relate the plain, cutting testimonies given
me of God. I anxiously watched the result, and if the persons reproved
rose up against the reproof, and afterward opposed the truth, these
queries would arise in my mind: Did I deliver the message just as I
should? Could there not have been some way to save them? And then such
distress pressed upon my soul that I often felt that death would be a
welcome messenger, and the grave a sweet resting place.
I
did not realize the danger and sin of such a course, until in vision I
was taken into the presence of Jesus. He looked upon me with a frown, and
turned His face from me. It is not possible to describe the terror and
agony I then felt. I fell upon my face before Him, but had no power to
utter a word. Oh, how I longed to be covered and hid from that dreadful
frown! Then could I realize, in some degree, what the feelings of the
lost will be when they cry: Mountains and rocks, fall on us, and
hide us from the face of Him that sitteth on the throne, and from the
wrath of the Lamb.
Presently
an angel bade me rise, and the sight that met my eyes can hardly be
described. Before me was a company whose hair and garments were torn, and
whose countenances were the very picture of despair and horror. They came
close to me, and rubbed their garments upon mine. As I looked at my
garments, I saw that they were stained with blood. Again I fell like one
dead at the feet of my accompanying angel. I could not plead one excuse,
and longed to be away from that holy place. The angel raised me to my
feet, and said: This is not your case now, but this scene has passed
before you to let you know what your situation must be if you neglect
to declare to others what the Lord has revealed to you. But if you are
faithful to the end, you shall eat of the tree of life, and shall drink of
the river of the water of life. You will have to suffer much, but the
grace of God is sufficient. I then felt willing to do all that the Lord
might require me to do, that I might have His approbation, and not
feel His dreadful frown. 1 Testimonies, 73-74.
It was not the will of God that
Israel should wander forty years in the wilderness; He desired to lead
them directly to the land of Canaan and establish them there, a holy,
happy people. But they could not enter in because of unbelief.
Hebrews 3:19. Because of their backsliding and apostasy they perished
in the desert, and others were raised up to enter the Promised Land. In
like manner, it was not the will of God that the coming of Christ should
be so long delayed and His people should remain so many years in this
world of sin and sorrow. But unbelief separated them from God. As they
refused to do the work which He had appointed them, others were raised up
to proclaim the message. In mercy to the world, Jesus delays His coming,
that sinners may have an opportunity to hear the warning and find in Him a
shelter before the wrath of God shall be poured out.
Now
as in former ages, the presentation of a truth that reproves the sins and
errors of the times will excite opposition. Everyone that doeth
evil hateth the light, neither cometh to the light, lest his deeds should
be reproved. John 3:20. As men see that they cannot maintain their
position by the Scriptures, many determine to maintain it at all hazards;
and, with a malicious spirit, they assail the character and motives of
those who stand in defense of unpopular truth. It is the same policy which
has been pursued in all ages. Elijah was declared to be a troubler in
Israel, Jeremiah a traitor, Paul a polluter of the temple. From that
day to this, those who would be loyal to truth have been denounced as
seditious, heretical, or schismatic. Multitudes who are too
unbelieving to accept the sure word of prophecy will receive with
unquestioning credulity an accusation against those who dare to reprove
fashionable sins. This spirit will increase more and more. And the
Bible plainly teaches that a time is approaching when the laws of the
state will so conflict with the law of God that whosoever would obey all
the divine precepts must brave reproach and punishment as an evildoer.
In
view of this, what is the duty of the messenger of truth? Shall he
conclude that the truth ought not to be presented, since often its
only effect is to arouse men to evade or resist its claims? No; he has
no more reason for withholding the testimony of Gods Word, because it
excites opposition, than had earlier Reformers. The confession of
faith made by saints and martyrs was recorded for the benefit of
succeeding generations. Those living examples of holiness and steadfast
integrity have come down to inspire courage in those who are now called to
stand as witnesses for God. They received grace and truth, not for
themselves alone, but that, through them, the knowledge of God might
enlighten the earth. Has God given light to His servants in this
generation? Then they should let it shine forth to the world.
Anciently
the Lord declared to one who spoke in His name: The house of Israel
will not hearken unto thee; for they will not hearken unto Me.
Nevertheless He said: Thou shalt speak My words unto them, whether they
will hear, or whether they will forbear. Ezekiel 3:7; 2:7. To the
servant of God at this time is the command addressed: Lift up thy
voice like a trumpet, and show My people their transgression, and the
house of Jacob their sins.
So
far as his opportunities extend, everyone who has received the light of
truth is under the same solemn and fearful responsibility as was the
prophet of Israel, to whom the word of the Lord came, saying: Son of
man, I have set thee a watchman unto the house of Israel; therefore thou
shalt hear the word at My mouth, and warn them from Me. When I say
unto the wicked, O wicked man, thou shalt surely die; if thou dost not
speak to warn the wicked from his way, that wicked man shall die in his
iniquity; but his blood will I require at thine hand. Nevertheless, if
thou warn the wicked of his way to turn from it; if he do not turn from
his way, he shall die in his iniquity; but thou hast delivered thy
soul. Ezekiel 33:7-9.
The
great obstacle both to the acceptance and to the promulgation of truth is
the fact that it involves inconvenience and reproach. This is the
only argument against the truth which its advocates have never been able
to refute. But this does not deter the true followers of Christ. These do
not wait for truth to become popular. Being convinced of their duty,
they deliberately accept the cross, with the apostle Paul counting
that our light affliction, which is but for a moment, worketh for us a
far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory; with one of old,
esteeming the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures in
Egypt. 2 Corinthians 4:17; Hebrews 11:26.
Whatever
may be their profession, it is only those who are world servers at heart
that act from policy rather than principle in religious things. We should
choose the right because it is right, and leave consequences with God.
To men of principle, faith, and daring, the world is indebted for its
great reforms. By such men the work of reform for this time must be
carried forward.
Thus
saith the Lord: Hearken unto Me, ye that know righteousness, the people
in whose heart is My law; fear ye not the reproach of men, neither be
ye afraid of their revilings. For the moth shall eat them up like a
garment, and the worm shall eat them like wool: but My righteousness shall
be forever, and My salvation from generation to generation. Isaiah
51:7-8. Great Controversy, 458-460.
Let our periodicals be devoted
to the publication of living, earnest matter . . There are times when
words of reproof and rebuke are called for. Those who are out of the right
way must be aroused to see their peril. A message must be given that shall
startle them from the lethargy which enchains their senses. Moral
renovation must take place, else souls will perish in their sins. Let the
message of truth, like a sharp, two-edged sword, cut its way to the heart.
Make appeals that will arouse the careless and bring foolish,
wandering minds back to God.
The
attention of the people must be arrested. Our message is a savor of
life unto life or of death unto death. The destinies of souls are
balancing. Multitudes are in the valley of decision. A voice should
be heard crying: "If the Lord be God, follow Him: but if Baal, then
follow him." 1 Kings 18:21.7 Testimonies, 155.
It is an extremely delicate thing
to tell people of their faults. The reprover is likely to find that in
those reproved, pride and stubbornness assert themselves, and the will is
arrayed in defiance and opposition. But for all this, advice should be
given, and faults should be laid bare . . It may seem that we are to study
our own hearts, and square our own actions by some standard of our own;
but this is not the case. This would but work deform instead of reform. The
work must begin in the heart, and then the spirit, the words, the
expression of the countenance, and the actions of the life, will make
manifest that a change has taken place. In knowing Christ through the
grace that He has shed forth abundantly, we become changed . . In
humility we shall correct every fault and defect of character; because
Christ is abiding in the heart, we shall be fitted up for the heavenly
family above. Sons and Daughters of God, 117.
The honor accorded him who is
concluding his work is of far more worth than the applause and
congratulations which those receive who are just entering upon their
duties, and who have yet to be tested. One may easily lay off his burdens,
when even the enemies of truth acknowledge his fidelity. But how many
of our great men close their official labors in disgrace, because they
have sacrificed principle for gain or honor. The desire to be popular,
the temptations of wealth or ease, lead them astray. Men who connive at
sin may appear to prosper; they may triumph because their undertakings
seem crowned with success; but Gods eye is upon these proud boasters.
He will reward them as their works have been. The greatest outward
prosperity cannot bring happiness to those who are not at peace with God
or with themselves. Signs, July 27, 1882; 2 Bible Commentary,
1014.
Reproofs must be given, and
that even rebuke may have to be spoken to cut off some evil doing.Fundamentals
of Education, 457.
He [Christ] fearlessly
denounced hypocrisy, unbelief, and iniquity, but tears were in His voice
as He uttered His scathing rebukes. He wept over Jerusalem, the
city He loved, that refused to receive Him, the Way, the Truth, and the
Life. They rejected Him, the Saviour, but He regarded them with pitying
tenderness, and sorrow so deep that it broke His heart. Every soul was
precious in His eyes.Desire of Ages, 353.
God pleaded with them not to
provoke Him to anger with the work of their hands and their hearts, but
they hearkened not. Jeremiah then predicted the captivity of the Jews
as their punishment for not heeding the word of the Lord. The
Chaldeans were to be used as the instrument by which God would chastise
His disobedient people. Their punishment was to be in proportion to
their intelligence and to the warnings they had despised. God had long
delayed His judgments because of His unwillingness to humiliate His chosen
people, but now He would visit His displeasure upon them as a last effort
to check them in their evil course.
In
these days He has instituted no new plan to preserve the purity of His
people. As of old, He entreats the erring ones who profess His name to
repent and turn from their evil ways. Now, as then, by the mouth of His
chosen servants He predicts the dangers before them. He sounds the note of
warning and reproves sin just as faithfully as in the days of Jeremiah. But
the Israel of our time have the same temptations to scorn reproof and
hate counsel as had ancient Israel. They too often turn a deaf ear to
the words that God has given His servants for the benefit of those who
profess the truth. Though the Lord in mercy withholds for a time the
retribution of their sin, as in the days of Jeremiah, He will not
always stay His hand, but will visit iniquity with righteous judgment. 4
Testimonies, 164-165.
If ye be without
chastisement, whereof all are partakers, then are ye . . not sons.
Our Lord has said: As many as I love, I rebuke and chasten. No
chastening for the present seemeth to be joyous, but grievous:
nevertheless afterward it yieldeth the peaceable fruit of righteousness
unto them which are exercised thereby. Though bitter the discipline,
it is appointed by a Fathers tender love, that we might be
partakers of His holiness. 5 Testimonies, 683.
CONTINUE PART 3 |