Testimonies for the Church Volume Three :
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28. The Laodicean Church
The message to the church of the Laodiceans is a startling
denunciation, and is applicable to the people of God at the
present time.
"And unto 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 spew 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."
The Lord here shows us that the message to be borne to His
people by ministers whom He has called to warn the people is
not a peace-and-safety message. It is not merely
theoretical, but practical in every particular. The people
of God are represented in the message to the Laodiceans as
in a position of carnal security. They are at ease,
believing themselves to be in an exalted condition of
spiritual attainments. "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."
What greater deception can come upon human minds than
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a confidence that they are right when they are all wrong!
The message of the True Witness finds the people of God in a
sad deception, yet honest in that deception. They know not
that their condition is deplorable in the sight of God.
While those addressed are flattering themselves that they
are in an exalted spiritual condition, the message of the
True Witness breaks their security by the startling
denunciation of their true condition of spiritual blindness,
poverty, and wretchedness. The testimony, so cutting and
severe, cannot be a mistake, for it is the True Witness who
speaks, and His testimony must be correct.
It is difficult for those who feel secure in their
attainments, and who believe themselves to be rich in
spiritual knowledge, to receive the message which declares
that they are deceived and in need of every spiritual grace.
The unsanctified heart is "deceitful above all things, and
desperately wicked." I was shown that many are flattering
themselves that they are good Christians, who have not a ray
of light from Jesus. They have not a living experience for
themselves in the divine life. They need a deep and thorough
work of self-abasement before God before they will feel
their true need of earnest, persevering effort to secure the
precious graces of the Spirit.
God leads His people on step by step. The Christian life is
a constant battle and a march. There is no rest from the
warfare. It is by constant, unceasing effort that we
maintain the victory over the temptations of Satan. As a
people we are triumphing in the clearness and strength of
the truth. We are fully sustained in our positions by an
overwhelming amount of plain Scriptural testimony. But we
are very much wanting in Bible humility, patience, faith,
love, self-denial, watchfulness, and the spirit of
sacrifice. We need to cultivate Bible holiness. Sin prevails
among the people of God. The plain message of rebuke to the
Laodiceans is not received. Many cling to their doubts and
their darling sins while they are in so great a deception as
to talk and feel that they are in need of nothing. They
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think the testimony of the Spirit of God in reproof is
uncalled for or that it does not mean them. Such are in the
greatest need of the grace of God and spiritual discernment
that they may discover their deficiency in spiritual
knowledge. They lack almost every qualification necessary to
perfect Christian character. They have not a practical
knowledge of Bible truth, which leads to lowliness of life
and a conformity of their will to the will of Christ. They
are not living in obedience to all God's requirements.
It is not enough to merely profess to believe the truth. All
the soldiers of the cross of Christ virtually obligate
themselves to enter the crusade against the adversary of
souls, to condemn wrong and sustain righteousness. But the
message of the True Witness reveals the fact that a terrible
deception is upon our people, which makes it necessary to
come to them with warnings, to break their spiritual
slumber, and arouse them to decided action.
In my last vision I was shown that even
this decided message of the True Witness had not
accomplished the design of God. The people slumber on in
their sins. They continue to declare themselves rich and
having need of nothing. Many inquire: Why are all these
reproofs given? Why do the
Testimonies
continually charge us with backsliding and with grievous
sins? We love the truth; we are prospering; we are in no
need of these testimonies of warning and reproof. But let
these murmurers see their hearts and compare their lives
with the practical teachings of the Bible, let them humble
their souls before God, let the grace of God illuminate the
darkness, and the scales will fall from their eyes, and they
will realize their true spiritual poverty and wretchedness.
They will feel the necessity of buying gold, which is pure
faith and love; white raiment, which is a spotless character
made pure in the blood of their dear Redeemer; and eyesalve,
which is the grace of God and which will give clear
discernment of spiritual things and detect sin. These
attainments are more precious than the gold of Ophir.
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I have been shown that the greatest reason why the people of
God are now found in this state of spiritual blindness is
that they will not receive correction. Many have despised
the reproofs and warnings given them. The True Witness
condemns the lukewarm condition of the people of God, which
gives Satan great power over them in this waiting, watching
time. The selfish, the proud, and the lovers of sin are ever
assailed with doubts. Satan has ability to suggest doubts
and to devise objections to the pointed testimony that God
sends, and many think it a virtue, a mark of intelligence in
them, to be unbelieving and to question and quibble. Those
who desire to doubt
will have plenty of room. God does not propose to remove all
occasion for unbelief. He gives evidence, which must be
carefully investigated with a humble mind and a teachable
spirit, and all should decide from the weight of evidence.
Eternal life is of infinite value and will cost us all that
we have. I was shown that we do not place a proper estimate
upon eternal things. Everything worth possessing, even in
this world, must be secured by effort, and sometimes by most
painful sacrifice. And this is merely to obtain a perishable
treasure. Shall we be less willing to endure conflict and
toil, and to make earnest efforts and great sacrifices, to
obtain a treasure which is of infinite value, and a life
which will measure with that of the Infinite? Can heaven
cost us too much?
Faith and love are golden treasures, elements that are
greatly wanting among God's people. I have been shown that
unbelief in the testimonies of warning, encouragement, and
reproof is shutting away the light from God's people.
Unbelief is closing their eyes so that they are ignorant of
their true condition. The True Witness thus describes their
blindness: "And knowest not that thou art wretched, and
miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked."
Faith in the soon coming of Christ is waning. "My Lord
delayeth His coming" is not only said in the heart, but
expressed in words and most decidedly in works. Stupidity in
this watching time is sealing the senses of God's people as
to
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the signs of the times. The terrible iniquity which abounds
calls for the greatest diligence and for the living
testimony, to keep sin out of the church. Faith has been
decreasing to a fearful degree, and it is only by exercise
that it can increase.
In the rise of the third angel's message those who engaged
in the work of God had something to venture; they had
sacrifices to make. They started this work in poverty and
suffered the greatest deprivations and reproach. They met
determined opposition, which drove them to God in their
necessity and kept their faith alive. Our present plan of
systematic benevolence amply sustains our ministers, and
there is no want and no call for the exercise of faith as to
a support. Those who start out now to preach the truth have
nothing to venture. They have no risks to run, no special
sacrifices to make. The system of truth is made ready to
their hand, and publications are provided for them,
vindicating the truths they advance.
Some young men start out with no real sense of the exalted
character of the work. They have no privations, hardships,
or severe conflicts to meet, which would call for the
exercise of faith. They do not cultivate practical
self-denial and cherish a spirit of sacrifice. Some are
becoming proud and lifted up, and have no real burden of the
work upon them. The True Witness speaks to these ministers:
"Be zealous therefore, and repent." Some of them are so
lifted up in pride that they are really a hindrance and a
curse to the precious cause of God. They do not exert a
saving influence upon others. These men need to be
thoroughly converted to God themselves and sanctified by the
truths they present to others.
Pointed Testimonies in the Church
Very many feel impatient and jealous because they are
frequently disturbed with warnings and reproofs which keep
their sins before them. Says the True Witness: "I know thy
works." The motives, the purposes, the unbelief, the
suspicions and jealousies may be hid from men, but not from
Christ.
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The True Witness comes as a counselor: "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. 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 in My throne, even as I also overcame,
and am set down with My Father in His throne."
Those who are reproved by the Spirit of God should not rise
up against the humble instrument. It is God, and not an
erring mortal, who has spoken to save them from ruin. Those
who despise the warning will be left in blindness to become
self-deceived. But those who heed it, and zealously go about
the work of separating their sins from them in order to have
the needed graces, will be opening the door of their hearts
that the dear Saviour may come in and dwell with them. This
class you will ever find in perfect harmony with the
testimony of the Spirit of God.
Ministers who are preaching present truth should not neglect
the solemn message to the Laodiceans. The testimony of the
True Witness is not a smooth message. The Lord does not say
to them, You are about right; you have borne chastisement
and reproof that you never deserved; you have been
unnecessarily discouraged by severity; you are not guilty of
the wrongs and sins for which you have been reproved.
The True Witness declares that when you suppose you are
really in a good condition of prosperity you are in need of
everything. It is not enough for ministers to present
theoretical subjects; they should also present those
subjects which are practical. They need to study the
practical lessons that Christ gave His disciples and make a
close application of the same to their own souls and to the
people. Because Christ bears this rebuking testimony, shall
we suppose that He is destitute of
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tender love to His people? Oh, no! He who died to redeem man
from death, loves with a divine love, and those whom He
loves He rebukes. "As many as I love, I rebuke and chasten."
But many will not receive the message that Heaven in mercy
sends them. They cannot endure to be told of their neglect
of duty and of their wrongs, their selfishness, their pride
and love of the world.
I was shown that God has laid upon my husband and me a
special work, to bear a plain testimony to His people, and
to cry aloud and spare not, to show the people their
transgressions and the house of Israel their sins. But there
is a class who will not receive the message of reproof, and
they raise their hands to shield those whom God would
reprove and correct. These are ever found sympathizing with
those whom God would make to feel their true poverty.
The word of the Lord, spoken through His servants, is
received by many with questionings and fears. And many will
defer their obedience to the warning and reproofs given,
waiting till every shadow of uncertainty is removed from
their minds. The unbelief that demands perfect knowledge
will never yield to the evidence that God is pleased to
give. He requires of His people faith that rests upon the
weight of evidence, not upon perfect knowledge. Those
followers of Christ who accept the light that God sends them
must obey the voice of God speaking to them when there are
many other voices crying out against it. It requires
discernment to distinguish the voice of God.
Those who will not act when the Lord calls upon them, but
who wait for more certain evidence and more favorable
opportunities, will walk in darkness, for the light will be
withdrawn. The evidence given one day, if rejected, may
never be repeated.
Many are tempted in regard to our work and are calling it in
question. Some, in their tempted condition, charge the
difficulties and perplexities of the people of God to the
testimonies of reproof that we have given them. They think
the trouble is with the ones who bear the message of
warning, who
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point out the sins of the people and correct their errors.
Many are deceived by the adversary of souls. They think that
the labors of Brother and Sister White would be acceptable
if they were not continually condemning wrong and reproving
sin. I was shown that God has laid this work upon us, and
when we are hindered from meeting with His people and from
bearing our testimony and counteracting the surmisings and
jealousies of the unconsecrated, then Satan presses in his
temptations very strongly. Those who have been ever on the
questioning, doubting side feel at liberty to suggest their
doubts and to insinuate their unbelief. Some have
sanctimonious and apparently conscientious and very pious
doubts, which they cautiously drop, but which have tenfold
more power to strengthen those who are wrong, and to lessen
our influence and weaken the confidence of God's people in
our work, than if they came out more frankly. These poor
souls, I saw, were deceived by Satan. They flatter
themselves that they are all right, that they are in favor
with God and are rich in spiritual discernment, when they
are poor, blind, and wretched. They are doing the work of
Satan, but think they have a zeal for God.
Some will not receive the testimony that God has given us to
bear, flattering themselves that we may be deceived and that
they may be right. They think that the people of God are not
in need of plain dealing and of reproof, but that God is
with them. These tempted ones, whose souls have ever been at
war with the faithful reproving of sin, would cry: Speak
unto us smooth things. What disposition will these make of
the message of the True Witness to the Laodiceans? There can
be no deception here. This message must be borne to a
lukewarm church by God's servants. It must arouse His people
from their security and dangerous deception in regard to
their real standing before God. This testimony, if received,
will arouse to action and lead to self-abasement and
confession of sins. The True Witness says: "I know thy
works, that thou art neither cold nor hot." And again, "As
many as I love, I rebuke
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and chasten: be zealous therefore, and repent." Then comes
the promise: "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 in My throne, even as
I also overcame, and am set down with My Father in His
throne."
The people of God must see their wrongs and arouse to
zealous repentance and a putting away of those sins which
have brought them into such a deplorable condition of
poverty, blindness, wretchedness, and fearful deception. I
was shown that the pointed testimony must live in the
church. This alone will answer to the message to the
Laodiceans. Wrongs must be reproved, sin must be called sin,
and iniquity must be met promptly and decidedly, and put
away from us as a people.
Fighting the Spirit of God
Those who have a spirit of opposition to the work that for
twenty-six years we have been pressed by the Spirit of God
to do, and who would break down our testimony, I saw are not
fighting against us, but against God, who has laid upon us
the burden of a work that He has not given to others. Those
who question and quibble, and think it a virtue to doubt,
and who would discourage; those who have been the means of
making our work hard and of weakening our faith, hope, and
courage have been the ones to surmise evil, to insinuate
suspicious charges, and to watch with jealousy for occasion
against us. They take it for granted that because we have
human weaknesses it is a positive evidence that we are wrong
and that they are right. If they can find a semblance of
anything that they can use to injure us they do it with a
spirit of triumph and are ready to denounce our work of
reproving wrong and condemning sin as a harsh, dictatorial
spirit.
But while we do not accept their version of our case as the
reason for our afflictions, while we maintain that God has
appointed us to a more trying work than He has others, we
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acknowledge with humility of soul and with repentance that
our faith and courage have been severely tried and that we
have sometimes failed to trust wholly in Him who has
appointed us our work. When we gather courage again, after
sore disappointment and trials, we deeply regret that we
ever distrusted God, gave way to human weaknesses, and
permitted discouragement to cloud our faith and lessen our
confidence in God. I have been shown that God's ancient
servants suffered disappointments and discouragements as
well as we poor mortals. We were in good company;
nevertheless this did not excuse us.
As my husband has stood by my side to sustain me in my work
and has borne a plain testimony in unison with the work of
the Spirit of God, many have felt that it was he personally
who was injuring them, when it was the Lord who laid upon
him the burden and who was, through His servant, reproving
them and seeking to bring them where they would repent of
their wrongs and have the favor of God.
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 God's
faithful servants as hard as possible.
If my husband has been pressed beyond measure and has become
discouraged and desponding, if we have at times seen nothing
desirable in life that we should choose it, this is nothing
strange or new. Elijah, one of God's great and mighty
prophets, as he fled for his life from the rage of the
infuriated Jezebel, a fugitive, weary and travel-worn,
desired to die rather
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than to live. His bitter disappointment in regard to
Israel's faithfulness had crushed his spirits, and he felt
that he could no longer put confidence in man. In the day of
Job's affliction and darkness, he utters these words: "Let
the day perish wherein I was born."
Those who are not accustomed to feel to the very depths, who
have not stood under burdens as a cart beneath sheaves, and
who have never had their interest identified so closely with
the cause and work of God that it seems to be a part of
their very being and dearer to them than life, cannot
appreciate the feelings of my husband any more than Israel
could appreciate the feelings of Elijah. We deeply regret
being disheartened, whatever the circumstances may have
been.
Ahab's Case a Warning
Under the perverted rule of Ahab, Israel departed from God
and corrupted their ways before Him. "And Ahab the son of
Omri did evil in the sight of the Lord above all that were
before him. And it came to pass, as if it had been a light
thing for him to walk in the sins of Jeroboam the son of
Nebat, that he took to wife Jezebel the daughter of Ethbaal
king of the Zidonians, and went and served Baal, and
worshiped him. And he reared up an altar for Baal in the
house of Baal, which he had built in Samaria. And Ahab made
a grove; and Ahab did more to provoke the Lord God of Israel
to anger than all the kings of Israel that were before him."
Ahab was weak in moral power. He did not have a high sense
of sacred things; he was selfish and unprincipled. His union
by marriage with a woman of decided character and positive
temperament, who was devoted to idolatry, made them both
special agents of Satan to lead the people of God into
idolatry and terrible apostasy. The determined spirit of
Jezebel molded the character of Ahab. His selfish nature was
incapable of appreciating the mercies of God to His people
and his obligation to God as the guardian and leader of
Israel. The fear of God was daily growing less in Israel.
The blasphemous
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tokens of their blind idolatry were to be seen among the
Israel of God There were none who dared to expose their
lives by openly standing forth in opposition to the
prevailing blasphemous idolatry. The altars of Baal, and the
priests of Baal who sacrificed to the sun, moon, and stars,
were conspicuous everywhere. They had consecrated temples
and groves wherein the work of men's hands was placed to be
worshiped. The benefits which God gave to this people called
forth from them no gratitude to the Giver. All the bounties
of heaven,--the running brooks, the streams of living
waters, the gentle dew, the showers of rain which refreshed
the earth and caused their fields to bring forth
abundantly,--these they ascribed to the favor of their gods.
Elijah's faithful soul was grieved. His indignation was
aroused, and he was jealous for the glory of God. He saw
that Israel was plunged into fearful apostasy. And when he
called to mind the great things that God had wrought for
them, he was overwhelmed with grief and amazement. But all
this was forgotten by the majority of the people. He went
before the Lord, and, with his soul wrung with anguish,
pleaded for Him to save His people if it must be by
judgments. He pleaded with God to withhold from His
ungrateful people dew and rain, the treasures of heaven,
that apostate Israel might look in vain to their gods, their
idols of gold, wood, and stone, the sun, moon, and stars, to
water and enrich the earth, and cause it to bring forth
plentifully. The Lord told Elijah that He had heard his
prayer and would withhold dew and rain from His people until
they should turn unto Him with repentance.
Achan's Sin and Punishment
God had specially guarded His people against mingling with
the idolatrous nations around them, lest their hearts should
be deceived by the attractive groves and shrines, temples
and altars, which were arranged in the most expensive,
alluring manner to pervert the senses so that God would be
supplanted in the minds of the people.
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The city of Jericho was devoted to the most extravagant
idolatry. The inhabitants were very wealthy, but all the
riches that God had given them they counted as the gift of
their gods. They had gold and silver in abundance; but, like
the people before the Flood, they were corrupt and
blasphemous, and insulted and provoked the God of heaven by
their wicked works. God's judgments were awakened against
Jericho. It was a stronghold. But the Captain of the Lord's
host Himself came from heaven to lead the armies of heaven
in an attack upon the city. Angels of God laid hold of the
massive walls and brought them to the ground. God had said
that the city of Jericho should be accursed and that all
should perish except Rahab and her household. These should
be saved because of the favor that Rahab showed the
messengers of the Lord. The word of the Lord to the people
was: "And ye, in anywise keep yourselves from the accursed
thing, lest ye make yourselves accursed, when ye take of the
accursed thing, and make the camp of Israel a curse, and
trouble it." "And Joshua adjured them at that time, saying,
Cursed be the man before the Lord, that riseth up and
buildeth this city Jericho: he shall lay the foundation
thereof in his first-born, and in his youngest son shall he
set up the gates of it."
God was very particular in regard to Jericho, lest the
people should be charmed with the things that the
inhabitants had worshiped and their hearts be diverted from
God. He guarded His people
by most positive commands; yet notwithstanding the solemn
injunction from God by the mouth of Joshua, Achan ventured
to transgress. His covetousness led him to take of the
treasures that God had forbidden him to touch because the
curse of God was upon them. And because of this man's sin
the Israel of God were as weak as water before their
enemies.
Joshua and the elders of Israel were in great affliction.
They lay before the ark of God in most abject humility
because the Lord was wroth with His people. They prayed and
wept before God. The Lord spoke to Joshua: "Get thee up;
wherefore
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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
from among you."
Duty to Reprove Sin
I have been shown that God here illustrates how He regards
sin among those who profess to be His commandment-keeping
people. Those whom He has specially honored with witnessing
the remarkable exhibitions of His power, as did ancient
Israel, and who will even then venture to disregard His
express directions, will be subjects of His wrath. He would
teach His people that disobedience and sin are exceedingly
offensive to Him and are not to be lightly regarded. He
shows us that when His people are found in sin they should
at once take decided measures to put that sin from them,
that His frown may not rest upon them all. But if the sins
of the people are passed over by those in responsible
positions, His frown will be upon them, and the people of
God, as a body, will be held responsible for those sins. In
His dealings with His people in the past the Lord shows the
necessity of purifying the church from wrongs. One sinner
may diffuse darkness that will exclude the light of God from
the entire congregation. When the people realize that
darkness is settling upon them, and they do not know the
cause, they should seek God earnestly, in great humility and
self-abasement, until the wrongs which grieve His Spirit are
searched out and put away.
The prejudice which has arisen against us because we have
reproved the wrongs that God has shown me existed, and the
cry that has been raised of harshness and severity, are
unjust. God bids us speak, and we will not be silent. If
wrongs are
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apparent among His people, and if the servants of God pass
on indifferent to them, they virtually sustain and justify
the sinner, and are alike guilty and will just as surely
receive the displeasure of God; for they will be made
responsible for the sins of the guilty. In vision I have
been pointed to many instances where the displeasure of God
has been incurred by a neglect on the part of His servants
to deal with the wrongs and sins existing among them. Those
who have excused these
wrongs have been thought by the people to be very amiable
and lovely in disposition, simply because they shunned to
discharge a plain Scriptural duty. The task was not
agreeable to their feelings; therefore they avoided it.
The spirit of hatred which has existed with some because the
wrongs among God's people have been reproved has brought
blindness and a fearful deception upon their own souls,
making it impossible for them to discriminate between right
and wrong. They have put out their own spiritual eyesight.
They may witness wrongs, but they do not feel as did Joshua
and humble themselves because the danger of souls is felt by
them.
The true people of God, who have the spirit of the work of
the Lord and the salvation of souls at heart, will ever view
sin in its real, sinful character. They will always be on
the side of faithful and plain dealing with sins which
easily beset the people of God. Especially in the closing
work for the church, in the sealing time of the one hundred
and forty-four thousand who are to stand without fault
before the throne of God, will they feel most deeply the
wrongs of God's professed people. This is forcibly set forth
by the prophet's illustration of the last work under the
figure of the men each having a slaughter weapon in his
hand. One man among them was clothed with linen, with a
writer's inkhorn by his side. "And the Lord said unto him,
Go through the midst of the city, through the midst of
Jerusalem, and set a mark upon the foreheads of the men that
sigh and that cry for all the abominations that be done in
the midst thereof."
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Who are standing in the counsel of God at this time? Is it
those who virtually excuse wrongs among the professed people
of God and who murmur in their hearts, if not openly,
against those who would reprove sin? Is it those who take
their stand against them and sympathize with those who
commit wrong? No, indeed! Unless they repent, and leave the
work of Satan in oppressing those who have the burden of the
work and in holding up the hands of sinners in Zion, they
will never receive the mark of God's sealing approval. They
will fall in the general destruction of the wicked,
represented by the work of the five men bearing slaughter
weapons. Mark this point with care: Those who receive the
pure mark of truth, wrought in them by the power of the Holy
Ghost, represented by a mark by the man in linen, are those
"that sigh and that cry for all the abominations that be
done" in the church. Their love for purity and the honor and
glory of God is such, and they have so clear a view of the
exceeding sinfulness of sin, that they are represented as
being in agony, even sighing and crying. Read the ninth
chapter of Ezekiel.
But the general slaughter of all those who do not thus see
the wide contrast between sin and righteousness, and do not
feel as those do who stand in the counsel of God and receive
the mark, is described in the order to the five men with
slaughter weapons: "Go ye after him through the city, and
smite: let not your eye spare, neither have ye pity: slay
utterly old and young, both maids, and little children, and
women: but come not near any man upon whom is the mark; and
begin at My sanctuary."
In the case of Achan's sin God said to Joshua: "Neither will
I be with you any more, except ye destroy the accursed from
among you." How does this instance compare with the course
pursued by those who will not raise their voice against sin
and wrong, but whose sympathies are ever found with those
who trouble the camp of Israel with their sins? Said God to
Joshua: "Thou canst
not stand before thine enemies, until ye take away the
accursed thing from among you." He pronounced
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the punishment which would follow the transgression of His
covenant.
Joshua then began a diligent search to find out the guilty
one. He took Israel by their tribes, then by their families,
and next individually; and Achan was designated as the
guilty one. But that the matter might be plain to all
Israel, that there should be no occasion given them to
murmur and to say that the guiltless was made to suffer,
Joshua used policy. He knew Achan was the transgressor and
that he had concealed his sin and provoked God against His
people. Joshua discreetly induced Achan to make confession
of his sin, that God's honor and justice might be vindicated
before Israel. "And Joshua said unto Achan, My son, give, I
pray thee, glory to the Lord God of Israel, and make
confession unto Him; and tell me now what thou hast done;
hide it not from me.
"And Achan answered Joshua, and said, Indeed I have sinned
against the Lord God of Israel, and thus and thus have I
done: When I saw among the spoils a goodly Babylonish
garment, and two hundred shekels of silver, and a wedge of
gold of fifty shekels weight, then I coveted them, and took
them; and, behold, they are hid in the earth in the midst of
my tent, and the silver under it. So Joshua sent messengers,
and they ran unto the tent; and, behold, it was hid in his
tent, and the silver under it. And they took them out of the
midst of the tent, and brought them unto Joshua, and unto
all the children of Israel, and laid them out before the
Lord. And Joshua, and all Israel with him, took Achan the
son of Zerah, and the silver, and the garment, and the wedge
of gold, and his sons, and his daughters, and his oxen, and
his asses, and his sheep, and his tent, and all that he had:
and they brought them unto the Valley of Achor. And Joshua
said, Why hast thou troubled us? the Lord shall trouble thee
this day. And all Israel stoned him with stones, and burned
them with fire, after they had stoned them with stones."
The Lord told Joshua that Achan had not only taken the
things which He had positively charged them not to take,
lest
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they be accursed, but he had stolen and had also dissembled.
The Lord said that Jericho and all its spoils should be
consumed, except the gold and silver, which were to be
reserved for the treasury of the Lord. The victory of taking
Jericho was not obtained through warfare or the exposure of
the people. The Captain of the Lord's host had led the
armies of heaven. The battle was the Lord's; it was He who
fought the battle. The children of Israel did not strike a
blow. The victory and glory were the Lord's, and the spoils
were His. He directed all to be consumed except the gold and
silver, which He reserved for His treasury. Achan understood
well the reserve made and that the treasures of gold and
silver which he coveted were the Lord's. He stole from God's
treasury for his own benefit.
Covetousness Among God's People
I saw that many who profess to be keeping the commandments
of God are appropriating to their own use the means which
the Lord has entrusted to them and which should come into
His treasury. They rob God in tithes and in offerings. They
dissemble and withhold from Him to their own hurt. They
bring leanness and poverty upon themselves and darkness upon
the church because of their covetousness, their dissembling,
and their robbing God in tithes and in offerings.
I saw that many souls will sink in darkness because of their
covetousness. The plain, straight testimony must live in the
church, or the curse of God will rest upon His people as
surely as it did upon ancient Israel because of their sins.
God holds His people, as a body, responsible for the sins
existing in individuals among them. If the leaders of the
church neglect to diligently search out the sins which bring
the displeasure of God upon the body, they become
responsible for these sins. But to deal with minds is the
nicest work in which men ever engaged. All are not fitted to
correct the erring. They have not wisdom to deal justly,
while loving mercy. They are not inclined to see the
necessity of mingling love and tender
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compassion with faithful reproofs. Some are ever needlessly
severe, and do not feel the necessity of the injunction of
the apostle: "And of some have compassion, making a
difference: and others save with fear, pulling them out of
the fire."
There are many who do not have the discretion of Joshua and
who have no special duty to search out wrongs and to deal
promptly with the sins existing among them. Let not such
hinder those who have the burden of this work upon them; let
them not stand in the way of those who have this duty to do.
Some make it a point to question and doubt and find fault
because others do the work that God has not laid upon them.
These stand directly in the way to hinder those upon whom
God has laid the burden of reproving and correcting
prevailing sins in order that His frown may be turned away
from His people. Should a case like Achan's be among us,
there are many who would accuse those who might act the part
of Joshua in searching out the wrong, of having a wicked,
fault-finding spirit. God is not to be trifled with and His
warnings disregarded with impunity by a perverse people.
I was shown that the manner of Achan's confession was
similar to the confessions that some among us have made and
will make. They hide their wrongs and refuse to make a
voluntary confession until God searches them out, and then
they acknowledge their sins. A few persons pass on in a
course of wrong until they become hardened. They may even
know that the church is burdened, as Achan knew that Israel
were made weak before their enemies because of his guilt.
Yet their consciences do not condemn them. They will not
relieve the church by humbling their proud, rebellious
hearts before God and putting away their wrongs. God's
displeasure is upon His people, and He will not manifest His
power in the midst of them while sins exist among them and
are fostered by those in responsible positions.
Those who work in the fear of God to rid the church of
hindrances and to correct grievous wrongs, that the people
of God may see the necessity of abhorring sin and may
prosper
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in purity, and that the name of God may be glorified, will
ever meet with resisting influences from the unconsecrated.
Zephaniah thus describes the true state of this class and
the terrible judgments that will come upon them:
"And it shall come to pass at that time, that I will search
Jerusalem with candles, and punish the men that are settled
on their lees: that say in their heart, The Lord will not do
good, neither will He do evil." "The great day of the Lord
is near, it is near, and hasteth greatly, even the voice of
the day of the Lord: the mighty man shall cry there
bitterly. That day is a day of wrath, a day of trouble and
distress, a day of wasteness and desolation, a day of
darkness and gloominess, a day of clouds and thick darkness,
a day of the trumpet and alarm against the fenced cities,
and against the high towers. And I will bring distress upon
men, that they shall walk like blind men, because they have
sinned against the Lord and their blood shall be poured out
as dust, and their flesh as the dung. Neither their silver
nor their gold shall be able to deliver them in the day of
the Lord's wrath; but the whole land shall be devoured by
the fire of His jealousy: for He shall make even a speedy
riddance of all them that dwell in the land."
Confessions Made Too Late
When a crisis finally comes, as it surely will, and God
speaks in behalf of His people, those who have sinned, those
who have been a cloud of darkness and who have stood
directly in the way of God's working for His people, may
become alarmed at the length they have gone in murmuring and
in bringing discouragement upon the cause; and, like Achan,
becoming terrified, they may acknowledge that they have
sinned. But their confessions are too late and are not of
the right kind to benefit themselves, although they may
relieve the cause of God. Such do not make their confessions
because of a conviction of their true state and a sense of
how displeasing their course has been to God. God may give
this class another
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test, another proving, and let them show that they are no
better prepared to stand free from all rebellion and sin
than before their confessions were made. They are inclined
to be ever on the side of wrong. And when the call is made
for those who will be on the Lord's side to make a decided
move to vindicate the right, they will manifest their true
position. Those who have been nearly all their lives
controlled by a spirit as foreign to the Spirit of God as
was Achan's will be very passive when the time comes for
decided action on the part of all. They will not claim to be
on either side. The power of Satan has so long held them
that they seem blinded and have no inclination to stand in
defense of right. If they do not take a determined course on
the wrong side, it is not because they have a clear sense of
the right, but because they dare not.
God will not be trifled with. It is in the time of conflict
that the true colors should be flung to the breeze. It is
then that the standard-bearers need to be firm and let their
true position be known. It is then that the skill of every
true soldier for the right is tested. Shirkers can never
wear the laurels of victory. Those who are true and loyal
will not conceal the fact, but will put heart and might into
the work, and venture their all in the struggle, let the
battle turn as it will. God is a sin-hating God. And those
who encourage the sinner, saying, It is well with thee, God
will curse.
Confessions of sin made at the right time to relieve the
people of God will be accepted of Him. But there are those
among us who will make confessions, as did Achan, too late
to save themselves. God may prove them and give them another
trial, for the sake of evidencing to His people that they
will not endure one test, one proving of God. They are not
in harmony with right. They despise the straight testimony
that reaches the heart, and would rejoice to see everyone
silenced who gives reproof.
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Elijah Reproves Ahab
The people of Israel had gradually lost their fear and
reverence for God until His word through Joshua had no
weight with them. "In his [Ahab's] days did Hiel the
Bethelite build Jericho: he laid the foundation thereof in
Abiram his first-born, and set up the gates thereof in his
youngest son Segub, according to the word of the Lord, which
he spake by Joshua the son of Nun."
While Israel was apostatizing, Elijah remained a loyal and
true prophet of God. His faithful soul was greatly
distressed as he saw that unbelief and infidelity were fast
separating the children of Israel from God, and he prayed
that God would save His people. He entreated that the Lord
would not wholly cast away His sinning people, but that He
would by judgments if necessary arouse them to repentance
and not permit them to go to still greater lengths in sin
and thus provoke Him to destroy them as a nation.
The message of the Lord came to Elijah to go to Ahab with
the denunciations of His judgments because of the sins of
Israel. Elijah traveled day and night until he reached the
palace of Ahab. He solicited no admission, and waited not to
be formally announced. All unexpectedly to Ahab, Elijah
stands before the astonished king of Samaria in the coarse
garments usually worn by the prophets. He makes no apology
for his abrupt appearance, without invitation; but, raising
his hands to heaven, he solemnly affirms by the living God,
who made the heavens and the earth, the judgments which
would come upon Israel: "There shall not be dew nor rain
these years, but according to my word."
This startling denunciation of God's judgments because of
the sins of Israel fell like a thunderbolt upon the apostate
king. He seemed to be paralyzed with amazement and terror;
and before he could recover from his astonishment, Elijah,
without waiting to see the effect of his message,
disappeared as suddenly as he came. His work was to speak
the word of
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woe from God, and he instantly withdrew. His word had locked
up the treasures of heaven, and his word was the only key
which could open them again.
The Lord knew that there was no safety for His servant among
the children of Israel. He would not trust him with apostate
Israel, but sent him to find an asylum among a heathen
nation. He directed him to a woman who was a widow and who
was in such poverty that she could barely sustain life with
the most meager fare. A heathen woman living up to the best
light she had was
in a more acceptable state with God than the widows of
Israel, who had been blessed with special privileges and
great light, and yet did not live according to the light
which God had given them. As the Hebrews had rejected light,
they were left in darkness, and God would not trust His
servant among His people, who had provoked His divine anger.
Now there is an opportunity for apostate Ahab and pagan
Jezebel to test the power of their gods and to prove the
word of Elijah false. Jezebel's prophets are numbered by
hundreds. Against them all stands Elijah, alone. His word
has locked heaven. If Baal can give dew and rain, and cause
vegetation to flourish; if he can cause the brooks and
streams to flow on as usual, independent of the treasures of
heaven in the showers of rain, then let the king of Israel
worship him and the people say that he is God.
Elijah was a man subject to like passions as ourselves. His
mission to Ahab, and the terrible denunciation to him of the
judgments of God, required courage and faith. On his way to
Samaria the perpetually flowing streams, the hills covered
with verdure, the forests of stately, flourishing
tress,--everything his eye rested upon flourishing in beauty
and glory,-- would naturally suggest unbelief. How can all
these things in nature, now is flourishing, be burned with
drought? How can these streams that water the land and that
have never been known to cease their flow, become dry? But
Elijah did not cherish unbelief. He went forth on his
mission at the peril of
275
his life. He fully believed that God would humble His
apostate people and that through the visitation of His
judgments He would bring them to humiliation and repentance.
He ventured everything in the mission before him.
When Ahab recovers in a degree from his astonishment at the
words of Elijah, the prophet is gone. He makes diligent
inquiry for him, but no one has seen him or can give any
information respecting him. Ahab informs Jezebel of the word
of woe that Elijah has uttered in his presence, and her
hatred against the prophet is expressed to the priests of
Baal. They unite with her in denouncing and cursing the
prophet of Jehovah. The news of the prophet's denunciations
spread throughout the land, arousing the fears of some and
the wrath of many.
After a few months the earth, unrefreshed by dew or rain,
becomes dry, and vegetation withers. The streams that have
never been known to cease their flow, decrease, and the
brooks dry up. Jezebel's prophets offer sacrifices to their
gods and call upon them night and day to refresh the earth
by dew and rain. But the incantations and deceptions
formerly practiced by them to deceive the people do not
answer the purpose now. The priests have done everything to
appease the anger of their gods; with a perseverance and
zeal worthy of a better cause have they lingered around
their pagan altars, while the flames of sacrifice burn on
all the high places, and the fearful cries and entreaties of
the priests of Baal are heard night after night through
doomed Samaria. But the clouds do not appear in the heavens
to cut off the burning rays of the sun. The word of Elijah
stands firm, and nothing that Baal's priests can do will
change it.
An entire year passes, and another commences, and yet there
is no rain. The earth is parched as though a fire had passed
over it. The flourishing fields are as the scorching desert.
The air
becomes dry and suffocating, and the dust-storm blinds the
eyes and nearly stops the breath. The groves of Baal are
leafless, and the forest trees give no shade, but
276
appear as skeletons. Hunger and thirst are telling upon man
and beast with fearful mortality.
All this evidence of God's justice and judgment does not
awaken Israel to repentance. Jezebel is filled with insane
madness. She will not bend nor yield to the God of heaven.
Baal's prophets, Ahab, Jezebel, and nearly the whole of
Israel, charge their calamity upon Elijah. Ahab has sent to
every kingdom and nation in search of the strange prophet
and has required an oath of the kingdoms and nations of
Israel that they know nothing in regard to him. Elijah had
locked heaven with his word and had taken the key with him,
and he could not be found.
Jezebel then decides that as she cannot make Elijah feel her
murderous power, she will be revenged by destroying the
prophets of God in Israel. No one who professed to be a
prophet of God shall live. This determined, infuriated woman
executes her work of madness by slaying the Lord's prophets.
Baal's priests and nearly all Israel are so far deluded that
they think that if the prophets of God were slain, the
calamity under which they are suffering would be averted.
But the second year passes, and the pitiless heavens give no
rain. Drought and famine are doing their sad work, and yet
the apostate Israelites do not humble their proud, sinful
hearts before God; but they murmur and complain against the
prophet of God who brought this dreadful state of things
upon them. Fathers and mothers see their children perish,
with no power to relieve them. And yet the people are in
such terrible darkness that they cannot see that the justice
of God is awakened against them because of their sins and
that this terrible calamity is sent in mercy to them to save
them from fully denying and forsaking the God of their
fathers.
It cost Israel suffering and great affliction to be brought
to that repentance that was necessary in order to recover
their lost faith and a clear sense of their responsibility
to God. Their apostasy was more dreadful than drought or
famine. Elijah waited and prayed in faith through the long
years of drought
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and famine that the hearts of Israel, through their
affliction, might be turned from their idolatry to
allegiance to God. But notwithstanding all their sufferings,
they stood firm in their idolatry and looked upon the
prophet of God as the cause of their calamity. And if they
could have had Elijah in their power they would have
delivered him to Jezebel, that she might satisfy her revenge
by taking his life. Because Elijah dared to utter the word
of woe which God bade him, he made himself the object of
their hatred. They could not see God's hand in the judgments
under which they were suffering because of their sins, but
charged them to the man Elijah. They abhorred not the sins
which had brought them under the chastening rod, but hated
the faithful prophet, God's instrument to denounce their
sins and calamity.
"And it came to pass after many days, that the word of the
Lord came to Elijah in the third year, saying, Go, show
thyself unto Ahab; and I will send rain upon the earth."
Elijah hesitates not to
start on his perilous journey. For three years he had been
hated, and hunted from city to city by the mandate of the
king, and the whole nation have given their oath that he
cannot be found. And now, by the word of God, he is to
present himself before Ahab.
During the apostasy of all Israel, and while his master is a
worshiper of Baal, the governor of Ahab's house has proved
faithful to God. At the risk of his own life he has
preserved the prophets of God by hiding them by fifties in a
cave and feeding them. While the servant of Ahab is
searching throughout the kingdom for springs and brooks of
water, Elijah presents himself before him. Obadiah
reverenced the prophet of God, but as Elijah sends him with
a message to the king, he is greatly terrified. He sees
danger and death to himself and also to Elijah. He pleads
earnestly that his life may not be sacrificed; but Elijah
assures him with an oath that he will see Ahab that day. The
prophet will not go to Ahab but as one of God's messengers,
to command respect, and he sends a message by Obadiah:
"Behold, Elijah is here." If Ahab wants to see
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Elijah, he now has the opportunity to come to him. Elijah
will not go to Ahab.
With astonishment mingled with terror the king hears the
message that Elijah whom he fears and hates, is coming to
meet him. He has long sought for the prophet that he might
destroy him, and he knows that Elijah would not expose his
life to come to him unless guarded or with some terrible
denunciation. He remembers the withered arm of Jeroboam and
decides that it is not safe to lift up his hand against the
messenger of God. And with fear and trembling, and with a
large retinue and an imposing display of armies, he hastens
to meet Elijah. And as he meets face to face the man whom he
has so long sought, he dares not harm him. The king, so
passionate, and so filled with hatred against Elijah, seems
to be powerless and unmanned in his presence. As he meets
the prophet he cannot refrain from speaking the language of
his heart: "Art thou he that troubleth Israel?" Elijah,
indignant, and jealous for the honor and glory of God,
answers the charge of Ahab with boldness: "I have not
troubled Israel; but thou, and thy father's house, in that
ye have forsaken the commandments of the Lord."
The prophet, as God's messenger, had reproved the sins of
the people, denouncing upon them the judgments of God
because of their wickedness. And now, standing alone in
conscious innocence, firm in his integrity, surrounded by
the train of armed men, Elijah shows no timidity, neither
does he show the least reverence to the king. The man whom
God has talked with, and who has a clear sense of how God
regards man in his sinful depravity, has no apology to make
to Ahab nor homage to give him. As God's messenger, Elijah
now commands and Ahab at once obeys as though Elijah were
monarch and he the subject.
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The Sacrifice on Mount Carmel
Elijah demands a convocation at Carmel of all Israel and
also of all the prophets of Baal. The awful solemnity in the
looks of the prophet gives him the appearance of one
standing in the presence of the Lord God of Israel. The
condition of Israel in their apostasy demands a firm
demeanor, stern speech, and commanding authority. God
prepares the message to fit the time and occasion. Sometimes
He puts His Spirit upon His messengers to sound an alarm day
and night, as did His messenger John: "Prepare ye the way of
the Lord." Then, again, men of action are needed who will
not be swerved from duty, but whose energy will arouse and
demand, "Who is on the Lord's side?" let him come over with
us. God will have a fitting message to meet His people in
their varied conditions.
Swift messengers are sent throughout the kingdom with the
message from Elijah.
Representatives are sent from cities, towns, villages, and
families. All seem in haste to answer the call, as though
some wonderful miracle is to be performed. According to
Elijah's command, Ahab gathers the prophets of Baal at
Carmel. The heart of Israel's apostate leader is overawed,
and he tremblingly follows the direction of the stern
prophet of God.
The people assemble upon Mount Carmel, a place of beauty
when the dew and rain fall upon it causing it to flourish;
but now its beauty is languishing under the curse of God.
Upon this mount, which was the excellency of groves and
flowers, Baal's prophets had erected altars for their pagan
worship. This mountain was conspicuous; it overlooked the
surrounding countries and was in sight of a large portion of
the kingdom. As God had been signally dishonored by the
idolatrous worship carried on here, Elijah chose this as the
most conspicuous place for the display of God's power and to
vindicate His honor.
Jezebel's prophets, eight hundred and fifty in number, like
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a regiment of soldiers prepared for battle, march out in a
body with instrumental music and imposing display. But there
is trembling in their hearts as they consider that at the
word of this prophet of Jehovah the land of Israel has been
destitute of dew and rain three years. They feel that some
fearful crisis is at hand. They had trusted in their gods,
but could not unsay the words of Elijah and prove him false.
Their gods were indifferent to their frantic cries, prayers,
and sacrifices.
Elijah, early in the morning, stands upon Mount Carmel,
surrounded by apostate Israel and the prophets of Baal. A
lone man in that vast multitude, he stands undaunted. He
whom the whole kingdom has charged with its weight of woe is
before them, unterrified and unattended by visible armies
and imposing display. He stands, clad in his coarse garment,
with awful solemnity in his countenance, as though fully
aware of his sacred commission as the servant of God to
execute His commands. Elijah fastens his eyes upon the
highest ridge of mountains where had stood the altar of
Jehovah when the mountain was covered with flourishing trees
and flowers. The blight of God is now upon it; all the
desolation of Israel is in full view of the neglected,
torn-down altar of Jehovah, and in sight are the altars of
Baal. Ahab stands at the head of the priests of Baal, and
all wait in anxious, fearful expectation for the words of
Elijah.
In the full light of the sun, surrounded by thousands,--men
of war, prophets of Baal, and the monarch of Israel,--stands
the defenseless man, Elijah, apparently alone, yet not
alone. The most powerful host of heaven surrounds him.
Angels who excel in strength have come from heaven to shield
the faithful and righteous prophet. With stern and
commanding voice Elijah cries: "How
long halt ye between two opinions? if the Lord be God,
follow Him: but if Baal, then follow him. And the people
answered him not a word." Not one in that vast assembly
dared utter one word for God and show his loyalty to
Jehovah.
What astonishing deception and fearful blindness had, like
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a dark cloud, covered Israel! This blindness and apostasy
had not closed about them suddenly; it had come upon them
gradually as they had not heeded the word of reproof and
warning which the Lord had sent to them because of their
pride and their sins. And now, in this fearful crisis, in
the presence of the idolatrous priests and the apostate
king, they remained neutral. If God abhors one sin above
another, of which His people are guilty, it is doing nothing
in case of an emergency. Indifference and neutrality in a
religious crisis is regarded of God as a grievous crime and
equal to the very worst type of hostility against God.
All Israel is silent. Again the voice of Elijah is heard
addressing them: "I, even I only, remain a prophet of the
Lord; but Baal's prophets are four hundred and fifty men.
Let them therefore give us two bullocks; and let them choose
one bullock for themselves, and cut it in pieces, and lay it
on wood, and put no fire under: and I will dress the other
bullock, and lay it on wood, and put no fire under: and call
ye on the name of your gods, and I will call on the name of
the Lord: and the God that answereth by fire, let Him be
God. And all the people answered and said, It is well
spoken. And Elijah said unto the prophets of Baal, Choose
you one bullock for yourselves, and dress it first; for ye
are many; and call on the name of your gods, but put no fire
under. And they took the bullock which was given them, and
they dressed it, and called on the name of Baal from morning
even until noon, saying, O Baal, hear us. But there was no
voice, nor any that answered. And they leaped upon the altar
which was made."
The proposition of Elijah is reasonable. The people dare not
evade it, and they find courage to answer: The word is good.
The prophets of Baal dare not dissent or evade the matter.
God has directed this trial and has prepared confusion for
the authors of idolatry and a signal triumph for His name.
The priests of Baal dare not do otherwise than accept the
conditions. With terror and guiltiness in their hearts,
while outwardly bold and defiant, they rear their altar, lay
on the wood
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and the victim, and then begin their incantations, their
chanting and bawling, characteristics of pagan worship.
Their shrill cries re-echo through forests and mountains: "O
Baal, hear us." The priests gather in an army about their
altars, and with leaping, and writhing, and screaming, and
stamping, and with unnatural gestures, and tearing their
hair, and cutting their flesh, they manifest apparent
sincerity.
The morning passes and noon comes, and yet there is no move
of their gods in pity to Baal's priests, the deluded
worshipers of idols. No voice answers their frantic cries.
The priests are continually devising how, by deception, they
can kindle a fire upon the altars and give the glory to
Baal. But the firm eye of Elijah watches every motion. Eight
hundred voices become hoarse. Their garments are covered
with blood, and yet their frantic excitement does not abate.
Their
pleadings are mingled with cursings to their sun-god that he
does not send fire for their altars. Elijah stands by,
watching with eagle eye lest any deception should be
practiced; for he knows that if, by any device, they could
kindle their altar fire, he would be torn in pieces upon the
spot. He wishes to show the people the folly of their
doubting and halting between two opinions when they have the
wonderful works of God's majestic power in their behalf and
innumerable evidences of His infinite mercies and
loving-kindness toward them.
"And it came to pass at noon, that Elijah mocked them, and
said, Cry aloud: for he is a god; either he is talking, or
he is pursuing, or he is in a journey, or peradventure he
sleepeth, and must be awaked. And they cried aloud, and cut
themselves after their manner with knives and lancets, till
the blood gushed out upon them. And it came to pass, when
midday was past, and they prophesied until the time of the
offering of the evening sacrifice, that there was neither
voice, nor any to answer, nor any that regarded."
How gladly would Satan, who fell like lightning from heaven,
come to the help of those whom he has deceived, whose minds
he has controlled, and who are fully devoted to his
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service. Gladly would he send the lightning and kindle their
sacrifices; but Jehovah has set Satan's bounds. He has
restrained his power, and all his devices cannot convey one
spark to Baal's altars. Evening draws on. The prophets of
Baal are weary, faint, and confused. One suggests one thing,
and one another, until they cease their efforts. Their
shrieks and curses no longer resound over Mount Carmel. With
weakness and despair they retire from the contest.
The people have witnessed the terrible demonstrations of the
unreasonable, frantic priests. They have beheld their
leaping upon the altar as though they would grasp the
burning rays from the sun to serve their altars. They have
become tired of the exhibitions of demonism, of pagan
idolatry; and they feel earnest and anxious to hear what
Elijah will speak.
Elijah's turn has now come. "And Elijah said unto all the
people, Come near unto me. And all the people came near unto
him. And he repaired the altar of the Lord that was broken
down. And Elijah took twelve stones, according to the number
of the tribes of the sons of Jacob, unto whom the word of
the Lord came, saying, Israel shall be thy name: and with
the stones he built an altar in the name of the Lord: and he
made a trench about the altar, as great as would contain two
measures of seed. And he put the wood in order, and cut the
bullock in pieces, and laid him on the wood, and said, Fill
four barrels with water, and pour it on the burnt sacrifice,
and on the wood. And he said, Do it the second time. And
they did it the second time. And he said, Do it the third
time. And they did it the third time. And the water ran
round about the altar; and he filled the trench also with
water. And it came to pass at the time of the offering of
the evening sacrifice, that Elijah the prophet came near,
and said, Lord God of Abraham, Isaac, and of Israel, let it
be known this day that Thou art God in Israel, and that I am
Thy servant, and that I have done all these things at Thy
word. Hear me, O Lord, hear me, that this people may know
that Thou art the Lord God, and that Thou hast turned their
heart back again. Then the fire of the
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Lord fell, and consumed the burnt sacrifice, and the wood,
and the stones, and the dust, and licked up the water that
was in the trench. And when all the people saw it, they fell
on their faces: and they said, The Lord, He is the God; the
Lord, He is the God."
Elijah at the hour of evening sacrifice repairs the altar of
God which the apostasy of Israel has allowed the priests of
Baal to tear down. He does not call upon one of the people
to aid him in his laborious work. The altars of Baal are all
prepared; but he turns to the broken-down altar of God,
which is more sacred and precious to him in its unsightly
ruins than all the magnificent altars of Baal.
Elijah respects the Lord's covenant with His people,
although they have apostatized. With calmness and solemnity
he repairs the broken-down altar with twelve stones,
according to the number of the twelve tribes of Israel. The
disappointed priests of Baal, wearied with their vain,
frenzied efforts, are sitting or lying prostrate on the
ground, waiting to see what Elijah will do. They are filled
with fear and hatred toward the prophet for proposing a test
which has exposed their weakness and the inefficiency of
their gods.
The people of Israel stand spellbound, pale, anxious, and
almost breathless with awe, while Elijah calls upon Jehovah,
the Creator of the heavens and the earth. The people have
witnessed the fanatical, unreasonable frenzy of the prophets
of Baal. In contrast they are now privileged to witness the
calm, awe-inspiring deportment of Elijah. He reminds the
people of their degeneracy, which has awakened the wrath of
God against them, and then calls upon them to humble their
hearts and turn to the God of their fathers, that His curse
may be removed from them. Ahab and his idolatrous priests
are looking on with amazement mingled with terror. They
await the result with anxious, solemn silence.
After the victim is laid upon the altar, he commands the
people to flood the sacrifice and the altar with water, and
to fill the trench round about the altar. He then
reverentially
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bows before the unseen God, raises his hands toward heaven,
and offers a calm and simple prayer, unattended with violent
gestures or contortions of the body. No shrieks resound over
Carmel's height. A solemn silence, which is oppressive to
the priests of Baal, rests upon all. In his prayer, Elijah
makes use of no extravagant expressions. He prays to Jehovah
as though He were nigh, witnessing the whole scene, and
hearing his sincere, fervent, yet simple prayer. Baal's
priests have screamed, and foamed, and leaped, and prayed,
very long-- from morning until near evening. Elijah's prayer
is very short, earnest, reverential, and sincere. No sooner
is that prayer uttered than flames of fire descend from
heaven in a distinct manner, like a brilliant flash of
lightning, kindling the wood for sacrifice and consuming the
victim, licking up the water in the trench and consuming
even the stones of the altar. The brilliancy of the blaze
illumes the mountain and is painful to the eyes of the
multitude. The people of the kingdom of Israel not gathered
upon the mount are watching with interest those there
assembled. As the fire descends, they witness it and are
amazed at the sight. It resembles the pillar of fire at the
Red Sea, which by night separated the children of Israel
from the Egyptian host.
The people upon the mountain prostrate themselves in terror
and awe before the unseen God. They cannot look upon the
bright consuming fire sent from heaven. They fear that they
will be consumed in their apostasy and sins, and cry out
with one voice, which resounds over the mountain and echoes
to the plains below with terrible distinctness: "The Lord,
He is the God; the Lord, He is the God." Israel is at last
aroused and undeceived. They see their sin and how greatly
they have dishonored God. Their anger is aroused against the
prophets of Baal. With terror, Ahab and Baal's priests
witness the wonderful exhibition of Jehovah's power. Again
the voice of Elijah is heard in startling words of command
to the people: "Take the prophets of Baal; let not one of
them escape." The people are ready to obey his word. They
seize the false prophets
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who have deluded them, and bring them to the brook Kishon,
and there, with his own hand, Elijah slays these idolatrous
priests.
The judgments of God having been executed upon the false
priests, the people having confessed their sins and
acknowledged their fathers' God, the withering curse of God
is now to be withdrawn, and He is to renew His blessings
unto His people and again refresh the earth with dew and
rain.
Elijah addresses Ahab: "Get thee up, eat and drink; for
there is a sound of abundance of rain." While Ahab went up
to feast, Elijah went up from the fearful sacrifice to the
top of Mount Carmel to pray. His work of slaying the pagan
priests had not unfitted him for the solemn exercise of
prayer. He had performed the will of God. After he had, as
God's instrument, done what he could to remove the cause of
Israel's apostasy by slaying the idolatrous priests, he
could do no more. He then intercedes in behalf of sinning,
apostate Israel. In the most painful position, his face
bowed between his knees, he most earnestly supplicates God
to send rain. Six times in succession he sends his servant
to see if there is any visible token that God has heard his
prayer. He does not become impatient and faithless because
the Lord does not immediately give the token that his prayer
is heard. He continues in earnest prayer, sending his
servant seven times to see if God has granted any signal.
His servant returns the sixth time from his outlook toward
the sea with the discouraging report that there is no sign
of clouds forming in the brassy heavens. The seventh time he
informs Elijah that there is a small cloud to be seen, about
the size of a man's hand. This is enough to satisfy the
faith of Elijah. He does not wait for the heavens to gather
blackness, to make the matter sure. In that small, rising
cloud his faith hears the sound of abundance of rain. His
works are in accordance with his faith. He sends a message
to Ahab by his servant: "Prepare thy chariot, and get thee
down, that the rain stop thee not."
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Elijah's Humility
Here Elijah ventured something upon his faith. He did not
wait for sight. "And it came to pass in the meanwhile, that
the heaven was black with clouds and wind, and there was a
great rain. And Ahab rode, and went to Jezreel. And the hand
of the Lord was on Elijah; and he girded up his loins, and
ran before Ahab to the entrance of Jezreel."
Elijah had passed through great excitement and labor during
the day; but the Spirit of the Lord came upon him because he
had been obedient and had done His will in executing the
idolatrous priests. Some will be ready to say: What a hard,
cruel man Elijah must have been! And anyone who defends the
honor of God at any risk will bring censure and condemnation
upon himself from a large class.
The rain began to descend. It was night, and the blinding
rain prevented Ahab from seeing his course. Elijah, nerved
by the Spirit and power of God, girded his coarse garment
about him and ran before the chariot of Ahab, guiding his
course to the entrance of the city. The prophet of God had
humiliated Ahab before his people. He had slain his
idolatrous priests, and now he wished to show to Israel that
he acknowledged Ahab as his king. As an act of special
homage he guided his chariot, running before it to the
entrance of the gate of the city.
Here is a lesson for young men who profess to be servants of
God, bearing His message, who are exalted in their own
estimation. They can trace nothing remarkable in their
experience, as could Elijah, yet they feel above performing
duties which to them appear menial. They will not come down
from their ministerial dignity to do needful service,
fearing that they will be doing the work of a servant. All
such should learn from the example of Elijah. His word
locked the treasures of heaven, the dew and rain, from the
earth three years. His word alone was the key to unlock
heaven and bring showers
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of rain. He was honored of God as he offered his simple
prayer in the presence of the king and the thousands of
Israel, in answer to which fire flashed from heaven and
kindled the fire upon the altar of sacrifice. His hand
executed the judgment of God in slaying eight hundred and
fifty priests of Baal; and yet, after the exhausting toil
and most signal triumph of the day, he who could bring
clouds and rain and fire from heaven was willing to perform
the service of a menial and run before the chariot of Ahab
in the darkness and in the wind and rain to serve the
sovereign whom he had not feared to rebuke to his face
because of his sins and crimes. The king passed within the
gates. Elijah wrapped himself in his mantle and lay upon the
bare earth.
Elijah in Despondency
After Elijah had shown such undaunted courage in a contest
between life and death, after he had triumphed over the
king, the priests, and the people, we would naturally
suppose that he would never give way to despondency or be
awed into timidity.
After his first appearance to Ahab, denouncing upon him the
judgments of God because of his and Israel's apostasy, God
directed his course from Jezebel's power to a place of
safety in the mountains, by the brook Cherith. There He
honored Elijah by sending food to him morning and evening by
an angel of heaven. Then, as the brook became dry, He sent
him to the widow of Sarepta, and wrought a miracle daily to
keep the widow's family and Elijah in food. After he had
been blessed with evidences of such love and care from God,
we would suppose that Elijah would never distrust Him. But
the apostle tells us that he was a man of like passions as
we, and subject, as we are, to temptations.
Ahab related to his wife the wonderful events of the day and
the marvelous exhibitions of the power of God showing that
Jehovah, the Creator of the heavens and the earth, was God;
also that Elijah had slain the prophets of Baal. At this,
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Jezebel, who was hardened in sin, became infuriated. Bold,
defiant, and determined in her idolatry, she declared to
Ahab that Elijah should not live.
That night a messenger aroused the weary prophet and
delivered the word of Jezebel, given in the name of her
pagan gods, that she would, in the presence of Israel, do to
Elijah as he had done to the priests of Baal. Elijah should
have met this threat and oath of Jezebel with an appeal for
protection to the God of heaven, who had commissioned him to
do the work he had done. He should have told the messenger
that the God in whom he trusted would be his protector
against the hatred and threats of Jezebel. But the faith and
courage of Elijah seem to forsake him. He starts up from his
slumbers bewildered. The rain is pouring from the heavens,
and darkness is on every side. He loses sight of God and
flees for his life as though the avenger of blood were close
behind him. He leaves his servant behind him on the way, and
in the morning he is far from the habitations of men, upon a
dreary desert alone.
"And when he saw that, he arose, and went for his life, and
came to Beersheba, which belongeth to Judah, and left his
servant there. But he himself went a day's journey into the
wilderness, and came and sat down under a juniper tree: and
he requested for himself that he might die; and said, It is
enough; now, O Lord, take away my life; for I am not better
than my fathers. And as he lay and slept under a juniper
tree, behold then an angel touched him, and said unto him,
Arise and eat. And he looked, and, behold, there was a cake
baken on the coals, and a cruse of water at his head. And he
did eat and drink, and laid him down again. And the angel of
the Lord came again the second time, and touched him, and
said, Arise and eat; because the journey is too great for
thee. And he arose, and did eat and drink, and went in the
strength of that meat forty days and forty nights unto Horeb
the mount of God. And he came thither unto a cave, and
lodged there; and, behold, the word of the Lord came to him,
and He said unto him, What doest thou here, Elijah?"
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Elijah should have trusted in God, who had warned him when
to flee and where to find an asylum from the hatred of
Jezebel, secure from the diligent search of Ahab. The Lord
had not warned him at this time to flee. He had not waited
for the Lord to speak to him. He moved rashly. Had he waited
with faith and patience, God would have shielded His servant
and would have given him another signal victory in Israel by
sending His judgments upon Jezebel.
Weary and prostrate, Elijah sits down to rest. He is
discouraged and feels like murmuring. He says. "Now, O Lord,
take away my life; for I am not better than my fathers." He
feels that life is no more desirable. He expected after the
signal display of God's power in the presence of Israel that
they would be true and faithful to God. He expected that
Jezebel would no longer have influence over the mind of Ahab
and that there would be a general revolution in the kingdom
of Israel. And when the threatening message from Jezebel was
delivered to him, he forgot that God
was the same all-powerful and pitiful God that He was when
he prayed to Him for fire from heaven, and it came, and for
rain, and it came. God had granted every request; yet Elijah
is a fugitive far from the homes of men, and he wishes never
to look upon man again.
How did God look upon His suffering servant? Did He for sake
him because despondency and despair had seized him? Oh, no.
Elijah was prostrated with discouragement. All day had he
toiled without food. When he guided the chariot of Ahab,
running before it to the gate of the city, he was strong of
courage. He had high hopes that Israel as a nation would
return to their allegiance to God and be reinstated in His
favor. But the reaction which frequently follows elevation
of faith and marked and glorious success, was pressing upon
Elijah. He was exalted to Pisgah's top, to be humiliated to
the lowliest valley in faith and feeling. But God's eye was
still upon His servant. He loved him no less when he felt
brokenhearted and forsaken of God and man than when, in
answer to his prayer, fire flashed from heaven illuminating
Carmel.
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Those who have not borne weighty responsibilities, or who
have not been accustomed to feel very deeply, cannot
understand the feelings of Elijah and are not prepared to
give him the tender sympathy he deserves. God knows and can
read the heart's sore anguish under temptation and sore
conflict.
As Elijah sleeps under the juniper tree, a soft touch and
pleasant voice arouse him. He starts at once in his terror,
as if to flee, as though the enemy who was in pursuit of his
life had indeed found him. But in the pitying face of love
bending over him he sees, not the face of an enemy, but of a
friend. An angel has been sent with food from heaven to
sustain the faithful servant of God. His voice says to
Elijah: "Arise and eat." After Elijah had partaken of the
refreshment prepared for him, he again slumbered. A second
time the angel of God ministers to the wants of Elijah. He
touches the weary, exhausted man, and in pitying tenderness
says to him: "Arise and eat; because the journey is too
great for thee." Elijah was strengthened and pursued his
journey to Horeb. He was in a wilderness. At night he lodged
in a cave for protection from the wild beasts.
Here God, through one of His angels, met with Elijah, and
inquired of him: "What doest thou here, Elijah?" I sent you
to the brook Cherith, I sent you to the widow of Sarepta, I
sent you to Samaria with a message to Ahab, but who sent you
this long journey into the wilderness? And what errand have
you here? Elijah mourns out the bitterness of his soul to
the Lord: "And he said, I have been very jealous for the
Lord God of hosts: for the children of Israel have forsaken
Thy covenant, thrown down Thine altars, and slain Thy
prophets with the sword; and I, even I only, am left; and
they seek my life, to take it away. And he said, Go forth,
and stand upon the mount before the Lord. And, behold, the
Lord passed by, and a great and strong wind rent the
mountains, and brake in pieces the rocks before the Lord;
but the Lord was not in the wind: and after the wind an
earthquake; but the Lord was not in the earthquake: and
after the earthquake a fire; but the Lord was not in the
fire: and after the
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fire a still small voice. And it was so, when Elijah heard
it, that he wrapped his face in his mantle, and went out,
and stood in the entering in of the cave. And, behold, there
came a voice
unto him, and said, What doest thou here, Elijah? And he
said, I have been very jealous for the Lord God of hosts:
because the children of Israel have forsaken Thy covenant,
thrown down Thine altars, and slain Thy prophets with the
sword; and I, even I only, am left; and they seek my life,
to take it away."
Then the Lord manifests Himself to Elijah, showing him that
quiet trust and firm reliance upon God will ever find Him a
present help in time of need.
I have been shown that my husband has erred in giving way to
despondency and distrust of God. Time and again has God
revealed Himself to him by remarkable evidences of His care,
love, and power. But when he has seen that his interest and
jealousy for God and His cause have not been understood or
appreciated, he has at times given way to discouragement and
to despair. God has given my husband and me a special and
important work to do in His cause, to reprove and counsel
His people. When we see our reproofs slighted and are repaid
with hatred instead of sympathy, then we have frequently let
go our faith and trust in the God of Israel; and, like
Elijah, we have yielded to despondency and despair. Here has
been the great error in the life of my husband--his becoming
discouraged because his brethren have brought trials upon
him instead of helping him. And when his brethren see, in
the sadness and despondency of my husband, the effect of
their unbelief and lack of sympathy, some are prepared to
triumph over him and take advantage of his discouraged
state, and feel that, after all, God cannot be with Brother
White or he would not manifest weakness in this direction. I
refer such to the work of Elijah and to his despondency and
discouragements. Elijah, although a prophet of God, was a
man subject to like passions as we are. We have the
frailties of mortal feelings to contend with. But if we
trust in God,
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He will never leave nor forsake us. Under all circumstances
we may have firm trust in God, that He will never leave nor
forsake us while we preserve our integrity.
My husband may take courage in his affliction, that he has a
pitying heavenly Father who reads the motives and
understands the purposes of the soul. Those who stand in the
front of the conflict, and who are reined up by the Spirit
of God to do a special work for Him, will frequently feel a
reaction when the pressure is removed, and despondency may
sometimes press them hard and shake the most heroic faith
and weaken the most steadfast minds. God understands all our
weaknesses. He can pity and love when the hearts of men may
be as hard as flint. To wait patiently and trust in God when
everything looks dark is the lesson that my husband must
learn more fully. God will not fail him in his integrity.
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