Mind, Character and Personality I
Mind, Character and Personality I
Ellen White
Foreword
In Ellen G. White's lifetime (1827-1915) psychology, the science which treats of the
mind and its powers and functions, was in its infancy. Yet there emerges throughout
her writings a distinctive philosophy in which guidelines in this science and to mental
health are clearly portrayed.
The purpose of this compilation is to bring the Ellen G. White statements in this
broad, important, and sometimes controversial field together for convenient study.
Seventh-day adventists and others with their conviction that Ellen G. White wrote
under the influence of the spirit of god treasure guidance in a field so vital to all
humanity at a time when schools of psychological thought are varied and changing.
The soundness of ellen white's views in the areas of physiology, nutrition, and
education, as well as in other fields, has already been demonstrated. There is no doubt
that as research in psychology and mental health progresses, her reputation for setting
forth sound psychological principles will be still more firmly established. To the
devout adventist this work, mind, character, and personality, will supply many
answers. We are certain that as truth unfolds, the positions taken here will appeal
more and more to all thoughtful readers.
In assembling this material in the white estate offices there has been no attempt to
select passages that support views advocated by various authorities in the fields of
education and psychology. No preconceived views held by the compilers are
represented here. Rather, an effort has been made to allow ellen white to freely
propound her views. This has been accomplished by drawing from the vast store of
her published writings, penned through six decades, as they appear in current or out-
of-print books, pamphlets, her thousands of periodical articles, and in her voluminous
manuscript and correspondence files housed in the white estate vault.
Ten years ago, when work was begun on this compilation, it was thought that it would
have its widest appeal to those studying particularly in the field of mental health.
Hence, an arrangement has been followed that would make statements readily
available to those considering classified areas. The researcher should understand that
while an attempt has been made to avoid redundancy as much as possible, a few key
statements are repeated in different chapters because the student would expect to find
them under different appropriate headings. It is now clear that this compilation is of
vital interest to all adventists and to their friends as well, for all of us are involved in
the battle for the mind.
The work of the compilers has been confined to the selection of the materials, placing
these in what seemed to be a logical sequence, and supplying the headings, including
the side headings that introduce the items chosen. An attempt has been made to
include all essential statements on the subjects presented, penned through the years of
ellen white's active service, thus taking advantage of approaching a given point from
all angles and presenting the widest possible coverage. In so doing there is here and
there repetition of thought in general basic lines that the casual reader may find
somewhat irritating. The careful student, however, will welcome each phrase that
makes a contribution to the subject under discussion. Thus mind, character, and
personality is somewhat encyclopedic.
Each quotation carries a specific credit to its source in the Ellen G. White materials,
making it possible for the reader in many cases to turn to the full original context if
desired. In the interest of conserving space, the commonly accepted abbreviations to
the e. G. White writings are employed in the source references. A key to these
abbreviations follows in the introductory pages. In all cases the date of writing or of
first publication is supplied. The original sources are given as primary references, and
if currently available in book form, the appropriate current published references
appear. Credits to the seventh-day adventist bible commentary are to the e. G. White
supplementary statements appearing at the close of each of the commentary volumes,
or in volume 7a of the sda bible commentary.
Limitation of space has precluded the inclusion in these volumes of some mind-
related topics as insanity, etc., For which the reader is referred to the comprehensive
index to the writings of Ellen G. White.
This compilation has been prepared in the offices of the Ellen G. White estate under
the direction of the board of trustees as authorized by ellen white in her will. Unlike
most compilations of Ellen G. White materials it was first released in temporary form
under the title of guidelines to mental health, for classroom testing and for critical
reading by adventist educators, psychologists, and psychiatrists. It was the desire of
the white estate to make certain that all known statements relevant to the topics
represented were taken into account and that the arrangement of materials was
acceptable.
The favorable response from the classroom use and of others ensures the place of this
work with the many other Ellen G. White books of posthumous publication. As now
issued in two parts, it becomes a segment of the popular christian home library.
In its present from it represents somewhat of a revision in the selection of items and
an improvement in the order of their appearance. A chapter titled love and sexuality in
the human experience has been added. Additions have rounded out certain chapters,
and some deletions have eliminated unnecessary repetition. Paging is continuous
through the two parts, and the scripture and subject indexes to the entire work are at
the close.
That the clearly traced picture of the great controversy between the forces of good and
evil for the control of the human mind may warn and enlighten all readers and provide
suggestions and direction for choosing that which will give safe guidance today and
ensure a future inheritance in the life to come is the earnest hope of
To Know the Laws That Govern Mind and Body.-- It is the duty of every person, for
his own sake and for the sake of humanity, to inform himself in regard to the laws of
life and conscientiously to obey them. All need to become acquainted with that most
wonderful of all organisms, the human body. They should understand the functions of
the various organs and the dependence of one upon another for the healthy action of
all. They should study the influence of the mind upon the body and of the body upon
the mind, and the laws by which they are governed.--MH 128 (1905).
Train and Discipline the Mind.--No matter who you are . . . the Lord has blessed you
with intellectual faculties capable of vast improvement. Cultivate your talents with
persevering earnestness. Train and discipline the mind by study, by observation, by
reflection. You cannot meet the mind of God unless you put to use every power. The
mental faculties will strengthen and develop if you will go to work in the fear of God,
in humility, and with earnest prayer. A resolute purpose will accomplish wonders. --
LS 275 (1915).
To deal with minds is the greatest work ever committed to men. The time of parents is
too valuable to be spent in the gratification of appetite or the pursuit of wealth or
fashion. God has placed in their hands the precious youth, not only to be fitted for a
place of usefulness in this life but to be prepared for the heavenly courts.--HS 209,
1886. (Te 270.)
He Will Strive for the Highest Mental and Moral Excellence.--To know oneself is a
great knowledge. The teacher who rightly estimates himself will let God mold and
discipline his mind. And he will acknowledge the source of his power. . . . Self-
knowledge leads to humility and to trust in God, but it does not take the place of
efforts for self-improvement. He who realizes his own deficiencies will spare no pains
to reach the highest possible standard of physical, mental, and moral excellence. No
one should have a part in the training of youth who is satisfied with a lower
standard.--SpTEd 50, May 15, 1896. (CT 67.)
Prepares for Eternity.--In all your work you must do as the husbandman does in
laboring for the fruits of the earth. Apparently he throws away the seed; but, buried in
the soil, the seed germinates. The power of the living God gives it life and vitality,
and there is seen first the blade, then the ear, after that the full corn in the ear (Mark
4:28). Study this wonderful process. Oh, there is so much to learn, so much to
understand! If we improve our minds to the utmost of our ability we shall through the
eternal ages continue to study the ways and works of God and to know more and more
of Him.--CT 252 (1913).
The Duty of Every Christian to Develop Mind.-- It is the duty of every Christian to
acquire habits of order, thoroughness, and dispatch. There is no excuse for slow
bungling at work of any character. When one is always at work and the work is never
done, it is because mind and heart are not put into the labor. The one who is slow and
who works at a disadvantage should realize that these are faults to be corrected. He
needs to exercise his mind in planning how to use the time so as to secure the best
results. By tact and method, some will accomplish as much in five hours as others do
in ten.
Some who are engaged in domestic labor are always at work, not because they have
so much to do but because they do not plan so as to save time. By their slow, dilatory
ways they make much work out of very little. But all who will may overcome these
fussy, lingering habits. In their work let them have a definite aim. Decide how long a
time is required for a given task, and then bend every effort toward accomplishing the
work in the given time. The exercise of the willpower will make the hands move
deftly.--COL 344 (1903).
To Train Every Power of Mind and Body.--God has given to every human being a
brain. He desires that it shall be used to His glory. . . . We have none too much brain
power or reasoning faculties. We are to educate and train every power of mind and
body--the human mechanism that Christ has bought--in order that we may put it to the
best possible use. We are to do all we can to strengthen these powers, for God is
pleased to have us become more and still more efficient colaborers with Him.--
Sermon at St. Helena Sanitarium, Jan 23, 1904. (1SM 100.)
The Cultivated Mind Measures the Man.--Never think that you have learned enough
and that you may now relax your efforts. The cultivated mind is the measure of the
man. Your education should continue during your lifetime; every day you should be
learning and putting to practical use the knowledge gained.--MH 499 (1905).
Acquiring Knowledge and Mental Culture.--Upon the right improvement of our time
depends our success in acquiring knowledge and mental culture. The cultivation of
the intellect need not be prevented by poverty, humble origin, or unfavorable
surroundings. . . . A resolute purpose, persistent industry, and careful economy of
time will enable men to acquire knowledge and mental discipline which will qualify
them for almost any position of influence and usefulness.--COL 343, 344 (1900).
Mechanics, lawyers, merchants, men of all trades and professions, educate themselves
that they may become masters of their business. Should the followers of Christ be less
intelligent, and while professedly engaged in His service be ignorant of the ways and
means to be employed? The enterprise of gaining everlasting life is above every
earthly consideration. In order to lead souls to Jesus there must be a knowledge of
human nature and a study of the human mind. Much careful thought and fervent
prayer are required to know how to approach men and women upon the great subject
of truth.--4T 67 (1876).
We May Attain Almost the Excellence of Angels.-- The Lord has given man capacity
for continual improvement, and has granted him all possible aid in the work. Through
the provisions of divine grace we may attain almost to the excellence of the angels.--
RH, June 20, 1882. (HC 218.)
Those who pass through the experience of true conversion will realize, with keenness
of perception, their responsibility to God to work out their own salvation with fear
and trembling, their responsibility to make complete their recovery from the leprosy
of sin. Such an experience will lead them humbly and trustfully to place their
dependence upon God.--MS 121, 1902. (ML 176.)
Mind Devoted to God Develops Harmoniously.-- God takes men as they are and
educates them for His service if they will yield themselves to Him. The Spirit of God,
received into the soul, quickens all its faculties. Under the guidance of the Holy Spirit
the mind that is devoted unreservedly to God develops harmoniously, and is
strengthened to comprehend and fulfill the requirements of God. The weak,
vacillating character becomes changed to one of strength and steadfastness. Continual
devotion establishes so close a relation between Jesus and His disciples that the
Christian becomes like his master in character. He has clearer, broader views. His
discernment is more penetrative, his judgment better balanced. So quickened is he by
the life-giving power of the Sun of righteousness that he is enabled to bear much fruit
to the glory of God.--GW 285, 286 (1915).
Surrounded With an Atmosphere of Peace.--All who are under the training of God
need the quiet hour for communion with their own hearts, with nature, and with
God.... We must individually hear Him speaking to the heart. When every other voice
is hushed, and in quietness we wait before Him, the silence of the soul makes more
distinct the voice of God. He bids us, Be still, and know that I am God. . . . Amid the
hurrying throngs and the strain of life's intense activities he who is thus refreshed will
be surrounded with an atmosphere of light and peace. He will receive a new
endowment of both physical and mental strength.--MH 58 (1905).
The Religion of Christ an Effectual Remedy.-- Satan is the originator of disease; and
the physician is warring against his work and power. Sickness of the mind prevails
everywhere. . . . Infidels have made the most of these unfortunate cases [in which
home troubles, remorse for sin, fear of an eternally burning hell, have unbalanced the
mind], attributing insanity to religion; but this is a gross libel and one which they will
not be pleased to meet by and by. The religion of Christ, so far from being the cause
of insanity, is one of its most effectual remedies; for it is a potent soother of the
nerves. --5T 443, 444 (1885).
Entering the Region of Peace.--When temptations assail you, when care, perplexity,
and darkness seem to surround your soul, look to the place where you last saw the
light. Rest in Christ's love and under His protecting care. . . . Entering into
communion with the Saviour, we enter the region of peace.--MH 250 (1905).
All Undue Anxieties Dismissed.-- When men go forth to their daily toil, as when they
engage in prayer; when they lie down at night, and when they rise in the morning;
when the rich man feasts in his palace, or when the poor man gathers his children
about the scanty board, each is tenderly watched by the heavenly Father. No tears are
shed that God does not notice. There is no smile that He does not mark.
If we would but fully believe this, all undue anxieties would be dismissed. Our lives
would not be so filled with disappointment as now; for everything, whether great or
small, would be left in the hands of God, who is not perplexed by the multiplicity of
cares or overwhelmed by their weight. We should then enjoy a rest of soul to which
many have long been strangers.--SC 86 (1892).
Christ Has Power to Invigorate and Restore.-- And while Christ opens heaven to man,
the life which He imparts opens the heart of man to heaven. Sin not only shuts us
away from God but destroys in the human soul both the desire and the capacity for
knowing Him. All this work of evil it is Christ's mission to undo. The faculties of the
soul, paralyzed by sin, the darkened mind, the perverted will, He has power to
invigorate and to restore. He opens to us the riches of the universe, and by Him the
power to discern and to appropriate these treasures is imparted.--Ed 28, 29 (1903).
Either God or Satan Controls.--Satan takes control of every mind that is not decidedly
under the control of the Spirit of God.--Lt 57, 1895 (TM 79).
Every Sin Cherished Weakens the Character.--And let none flatter themselves that
sins cherished for a time can easily be given up by and by. This is not so. Every sin
cherished weakens the character and strengthens habit; and physical, mental, and
moral depravity is the result. You may repent of the wrong you have done, and set
your feet in right paths; but the mold of your mind and your familiarity with evil will
make it difficult for you to distinguish between right and wrong. Through the wrong
habits formed, Satan will assail you again and again.-- COL 281 (1900).
So spiritual is the character of God's work upon the human heart that receives it that it
makes every one a new creature without destroying or weakening any capability God
has given to man. It purifies every attribute fit for connection with the divine nature.
That which is born of the Spirit is Spirit, and when man is born from above, a
heavenly peace pervades the soul.--MS 1, 1897. (SpTBC [No. 3] 8, 9.)
Right Excludes Wrong.--Parents, you are the ones to decide whether the minds of
your children shall be filled with ennobling thoughts or with vicious sentiments. You
cannot keep their active minds unoccupied, neither can you frown away evil. Only by
the inculcation of right principles can you exclude wrong thoughts. Unless parents
plant the seeds of truth in the hearts of their children, the enemy will sow tares. Good,
sound instruction is the only preventive of the evil communications that corrupt good
manners. Truth will protect the soul from the endless temptations that must be
encountered.--CT 121 (1913).
Only One Day Is Mine.--Day by day we are all to be trained, disciplined, and
educated for usefulness in this life. Only one day at a time--think of this. One day is
mine. I will in this one day do my best. I will use my talent of speech to be a blessing
to some other one, a helper, a comforter, an example which the Lord my Saviour shall
approve. I will exercise myself in patience, kindness, forbearance, that the Christian
virtues may be developed in me today.
Every morning dedicate yourself, soul, body, and spirit, to God. Establish habits of
devotion and trust more and more in your Saviour. You may believe with all
confidence that the Lord Jesus loves you and wishes you to grow up to His stature of
character. He wishes you to grow in His love, to increase and strengthen in all the
fullness of divine love. Then you will gain a knowledge of the highest value for time
and for eternity.--Lt 36, 1901. (HP 227.)
The Christian alone can make the right use of knowledge. Science, in order to be fully
appreciated, must be viewed from a religious standpoint. Then all will worship the
God of science. The heart which is ennobled by the grace of God can best
comprehend the real value of education. The attributes of God as seen in His created
works can be appreciated only as we have a knowledge of the Creator.
The teachers must be acquainted not only with the theory of the truth but must have
an experimental knowledge of the way of holiness in order to lead the youth to the
fountains of truth, to the Lamb of God that taketh away the sins of the world.
Knowledge is power for good only when united with true piety. A soul emptied of self
will be noble. Christ abiding in the heart by faith will make us wise in God's sight.--
MS 44, 1894.
Whole Being Open to Healing Agencies of Heaven.-- Christ is the wellspring of life.
That which many need is to have a clearer knowledge of Him; they need to be
patiently and kindly, yet earnestly, taught how the whole being may be thrown open
to the healing agencies of heaven. When the sunlight of God's love illuminates the
darkened chambers of the soul, restless weariness and dissatisfaction will cease and
satisfying joys will give vigor to the mind and health and energy to the body.-- MH
247 (1905).
Graces Not Developed in a Moment.--The precious graces of the Holy Spirit are not
developed in a moment. Courage, fortitude, meekness, faith, unwavering trust in
God's power to save, are acquired by the experience of years. By a life of holy
endeavor and firm adherence to the right the children of God are to seal their
destiny.-- MH 454 (1905).
Misuse of Sciences Pertaining to the Mind.--In these days when skepticism and
infidelity so often appear in a scientific garb, we need to be guarded on every hand.
Through this means our great adversary is deceiving thousands and leading them
captive according to his will. The advantage he takes of the sciences, sciences which
pertain to the human mind, is tremendous. Here, serpent-like, he imperceptibly creeps
in to corrupt the work of God.
This entering in of Satan through the sciences is well devised. Through the channel of
phrenology, psychology, and mesmerism, [NOTE: IN THIS STATEMENT AS
PUBLISHED IN THE SIGNS OF THE TIMES, NOV. 6, 1884, MRS. WHITE
DREW HEAVILY FROM, AND SOMEWHAT CLARIFIED A STATEMENT
PUBLISHED ORIGINALLY IN, THE REVIEW AND HERALD OF FEB. 18, 1862,
NOW IN TESTIMONIES FOR THE CHURCH, VOL. 1, PP. 290-302.
While it is believed that one human mind so wonderfully affects another, Satan, who
is ready to press every advantage, insinuates himself and works on the right hand and
on the left. And while those who are devoted to these sciences laud them to the
heavens because of the great and good works which they affirm are wrought by them,
they little know what a power for evil they are cherishing; but it is a power which will
yet work with all signs and lying wonders--with all deceivableness of
unrighteousness. Mark the influence of these sciences, dear reader, for the conflict
between Christ and Satan is not yet ended.
Neglect of prayer leads men to rely on their own strength and opens the door to
temptation. In many cases the imagination is captivated by scientific research, and
men are flattered through the consciousness of their own powers. The sciences which
treat of the human mind are very much exalted. They are good in their place, but they
are seized upon by Satan as his powerful agents to deceive and destroy souls. His arts
are accepted as from heaven, and he thus receives the worship which suits him well.
The world, which is supposed to be benefited so much by phrenology and animal
magnetism, never was so corrupt as now. Through these sciences, virtue is destroyed
and the foundations of spiritualism are laid.--ST, Nov 6, 1884. (2SM 351, 352.)
His Work to Divert the Mind of Man.--Satan has come right in and placed himself
between God and man. It is his work to divert the human mind, and he throws his
darkened shadow right athwart our pathways so that we cannot discern between God
and the moral darkness and corruption and the mass of iniquity that is in our world.
Then what are we going to do about the matter? Shall we let that darkness remain?
No.
There is a power here for us that will bring in the light of heaven to our dark world.
Christ has been in heaven, and He will bring the light of heaven, drive back the
darkness, and let the sunlight of His glory in. Then we shall see, amid the corruption
and pollution and defilement, the light of heaven.
We must not give up at the defilement that is in the human race, and ever keep that
before the mind's eye. We must not look at that. . . . What then are we to do? What is
our work? To behold what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us (1 John
3:1).--MS 7, 1888.
The Artful Insinuation Versus the Open, Bold Attack. --If Satan were to make an open
and bold attack upon Christianity, it would bring the Christian at once to the feet of
his Mighty Deliverer, who alone could put the adversary to flight. He does not
generally do this. He is artful and knows that the most effectual way for him to
accomplish his designs is to come to poor, fallen man in the form of an angel of light.
In this disguise he works upon the mind to allure from the safe and right path. He has
ever been ambitious to counterfeit the work of Christ and establish his own power and
claims. He leads deceived mortals to account for the works and miracles of Christ
upon scientific principles; he makes them appear as the result of human skill and
power. In many minds he will thus eventually destroy all true faith in Christ as the
Messiah, the Son of God.--ST, Nov 6, 1884.
Youthful Minds His Special Objective.--It is the special work of Satan in these last
days to take possession of the minds of the youth, to corrupt their thoughts, and
inflame their passions. All are free moral agents, and as such they must bring their
thoughts to run in the right channel.--Und MS 93. (HC 337.)
Satan Controls Mind Not Directed by Holy Spirit. --Few believe that humanity has
sunk so low as it has or that it is so thoroughly bad, so desperately opposed to God, as
it is. The carnal mind is enmity against God: for it is not subject to the law of God,
neither indeed can be (Romans 8:7).
When the mind is not under the direct influence of the Spirit of God, Satan can mold
it as he chooses. All the rational powers which he controls he will carnalize. He is
directly opposed to God in his tastes, views, preferences, likes and dislikes, choice of
things and pursuits; there is no relish for what God loves or approves, but a delight in
those things which He despises; therefore a course is maintained which is offensive to
Him.
This leads to controversy with those who are trying to walk in the way of the Lord.
They [those who oppose truth] will call light darkness, and darkness light; good evil,
and evil good.--Lt 8, 1891.
From Adam's Day to Now.--Satan has been working at the wheel, turning it until he
has the control of all the human minds who have received the lies with which he
deceived Eve and then used her as his agent to entice Adam into sin. Satan has kept
up his specious working upon human minds from that day to this.--MS 19, 1894.
Those Who Know the Truth Are Special Targets. --Satan is stealthily working to
confuse the minds of those who know the truth by bringing in misleading sentiments
and misleading examples. Unless they repent and are converted, those who are living
divided lives, professedly serving the Lord but at the same time scheming to carry out
their own plans--plans which retard the very work which Christ gave His life to
accomplish--will be deceived by the enemy of souls.--Lt 248, 1907.
A Power for Good, a Power for Evil.--The influence of mind on mind, so strong a
power for good when sanctified, is equally strong for evil in the hands of those
opposed to God. This power Satan used in his work of instilling evil into the minds of
the angels, and he made it appear that he was seeking the good of the universe. As the
anointed cherub, Lucifer had been highly exalted; he was greatly loved by the
heavenly beings, and his influence over them was strong. Many of them listened to his
suggestions and believed his words. And there was war in heaven: Michael and His
angels fought against the dragon; and the dragon fought and his angels, and prevailed
not; neither was their place found any more in heaven (Revelation 12:8).--Lt 114,
1903. (7BC 973.)
One Man's Mind Not to Be Trusted.--One man's mind and one man's judgment was
not to be trusted, for too great interests were at stake, and it was not free from human
frailties and human errors. . . . There is not any one man's mind so perfect that there is
no danger of his moving from wrong motives, viewing things from a wrong
standpoint.--Lt 41, 1891.
Satan Watching for Unguarded Minds.--Satan is watching that he may find the mind
in an unguarded moment, and so get possession of it. We do not want to be ignorant
of his devices, neither do we want to be overpowered by his devices. He is pleased
with the pictures that represent him as having horns and hooves, for he has
intelligence; he was once an angel of light.--MS 11, 1893.
Evil Angels Attempt to Destroy Man's Will.--If permitted, the evil angels will work
[captivate and control] the minds of men until they have no mind or will of their
own.--MS 64, 1904.
Only Safety in Resistance.--Our only safety is in giving no place to the devil; for his
suggestions and purposes are ever to injure us and hinder us from relying upon God.
He transforms himself into an angel of purity that he may, through his specious
temptations, introduce his devices in such a manner that we may not discern his wiles.
The more we yield, the more powerful will be his deceptions over us. It is unsafe to
controvert or to parley with him. For every advantage we give the enemy, he will
claim more.
Our only safety is to reject firmly the first insinuation to presumption. God has given
us grace through the merits of Christ sufficient to withstand Satan, and be more than
conquerors. Resistance is success. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you.
Resistance must be firm and steadfast. We lose all we gain if we resist today only to
yield tomorrow.--RH, Apr 8, 1880. (HC 95.)
Genuine Faith and Presumption.--The promises of God are not for us to claim rashly,
to protect us while we rush on recklessly into danger, violating the laws of nature or
disregarding prudence and the judgment God has given us to use. This would not be
genuine faith but presumption. . . .
Satan comes to us with worldly honor, wealth, and the pleasures of life. These
temptations are varied to meet men of every rank and degree, tempting them away
from God to serve themselves more than their Creator. All these things will I give
Thee, said Satan to Christ. All these things will I give thee, says Satan to man. All this
money, this land, all this power and honor and riches will I give thee; and man is
charmed, deceived, and treacherously allured on to his ruin. If we give ourselves up to
worldliness of heart and of life, Satan is satisfied. --Lt 1a, 1872. (HC 93.)
Evil Angels or God's Angels Control Men's Minds. --Either the evil angels or the
angels of God are controlling the minds of men. Our minds are given to the control of
God or to the control of the powers of darkness; and it will be well for us to inquire
where we are standing today --whether under the bloodstained banner of Prince
Emmanuel or under the black banner of the powers of darkness.--MS 1, 1890. (6BC
1120.)
Prayer Will Prevail Against Satan.--The prayer of faith is the great strength of the
Christian and will assuredly prevail against Satan. This is why he insinuates that we
have no need of prayer. The name of Jesus, our Advocate, he detests; and when we
earnestly come to Him for help, Satan's host is alarmed. It serves his purpose well if
we neglect the exercise of prayer, for then his lying wonders are more readily
received. That which he failed to accomplish in tempting Christ he accomplishes by
setting his deceitful temptations before man.--1T 296 (1862).
Pure Religion Brings Serenity, Composure, and Strength.--Pure and undefiled religion
is not a sentiment, but the doing of works of mercy and love. This religion is
necessary to health and happiness. It enters the polluted soul temple and with a
scourge drives out the sinful intruders. Taking the throne, it consecrates all by its
presence, illuminating the heart with the bright beams of the Sun of righteousness. It
opens the windows of the soul heavenward, letting in the sunshine of God's love.
With it comes serenity and composure. Physical, mental, and moral strength increase,
because the atmosphere of heaven as a living, active agency fills the soul. Christ is
formed within, the hope of glory.--RH, Oct 15, 1901. (WM 38.)
God Is the Source of Life and Joy.--God is the source of life and light and joy to the
universe. Like rays of light from the sun, like the streams of water bursting from a
living spring, blessings flow out from Him to all His creatures. And wherever the life
of God is in the hearts of men, it will flow out to others in love and blessing.--SC 77
(1892).
All Receive Life From God.--All created things live by the will and power of God.
They are recipients of the life of the Son of God. However able and talented, however
large their capacities, they are replenished with life from the Source of all life. He is
the spring, the fountain, of life. Only He who alone hath immortality, dwelling in light
and life, could say, I have power to lay down My life, and I have power to take it
again.-- MS 131, 1897. (5BC 1113.)
Satan Uses Influences of Mind on Mind.--Cast out of heaven, Satan set up his
kingdom in this world, and ever since he has been untiringly striving to seduce human
beings from their allegiance to God. He uses the same power that he used in heaven--
the influence of mind on mind. Men become tempters of their fellowmen. The strong,
corrupting sentiments of Satan are cherished, and they exert a masterly, compelling
power. Under the influence of these sentiments, men bind up with one another in
confederacies, in trade unions, and in secret societies. There are at work in the world
agencies that God will not much longer tolerate.--Lt 114, 1903.
Satan's Studied Purpose to Employ Powers for Selfish Ends.--Satan has nets and
snares, like the snares of the fowler, all prepared to entrap souls. It is his studied
purpose that men shall employ their God-given powers for selfish ends rather than
yield them to glorify God. God would have men engage in a work that will bring them
peace and joy and will render them eternal profit; but Satan wants us to concentrate
our efforts for that which profiteth not, for the things that perish with the using.--RH,
Sept 1, 1910. (HC 200.)
Each Must Choose One of Two Banners.--Here is the great issue. Here are the two
great powers confronting each other, the Prince of God, Jesus Christ, and the prince of
darkness, Satan. Here comes the open conflict. There are but two classes in the world,
and every human being will range under one of the two banners, the banner of the
prince of darkness or the banner of Jesus Christ.--Lt 38, 1894.
Sin Affects Entire Being.--Sin affects the entire being; so also does grace.--Lt 8, 1891.
It is the wayward heart that has dragged down the faculties of the soul. All who would
learn the science of salvation must be submissive students in the school of Christ, that
the soul temple may be the abiding place of the Most High. If we would learn of
Christ, the soul must be emptied of all its proud possessions, that Christ may imprint
His image on the soul.--Lt 5, 1898. (HC 105.)
The Cross Gives Proper Level to the Human Mind. --What gives the proper level to
the human mind? It is the cross of Calvary. By looking unto Jesus, who is the Author
and Finisher of our faith, all the desire for self-glorification is laid in the dust. There
comes, as we see aright, a spirit of self-abasement that promotes lowliness and
humbleness of mind. As we contemplate the cross, we are enabled to see the
wonderful provision it has brought to every believer. God in Christ, . . . if seen aright,
will level human exaltation and pride. There will be no self-exaltation, but there will
be true humility.--Lt 20, 1897. (HC 114.)
Man Is Made Complete in Christ.--Christ brings His disciples into a living union with
Himself and with the Father. Through the working of the Holy Spirit upon the human
mind, man is made complete in Christ Jesus. Unity with Christ establishes a bond of
unity with one another. This unity is the most convincing proof to the world of the
majesty and virtue of Christ and of His power to take away sin.--MS 111, 1903. (5BC
1148.)
God Alone Can Raise Man in Moral Worth.--The value of man as God estimates him
is through his union with Christ, for God is the only One able to raise man in the scale
of moral worth through the righteousness of Christ. Worldly honor and worldly
greatness are of just that value that the Creator of man places upon them. Their
wisdom is foolishness, their strength weakness.--Lt 9, 1873. (HC 149.)
Selfishness and Its Fruit.--Selfishness is the essence of depravity, and because human
beings have yielded to its power, the opposite of allegiance to God is seen in the
world today. Nations, families, and individuals are filled with a desire to make self a
center. Man longs to rule over his fellowmen. Separating himself in his egotism from
God and his fellow beings, he follows his unrestrained inclinations. He acts as if the
good of others depended on their subjection to his supremacy.--RH, June 25, 1908.
(CS 24.)
The Victory May Be Gained.--Through the cultivation of righteous principles, man
may gain the victory over the bias to evil. If he is obedient to the law of God, the
senses are no longer warped and twisted; the faculties are no longer perverted and
wasted by being exercised on objects that are of a character to lead away from God. In
and through the grace bestowed by Heaven, the words, the thoughts, and the energies
may be purified; a new character may be formed, and the debasement of sin
overcome.--MS 60, 1905.
If he can, he will fasten the mind upon the things of the world. He will endeavor to
excite the emotions, to arouse the passions, to fasten the affections on that which is
not for your good; but it is for you to hold every emotion and passion under control, in
calm subjection to reason and conscience. Then Satan loses his power to control the
mind.
The work to which Christ calls us is to the work of progressive conquest over spiritual
evil in our characters. Natural tendencies are to be overcome.... Appetite and passion
must be conquered, and the will must be placed wholly on the side of Christ.--RH,
June 14, 1892. (HC 87.)
None Need Despair Because of Inherited Tendencies. --Satan is ever on the alert to
deceive and mislead. He is using every enchantment to allure men into the broad road
of disobedience. He is working to confuse the senses with erroneous sentiments and
remove the landmarks by placing his false inscription on the signposts which God has
established to point the right way. It is because these evil agencies are striving to
eclipse every ray of light from the soul that heavenly beings are appointed to do their
work of ministry, to guide, guard, and control those who shall be heirs of salvation.
None need despair because of the inherited tendencies to evil, but when the Spirit of
God convicts of sin, the wrongdoer must repent and confess and forsake the evil.
Faithful sentinels are on guard to direct souls in right paths.-- MS 8, 1900. (6BC
1120.)
Partaker of Sin Through Association.--The soul that has been misled by wrong
influences and has become a partaker of sin through association with others, to do
contrary to the mind and character of God, need not despair. For such an high priest
became us, who is holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners, and made higher
than the heavens (Hebrews 7:26). Christ is not only priest and intercessor for our sins,
but the offering. He offered Himself once for all.--Lt 11, 1897.
Christ's Blood the Only Remedy.--The law of Jehovah is exceedingly broad. Jesus...
plainly declared to His disciples that this holy law of God may be violated in even the
thoughts and feelings and desires, as well as in the word and deed. The heart that
loves God supremely will not in any way be inclined to narrow down His precepts to
the very smallest possible claims, but the obedient, loyal soul will cheerfully render
full spiritual obedience when the law is seen in its spiritual power. Then will the
commandments come home to the soul in their real force. Sin will appear exceedingly
sinful. . . . There is no longer self-righteousness, self-esteem, self-honor. Self-security
is gone. Deep conviction of sin and self-loathing is the result, and the soul in its
desperate sense of peril lays hold on the blood of the Lamb of God as his only
remedy.--Lt 51, 1888. (HC 140.)
Meeting the Tempter's Challenge.--Satan will come to you saying, You are a sinner.
But do not let him fill your mind with the thought that because you are sinful, God has
cast you off. Say to him, Yes, I am a sinner, and for that reason I need a Saviour. I
need forgiveness and pardon, and Christ says that if I come to Him I shall not perish.
In His letter to me I read, If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us
our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness (1 John 1:9). I will believe the
word He has left for me. I will obey His commands. When Satan tells you that you are
lost, answer, Yes, but Jesus came to seek and to save that which was lost. The greater
my sin, the greater my need of a Saviour.--Lt 98b, 1896.
Attention Turned From Confusion to God's Handiwork. --God calls upon His
creatures to turn their attention from the confusion and perplexity around them and
admire His handiwork. The heavenly bodies are worthy of contemplation. God has
made them for the benefit of man, and as we study His works, angels of God will be
by our side to enlighten our minds and guard them from satanic deception.--MS 96,
1899. (4BC 1145.)
What Religion Does.--True religion ennobles the mind, refines the taste, sanctifies the
judgment, and makes its possessor a partaker of the purity and the holiness of Heaven.
It brings angels near and separates us more and more from the spirit and influence of
the world. It enters into all the acts and relations of life and gives us the spirit of a
sound mind, and the result is happiness and peace.--ST, Oct 23, 1884. (CH 629, 630.)
It Improves the Physical Health.--Let the mind become intelligent and the will be
placed on the Lord's side, and there will be a wonderful improvement in the physical
health.--Medical Missionary, Nov-Dec, 1892. (CH 505.)
Right Doing the Best Medicine.--The consciousness of right doing is the best
medicine for diseased bodies and minds. The special blessing of God resting upon the
receiver is health and strength. One whose mind is quiet and satisfied in God is on the
highway to health. To have the consciousness that the eye of the Lord is upon us and
that His ear is open to our prayers is a satisfaction indeed. To know that we have a
never-failing friend to whom we can confide all the secrets of the soul is a happiness
which words can never express.--ST, Oct 23, 1884. (CH 628.)
Love of Jesus Surrounds Souls With Fragrant Atmosphere.--The souls of those who
love Jesus will be surrounded with a pure, fragrant atmosphere. There are those who
hide their soul hunger. These will be greatly helped by a tender word or a kind
remembrance. The heavenly gifts, freely and richly bestowed by God, are in turn to be
freely bestowed by us upon all who come within the sphere of our influence. Thus we
reveal a love that is heaven-born and which will increase as it is freely used in
blessing others. Thus we glorify God.--MS 17, 1899. (HC 231.)
God Works No Miracle to Prevent Harvest.--The Lord sends us warning, counsel, and
reproof that we may have opportunity to correct our errors before they become second
nature. But if we refuse to be corrected, God does not interfere to counteract the
tendencies of our own course of action. He works no miracle that the seed sown may
not spring up and bear fruit.
That man who manifests an infidel hardihood or a stolid indifference to divine truth is
but reaping the harvest which he has himself sown. Such has been the experience of
many. They listen with stoical indifference to the truths which once stirred their very
souls. They sowed neglect, indifference, and resistance to the truth; and such is the
harvest which they reap. The coldness of ice, the hardness of iron, the impenetrable,
unimpressible nature of rock--all these find a counterpart in the character of many a
professed Christian.
It was thus that the Lord hardened the heart of Pharaoh. God spoke to the Egyptian
king by the mouth of Moses, giving him the most striking evidences of divine power;
but the monarch stubbornly refused the light which would have brought him to
repentance. God did not send a supernatural power to harden the heart of the
rebellious king, but as Pharaoh resisted the truth the Holy Spirit was withdrawn, and
he was left to the darkness and unbelief which he had chosen. By persistent rejection
of the Spirit's influence, men cut themselves off from God. He has in reserve no more
potent agency to enlighten their minds. No revelation of His will can reach them in
their unbelief.--RH, June 20, 1882. (3BC 1151.)
Molding Our Surroundings Instead of Being Molded by Them.--There are evils which
man may lessen but can never remove. He is to overcome obstacles and make his
surroundings instead of being molded by them. He has room to exercise his talents in
bringing order and harmony out of confusion. In this work he may have divine aid if
he will claim it. He is not left to battle with temptations and trials in his own strength.
Help has been laid upon One who is mighty. Jesus left the royal courts of heaven and
suffered and died in a world degraded by sin that He might teach man how to pass
through the trials of life and overcome its temptations. Here is a pattern for us.--5T
312 (1885).
To Deal Judiciously With Different Minds.--We all need to study character and
manner that we may know how to deal judiciously with different minds, that we may
use our best endeavors to help them to a correct understanding of the Word of God
and to a true Christian life. We should read the Bible with them and draw their minds
away from temporal things to their eternal interests. It is the duty of God's children to
be missionaries for Him, to become acquainted with those who need help. If one is
staggering under temptation, his case should be taken up carefully and managed
wisely; for his eternal interest is at stake, and the words and acts of those laboring for
him may be a savor of life unto life or of death unto death.--4T 69 (1876).
Unbending Principle Marks Students of Jesus.-- Unbending principle will mark the
course of those who sit at the feet of Jesus and learn of Him.--RH, June 20, 1882. (HC
160.)
Fanatics and Fanaticism Will Press In.--We are living in a time when every phase of
fanaticism will press its way in among believers and unbelievers. Satan will come in,
speaking lies in hypocrisy. Everything that he can invent to deceive men and women
will be brought forward.--Lt 121, 1901. (MM 114.)
How Satan Does It.--We have found in our experience that if Satan cannot keep souls
bound in the ice of indifference, he will try to push them into the fire of fanaticism.
When the Spirit of the Lord comes among His people, the enemy seizes his
opportunity to work also upon different minds and lead them to mingle their own
peculiar traits of character with the work of God. Thus there is always danger that
they may allow their own spirit to mingle with the work and that unwise moves may
be made. Many carry on a work of their own devising that is not prompted by God.--
Lt 34, 1889. (Similar to 5T 644.)
Result of Cherishing Defective Tendencies.--There are some who will not hear. So
long have they chosen to follow their own way and their own wisdom, so long have
they cherished defective hereditary and cultivated tendencies of character, that they
are blind and cannot see afar off. By them, principles are perverted, false standards
are raised, tests are made that bear not the signature of Heaven. . . . Some of these
very ones make their boasts in the Lord as a people who do righteousness and forsake
not the ordinances of their God.--MS 138, 1902.
Bereft of a Healthy Mental Attitude.--Those taken in Satan's snare have not yet come
to a healthy mental attitude. They are dazed, self-important, self-sufficient. Oh, with
what sorrow the Lord looks upon them and hears their great swelling words of vanity.
They are puffed up with pride. The enemy is looking on with surprise at their being
taken captive so easily.--Lt. 126, 1906.
Take no glory whatever to yourself. Do not work with a divided mind, trying to serve
God and self at the same time. Keep self out of sight. Let your words lead the weary
and heavy-laden to Jesus, the compassionate Saviour. Work as seeing Him who is at
your right hand, ready to give you strength for service. Your only safety is in entire
dependence upon Christ.--RH, May 11, 1897.
Too Much Made of a Happy Flight of Feeling.--Some are not satisfied with a meeting
unless they have a powerful and happy time. They work for this and get up an
excitement of feeling. But the influence of such meetings is not beneficial. When the
happy flight of feeling is gone, they sink lower than before the meeting because their
happiness did not come from the right source. The most profitable meetings for
spiritual advancement are those which are characterized with solemnity and deep
searching of heart; each seeking to know himself and earnestly, and in deep humility,
seeking to learn of Christ.--1T 412 (1864).
Naturally Combative.--Some are naturally combative. They do not care whether they
harmonize with their brethren or not. They would like to enter into controversy,
would like to fight for their particular ideas; but they should lay this aside, for it is not
developing the Christian graces. Work with all your power to answer the prayer of
Christ, that His disciples may be one, as He is one with the Father. Not a soul of us is
safe unless we learn of Christ daily, His meekness and lowliness.
In your labor do not be dictatorial, do not be severe, do not be antagonistic. Preach the
love of Christ, and this will melt and subdue hearts. Seek to be of one mind and one
judgment with your brethren and to speak the same things. This talking about
divisions because all do not have the same ideas as present themselves to your mind is
not the work of God but of the enemy. Talk the simple truth wherein you can agree.
Talk of unity; do not become narrow and conceited; let your mind broaden.--MS 111,
1894.
Reaction of a Fanatic.--A few years since, a man named N, of Red Bluff, California,
came to me to deliver his message. . . . He thought God had passed all the leading
workers and given him the message. I attempted to show him that he was mistaken. . .
. When we told him our reasons and set the matter before him, that he was in error, he
had great power come upon him, and he certainly gave a loud cry. . . . We had much
trouble with him; his mind became unbalanced, and he had to be placed in the insane
asylum.--Lt 16, 1893. (2SM 64.)
How to Meet the Fanatic.--God calls upon His servants to study His mind and will.
Then when men come with their curiously invented theories, enter not into
controversy with them, but affirm what you know. It is written is to be your weapon.
There are men who will try to spin out their fine threads of false theories. Thank God
that there are those also who have been taught of Him and who know what is truth.--
Lt 191, 1905.
Avoid Tests of Human Invention.--New and strange things will continually arise to
lead God's people into false excitement, religious revivals, and curious developments;
but our people should not be subjected to any tests of human invention that will create
controversy in any line.--MS 167, 1897.
Fine-drawn Theories That Fill the Mind.--Satan is working in many ways that the
very men who ought to preach the message may be occupied with fine-drawn theories
which he will cause to appear of such magnitude and importance as to fill the whole
mind; and while they think they are making wonderful strides in experience, they are
idolizing a few ideas, and their influence is injured and tells but little on the Lord's
side.
Let every minister make earnest efforts to ascertain what is the mind of Christ. There
are those who pick out from the Word of God, and also from the Testimonies,
detached paragraphs or sentences that may be interpreted to suit their ideas, and they
dwell upon these and build themselves up in their own positions, when God is not
leading them. Now all this pleases the enemy. We should not needlessly take a course
that will make differences or cause dissension. We should not give the impression that
if our particular ideas are not followed, it is because the ministers are lacking in
comprehension.
There are in the lessons of Christ subjects in abundance that you can speak upon, and
mysteries which neither you nor your hearers can understand or explain might better
be left alone. Give the Lord Jesus Christ Himself room to teach; let Him by the
influence of His Spirit open to the understanding the wonderful plan of salvation.--
MS 111, 1894.
Turn Away From the Negative Side (counsel to a minister).--If you could see the
result of always occupying the negative side, as you have done for years to a greater
or less extent, you would have a better understanding of the words of the Saviour,
recorded in the eighteenth chapter of Matthew. The disciples came to Jesus with the
question, Who is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven? And Jesus called a little child
unto Him, and set him in the midst of them, and said, Verily I say unto you, Except ye
be converted, and become as little children, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of
heaven. Whosoever therefore shall humble himself as this little child, the same is
greatest in the kingdom of heaven. And whoso shall receive one such little child in
My name receiveth Me. But whoso shall offend one of these little ones which believe
in Me, it were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and that he
were drowned in the depth of the sea. Woe unto the world because of offenses! for it
must needs be that offenses come; but woe to that man by whom the offense cometh!
(Matthew 18:1-7).
My brother, cast away all evil thinking. Humble your heart before God. Then, your
eyes being opened, you will no longer stand on the negative side. If thy hand or thy
foot offend thee, cut them off, and cast them from thee: it is better for thee to enter
into life halt or maimed, rather than having two hands or two feet to be cast into
everlasting fire (Matthew 18:8). Cut away your defective attributes, however painful
to human nature it may be to do this. And if thine eye--so sharp to see something to
criticize or oppose--offend thee, pluck it out, and cast if from thee: it is better for thee
to enter into life with one eye, rather than having two eyes to be cast into hell fire
(verse 9).--Lt 93, 1901.
The Peril of Individual Independence.--There have ever been in the church those who
are constantly inclined toward individual independence. They seem unable to realize
that independence of spirit is liable to lead the human agent to have too much
confidence in himself and to trust in his own judgment rather than to respect the
counsel and highly esteem the judgment of his brethren, especially of those in the
offices that God has appointed for the leadership of His people. God has invested His
church with special authority and power which no one can be justified in disregarding
and despising, for he who does this despises the voice of God.--AA 163, 164 (1911).
The Virtue of Christian Courtesy.--Paul, though firm as a rock to principle, yet ever
preserved his courtesy. He was zealous for the vital points and was not regardless of
the grace and politeness due to social life. The man of God did not absorb the man of
humanity.--Lt 25, 1870. (HC 236.)
Some persons speak in a harsh, uncourteous manner that wounds the feelings of
others, and then they justify themselves by saying, It is my way; I always tell just
what I think; and they exalt this wicked trait of character as a virtue. Their
uncourteous deportment should be firmly rebuked.--RH, Sept 1, 1885. (HC 229.)
The Author Called to Meet Every Phase of Fanaticism.--In 1844 we had to meet
fanaticism on every hand, but always the word came to me: A great wave of
excitement is an injury to the work. Keep your feet in the footprints of Christ. I was
given a message to meet every phase of fanaticism. I was instructed to show the
people that under a wave of excitement a strange work is done. There are those who
improve the opportunity to bring in superstitions. Thus the door is closed to the
promulgation of sound doctrine.--Lt 17, 1902.
An Impending Danger.--As the end draws near, the enemy will work with all his
power to bring in fanaticism among us. He would rejoice to see Seventh-day
Adventists going to such extremes that they would be branded by the world as a body
of fanatics. Against this danger I am bidden to warn ministers and lay members. Our
work is to teach men and women to build on a true foundation, to plant their feet on a
plain Thus saith the Lord.--GW 316 (1915).
Mind Control One Form of Fanaticism.--I have spoken distinctly regarding the
dangerous science which says that one person shall give up his mind to the control of
another. This science is the devil's own.
This is the character of the fanaticism we had to meet in 1845. I did not then know
what it meant, but I was called upon to bear a most decided testimony against
anything of the kind.--Lt 130 1/2, 1901.
Others think that the mind must be ever on the stretch to invent new amusements and
diversions in order to gain health. They learn to depend on excitement, and are uneasy
without it. Such are not true Christians. They go to another extreme.
The true principles of Christianity open before all a source of happiness, the height
and depth, the length and breadth of which are immeasurable. It is Christ in us a well
of water springing up into everlasting life. It is a continual wellspring from which the
Christian can drink at will and never exhaust the fountain.--1T 565, 566 (1867).
Zeal Which Quickly Fades.--We are not to encourage a spirit of enthusiasm that
brings zeal for a while but soon fades away, leaving discouragement and depression.
We need the Bread of life that comes down from heaven to give life to the soul. Study
the Word of God. Do not be controlled by feeling. All who labor in the vineyard of
the Lord must learn that feeling is not faith. To be always in a state of elevation is not
required. But it is required that we have firm faith in the Word of God as the flesh and
blood of Christ.--Lt 17, 1902. (Ev 138.)
Neither Cold Orthodoxy Nor Careless Liberalism. --The progress of reform depends
upon a clear recognition of fundamental truth. While, on the one hand, danger lurks in
a narrow philosophy and a hard, cold orthodoxy, on the other hand there is great
danger in a careless liberalism. The foundation of all enduring reform is the law of
God. We are to present in clear, distinct lines the need of obeying this law. Its
principles must be kept before the people. They are as everlasting and inexorable as
God Himself.-- MH 129 (1905).
There are needed for this time well-balanced minds, healthy, wholesome Christians.
Many of those who profess Christ have a sickly experience. They cannot bear
anything unfavorable. They lose heart if they think they are in any way slighted or
hurt, if their brethren have not been as tender with them as they think they should be.
The Great Physician would, by His infinite skill, restore them to sound moral health;
but the patient refuses to take the prescription He offers. These persons may apply the
Word of God to their case for a short time, but they do not become doers of that
Word. They soon come under influences which suit their natural tastes and counteract
all they have gained.--RH, July 28, 1896.
All Faculties to Be Cultivated.--If certain faculties are used to the neglect of others,
the design of God is not fully carried out in us, for all the faculties have a bearing and
are dependent, in a great measure, upon one another. One cannot be effectually used
without the operation of all, that the balance may be carefully preserved. If all the
attention and strength are given to one, while others lie dormant, the development is
strong in that one and will lead to extremes, because all the powers have not been
cultivated. Some minds are dwarfed and not properly balanced. All minds are not
naturally constituted alike. We have varied minds; some are strong upon certain
points and very weak upon others. These deficiencies, so apparent, need not and
should not exist.
If those who possess them would strengthen the weak points in their character by
cultivation and exercise, they would become strong.--3T 33 (1872).
Call All Powers of Mind Into Use.--All the powers of the mind should be called into
use and developed in order for men and women to have well-balanced minds. The
world is full of one-sided men and women who have become such because one set of
their faculties was cultivated while others were dwarfed from inaction.
The education of most youth is a failure. They overstudy, while they neglect that
which pertains to practical business life. Men and women become parents without
considering their responsibilities, and their offspring sink lower in the scale of human
deficiency than they themselves. Thus the race is fast degenerating.
The constant application to study, as the schools are now conducted [1872], is
unfitting youth for practical life. The human mind will have action. If it is not active
in the right direction, it will be active in the wrong. In order to preserve the balance of
the mind, labor and study should be united in the schools.--3T 152, 153 (1872).
Means of Improvement Within Reach of All.--Young men are wanted who are men of
understanding, who appreciate the intellectual faculties that God has given them and
cultivate them with the utmost care. Exercise enlarges these faculties, and if heart-
culture is not neglected, the character will be well-balanced. The means of
improvement are within the reach of all. Then let none disappoint the Master, when
He comes seeking for fruit, by presenting nothing but leaves. A resolute purpose,
sanctified by the grace of Christ, will do wonders.--MS 122, 1899.
Body, Mind, Heart, Under God's Control.--He who truly loves and fears God, striving
with a singleness of purpose to do His will, will place his body, his mind, his heart,
his soul, his strength, under service to God. Thus it was with Enoch. He walked with
God. . . . Those who are determined to make the will of God their own must serve and
please God in everything. Then the character will be harmonious and well-balanced,
consistent, cheerful, and true.--Lt 128, 1897. (HP 190.)
Faculties of Mind to Rule the Body.--True education includes the whole being. It
teaches the right use of one's self. It enables us to make the best use of brain, bone,
and muscle, of body, mind, and heart. The faculties of the mind, as the higher powers,
are to rule the kingdom of the body. The natural appetites and passions are to be
brought under the control of the conscience and the spiritual affections. Christ stands
at the head of humanity, and it is His purpose to lead us, in His service, into high and
holy paths of purity. By the wondrous working of His grace, we are to be made
complete in Him.--MH 398, 399 (1905).
Commonplace, Trivial Matters Dwarf the Mind.-- Upon the mind of every student
should be impressed the thought that education is a failure unless the understanding
has learned to grasp the truths of divine revelation and unless the heart accepts the
teachings of the gospel of Christ. The student who, in the place of the broad principles
to the Word of God, will accept common ideas and will allow the time and attention
to be absorbed in commonplace, trivial matters, will find his mind becoming dwarfed
and enfeebled. He has lost the power of growth. The mind must be trained to
comprehend the important truths that concern eternal life,--RH, Nov 11, 1909.(FE
536.)
I must tell you from the light given me by God, I know that much time and money are
spent by students in acquiring a knowledge that is as chaff to them; for it does not
enable them to help their fellowmen to form characters that will fit them to unite with
saints and angels in the higher school. In the place of crowding youthful minds with a
mass of things that are distasteful and that in many cases will never be of any use to
them, a practical education should be given. Time and money are spent in gaining
useless knowledge. The mind should be carefully and wisely taught to dwell upon
Bible truth. The main object of education should be to gain a knowledge of how we
can glorify God, whose we are by creation and by redemption. The result of education
should be to enable us to understand the voice of God. . . .
Like the branches of the True Vine, the Word of God presents unity in diversity.
There is in it a perfect, superhuman, mysterious unity. It contains divine wisdom, and
that is the foundation of all true education; but this Book has been treated
indifferently.
Now, as never before, we need to understand the true science of education. If we fail
to understand this, we shall never have a place in the kingdom of God. This is life
eternal, that they might know Thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom Thou
hast sent (John 17:3). If this is the price of heaven, shall not our education be
conducted on these lines?--Christian Educator, Aug, 1897.
Making Iron Rule for Others Dishonors God.--God will not vindicate any device
whereby man shall in the slightest degree rule or oppress his fellowman. As soon as a
man begins to make an iron rule for other men, he dishonors God and imperils his
own soul and the souls of his brethren.--7T 181 (1902).
The Hyssop, the Cedar, and the Palm.--In all the Lord's arrangements there is nothing
more beautiful than His plan of giving to men and women a diversity of gifts. The
church is His garden, adorned with a variety of trees, plants, and flowers. He does not
expect the hyssop to assume the proportions of the cedar, nor the olive to reach the
height of the stately palm. Many have received but a limited religious and intellectual
training, but God has a work for this class to do if they will labor in humility, trusting
in Him.--Lt 122, 1902. (Ev 98, 99).
Characters as Varied as the Flowers.--From the endless variety of plants and flowers,
we may learn an important lesson. All blossoms are not the same in form or color.
Some possess healing virtues. Some are always fragrant. There are professing
Christians who think it their duty to make every other Christian like themselves. This
is man's plan, not the plan of God. In the church of God there is room for characters
as varied as are the flowers in a garden. In His spiritual garden there are many
varieties of flowers.--Lt 95, 1902. (Ev 99.)
Too Little Thought Given to Causative Factors.--Far too little thought is given to the
causes underlying the mortality, the disease and degeneracy, that exist today even in
the most civilized and favored lands. The human race is deteriorating.--MH 380
(1905).
Mind Affects Body.--The relation which exists between the mind and the body is very
intimate. When one is affected, the other sympathizes. The condition of the mind
affects the health of the physical system. If the mind is free and happy, from a
consciousness of right doing and a sense of satisfaction in causing happiness to others,
it creates a cheerfulness that will react upon the whole system, causing a freer
circulation of the blood and a toning up of the entire body. The blessing of God is a
healing power, and those who are abundant in benefiting others will realize that
wondrous blessing in both heart and life.--CTBH 13, 1890. (CH 28; see also 4T 60,
61 [1876].)
A Well-nourished and Healthy Brain.--The brain is the organ and instrument of the
mind, and controls the whole body. In order for the other parts of the system to be
healthy, the brain must be healthy. And in order for the brain to be healthy, the blood
must be pure. If by correct habits of eating and drinking the blood is kept pure, the
brain will be properly nourished.--MS 24, 1900. (MM 291.)
Electric Power of Brain Vitalizes System.--The influence of the mind on the body, as
well as of the body on the mind, should be emphasized. The electric power of the
brain, promoted by mental activity, vitalizes the whole system, and is thus an
invaluable aid in resisting disease. This should be made plain. The power of the will
and the importance of self-control, both in the preservation and in the recovery of
health, the depressing and even ruinous effect of anger, discontent, selfishness, or
impurity, and on the other hand the marvelous life-giving power to be found in
cheerfulness, unselfishness, gratitude, should also be shown.--Ed 197 (1903).
Some Sick Because They Lack Willpower.--In journeying I have met many who were
really sufferers through their imaginations. They lacked willpower to rise above and
combat disease of body and mind; and, therefore, they were held in suffering
bondage. . . .
I frequently turn from the bedside of these self-made invalids, saying to myself,
Dying by inches, dying of indolence, a disease which no one but themselves can
cure.--HR, Jan, 1871. (MM 106, 107.)
Importance of Sound Minds in Sound Bodies.-- Mental and moral power is dependent
upon the physical health. Children should be taught that all pleasures and indulgences
are to be sacrificed which will interfere with health. If the children are taught self-
denial and self-control, they will be far happier than if allowed to indulge their desires
for pleasure and extravagance in dress. . . .
Good health, sound minds, and pure hearts are not made of the first importance in
households. Many parents do not educate their children for usefulness and duty. They
are indulged and petted, until self-denial to them becomes almost an impossibility.
They are not taught that to make a success of Christian life, the development of sound
minds in sound bodies is of the greatest importance.--RH, Oct 31, 1871.
Children Who Are Pressed Too Hard Too Early.--In the schoolroom the foundation
has been too surely laid for diseases of various kinds. But, more especially, the most
delicate of all organs, the brain, has often been permanently injured by too great
exercise. . . . And the lives of many have been thus sacrificed by ambitious mothers.
Of those children who have apparently had sufficient force of constitution to survive
this treatment, there are very many who carry the effects of it through life. The
nervous energy of the brain becomes so weakened, that after they come to maturity, it
is impossible for them to endure much mental exercise. The force of some of the
delicate organs of the brain seems to be expended. And not only has the physical and
mental health of children been endangered by being sent to school at too early a
period, but they have been the losers in a moral point of view.--HL 43, 44, 1865.
(2SM 436.)
Very few realize the benefits of the care, responsibility, and experience that children
bring to the family. . . . A childless house is a desolate place. The hearts of the
inmates are in danger of becoming selfish, of cherishing a love for their own ease, and
consulting their own desires and conveniences. They gather sympathy to themselves
but have little to bestow upon others. Care and affection for dependent children
removes the roughness from our natures, makes us tender and sympathetic, and has an
influence to develop the nobler elements of our character.--2T 647 (1871).
In Treating Sick, Study Minds. [SEE CHAPTER 42, MIND AND HEALTH.] --In the
treatment of the sick the effect of mental influence should not be overlooked. Rightly
used, this influence affords one of the most effective agencies for combating
disease.--MH 241 (1905).
Sickness Originates in the Mind.--A great deal of the sickness which afflicts humanity
has its origin in the mind and can only be cured by restoring the mind to health. There
are very many more than we imagine who are sick mentally. Heart sickness makes
many dyspeptics, for mental trouble has a paralyzing influence upon the digestive
organs.--3T 184 (1872).
Christ Heals.--There is a soul sickness no balm can reach, no medicine heal. Pray for
these, and bring them to Jesus Christ.--MS 105, 1898. (WM 71.)
Atmosphere Provides Health and Vigor.--Above all things, parents should surround
their children with an atmosphere of cheerfulness, courtesy, and love. A home where
love dwells and where it finds expression in looks, in words, in acts, is a place where
angels delight to dwell. Parents, let the sunshine of love, cheer, and happy content
enter your own hearts, and let its sweet influence pervade the home. Manifest a
kindly, forbearing spirit, and encourage the same in your children, cultivating all
those graces that will brighten the home life. The atmosphere thus created will be to
the children what air and sunshine are to the vegetable world, promoting health and
vigor of mind and body.--CT 115 (1913).
The Love of Christ Vitalizes the Whole Being.--The love which Christ diffuses
through the whole being is a vitalizing power. Every vital part--the brain, the heart,
the nerves--it touches with healing. By it the highest energies of the being are aroused
to activity. It frees the soul from the guilt and sorrow, the anxiety and care, that crush
the life-forces. With it come serenity and composure. It implants in the soul, joy that
nothing earthly can destroy--joy in the Holy Spirit--health-giving, life-giving joy.--
MH 115 (1905).
Christ's Work Is to Heal the Brokenhearted.-- God's healing power runs all through
nature. If a tree is cut, if a human being is wounded or breaks a bone, nature begins at
once to repair the injury. Even before the need exists, the healing agencies are in
readiness; and as soon as a part is wounded, every energy is bent to the work of
restoration. So it is in the spiritual realm. Before sin created the need, God had
provided the remedy. Every soul that yields to temptation is wounded, bruised, by the
adversary; but wherever there is sin, there is the Saviour. It is Christ's work to heal the
brokenhearted, to preach deliverance to the captives, . . . to set at liberty them that are
bruised (Luke 4:18).--Ed 113 (1903).
The Saviour's Prescription for Mental and Spiritual Ills.--Our Saviour's words, Come
unto Me, . . . and I will give you rest (Matthew 11:28), are a prescription for the
healing of physical, mental, and spiritual ills. Though men have brought suffering
upon themselves by their own wrongdoing, He regards them with pity. In Him they
may find help. He will do great things for those who trust in Him.--MH 115 (1905).
Gospel Versus Science and Literature.--Science and literature cannot bring into the
darkened mind of men the light which the glorious gospel of the Son of God can
bring. The Son of God alone can do the great work of illuminating the soul. No
wonder Paul exclaims, For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ: for it is the
power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth (Romans 1:16). The gospel of
Christ becomes personality in those who believe, and makes them living epistles,
known and read of all men. In this way the leaven of godliness passes into the
multitude. The heavenly intelligences are able to discern the true elements of
greatness in character, for only goodness is esteemed as efficiency with God.--RH,
Dec 15, 1891. (FE 199, 200.)
Gospel Alone Can Cure Evils Cursing Society.-- The only remedy for the sins and
sorrows of men is Christ. The gospel of His grace alone can cure the evils that curse
society. The injustice of the rich toward the poor, the hatred of the poor toward the
rich, alike have their root in selfishness, and this can be eradicated only through
submission to Christ. He alone, for the selfish heart of sin, gives the new heart of love.
Let the servants of Christ preach the gospel with the Spirit sent down from heaven
and work as He did for the benefit of men. Then such results will be manifest in the
blessing and uplifting of mankind as are wholly impossible of accomplishment by
human power.--COL 254 (1900).
The Divine Leaven Changes the Mind.--In the parable the woman placed the leaven in
the meal. It was necessary to supply a want. . . . Thus the divine leaven does its
work. . . . The mind is changed; the faculties are set to work. Man is not supplied with
new faculties, but the faculties he has are sanctified. The conscience hitherto dead is
aroused. But man cannot make this change himself. It can be made only by the Holy
Spirit. . . .
When our minds are controlled by the Spirit of God, we shall understand the lesson
taught by the parable of the leaven. Those who open their hearts to receive the truth
will realize that the Word of God is the great instrumentality in the transformation of
character.--RH, July 25, 1899.
Committing Ourselves to Christ Brings Peace.--All our future rests with our
individual action in opening our heart to receive the Prince of peace. Our minds can
find quiet and rest in and through committing ourselves to Christ, in whom is
efficiency of power. Having secured that peace, that comfort, that hope, which He
offers to your soul, your heart will be rejoicing in God our Saviour for the great and
wondrous hope presented to you as an individual who recognizes the Great Gift. Then
you will be so thankful that you will praise God for the great love and grace bestowed
upon you.
Behold your Helper, Jesus Christ. Welcome Him, and invite His gracious presence.
Your mind may be renewed day by day, and it is your privilege to accept peace and
rest, rise above worries, and praise God for your blessings. Do not erect barriers of
objectionable things to keep Jesus away from your soul. Change your voice; repine
not; let gratitude be expressed for the great love of Christ that has been and is still
being shown toward you.--Lt 294, 1906.
Dwelling Upon Christ Provides Stimulus.--If we would permit our minds to dwell
more upon Christ and the heavenly world, we should find a powerful stimulus and
support in fighting the battles of the Lord. Pride and love of the world will lose their
power as we contemplate the glories of that better land so soon to be our home.
Beside the loveliness of Christ all earthly attractions will seem of little worth.--RH,
Nov 15, 1887.
The Mind and Spiritual Warfare.--Our improvement in moral purity depends on right
thinking and right acting. Not that which goeth into the mouth defileth a man; but that
which cometh out of the mouth, this defileth a man. For out of the heart proceed evil
thoughts, murders, adulteries, fornications, thefts, false witness, blasphemies. These
are the things which defile a man (Matthew 15:11, 19, 20).
Evil thoughts destroy the soul. The converting power of God changes the heart,
refining and purifying the thoughts. Unless a determined effort is made to keep the
thoughts centered on Christ, grace cannot reveal itself in the life. The mind must
engage in the spiritual warfare. Every thought must be brought into captivity to the
obedience of Christ. All the habits must be brought under God's control.--Lt 123
1904.
Preoccupation of Mind a Safeguard Against Evil. --As a safeguard against evil, the
preoccupation of the mind with good is worth more than unnumbered barriers of law
and discipline.--Ed 213 (1903).
A Perverted Imagination Produces Darkness.--If the eye of the mind beholds the
excellence of the mystery of godliness, the advantage of spiritual riches over worldly
riches, the whole body will be full of light. If the imagination is perverted by the
fascination of earthly pomp and splendor until gain seems godliness, the whole body
will be full of darkness. When the powers of the mind are concentrated upon the
treasures of earth, they are debased and belittled.--RH, Sept 18, 1888.
Living Water Versus Broken Cisterns.--Jesus knew the wants of the soul. Pomp,
riches, and honor cannot satisfy the heart. If any man thirst, let him come unto Me.
The rich, the poor, the high, the low, are alike welcome. He promises to relieve the
burdened mind, to comfort the sorrowing, and to give hope to the despondent.
Many of those who heard Jesus were mourners over disappointed hopes, many were
nourishing a secret grief, many were seeking to satisfy their restless longing with the
things of the world and the praise of men; but when all was gained, they found that
they had toiled only to reach a broken cistern, from which they could not quench their
thirst. Amid the glitter of the joyous scene they stood, dissatisfied and sad.
That sudden cry, If any man thirst, startled them from their sorrowful meditation, and
as they listened to the words that followed, their minds kindled with a new hope. The
Holy Spirit presented the symbol before them until they saw in it the offer of the
priceless gift of salvation.--DA 454 (1898).
Union of Divine and Human Endeavor Necessary. --The Spirit furnishes the strength
that sustains striving, wrestling souls in every emergency--amid the unfriendliness of
relatives, the hatred of the world, and the realization of their own imperfections and
mistakes. A union of divine and human endeavor, a close connection first, last, and
ever, with God, the source of all strength--this is absolutely necessary.--RH, May 19,
1904. (HC 151.)
The mind controls the whole man. All our actions, good or bad, have their source in
the mind. It is the mind that worships God and allies us to heavenly beings. Yet many
spend all their lives without becoming intelligent in regard to the casket [jewel case]
that contains this treasure.--SpTED 33, May 11, 1896. (FE 426.)
Brain Controls the Body.--There are many invalids today who will ever remain so
because they cannot be convinced that their experience is not reliable. The brain is the
capital of the body, the seat of all the nervous forces and of mental action. The nerves
proceeding from the brain control the body. By the brain nerves, mental impressions
are conveyed to all the nerves of the body as by telegraph wires, and they control the
vital action of every part of the system. All the organs of motion are governed by the
communications they receive from the brain.--3T 69 (1872).
The brain nerves which communicate with the entire system are the only medium
through which Heaven can communicate to man and affect his inmost life.--2T 347
(1870).
Satan Strikes at the Perceptive Faculties. [SEE CHAPTER 35, THE INFLUENCE OF
PERCEPTION.]--Satan comes to man with his temptations as an angel of light, as he
came to Christ. He has been working to bring man into a condition of physical and
moral weakness that he may overcome him with his temptations and then triumph
over his ruin. And he has been successful in tempting man to indulge appetite,
regardless of the result. He well knows that it is impossible for man to discharge his
obligations to God and to his fellowmen while he impairs the faculties God has given
him. The brain is the capital of the body. If the perceptive faculties become benumbed
through intemperance of any kind, eternal things are not discerned.--RH, Sept 8,
1874. (MYP 236.)
The Tyranny of Custom.--The strength or the weakness of the mind has very much to
do with our usefulness in this world and with our final salvation. The ignorance that
has prevailed in regard to God's law in our physical nature is deplorable.
Intemperance of any kind is a violation of the laws of our being. Imbecility is
prevailing to a fearful extent. Sin is made attractive by the covering of light which
Satan throws over it, and he is well pleased when he can hold the Christian world in
their daily habits under the tyranny of custom, like the heathen, and allow appetite to
govern them.--RH, Sept 8, 1874. (MYP 237.)
Guarding the Citadel.--All should feel the necessity of keeping the moral nature
braced by constant watchfulness. Like faithful sentinels, they should guard the citadel
of the soul, never feeling that they may relax their vigilance for a moment.--SpTPH
65, 1879. (CH 411.)
The Mind Rightly Trained Wavers Not.--The mind must be trained through daily tests
to habits of fidelity, to a sense of the claims of right and duty above inclination and
pleasure. Minds thus trained do not waver between right and wrong, as the reed
trembles in the wind; but as soon as matters come before them, they discern at once
that principle is involved, and they instinctively choose the right without long
debating the matter. They are loyal because they have trained themselves in habits of
faithfulness and truth.-- 3T 22 (1872).
I was compelled to hear the words spoken by some men to women and girls--words of
flattery, words that would deceive and infatuate. Satan uses all these means to destroy
souls. Some of you may thus have been his agents; and if so, you will have to meet
these things in the judgment. The angel said of this class. Their hearts have never
been given to God. Christ is not in them. Truth is not there. Its place is occupied by
sin, deception, and falsehood. The Word of God is not believed and acted upon.--5T
536, 537 (1889).
Ease, Self-indulgence, Security--Traitors Within the Walls.--It was when the Israelites
were in a condition of outward ease and security that they were led into sin. They
failed to keep God ever before them, they neglected prayer and cherished a spirit of
self-confidence. Ease and self-indulgence left the citadel of the soul unguarded, and
debasing thoughts found entrance. It was the traitors within the walls that overthrew
the strongholds of principle and betrayed Israel into the power of Satan.
It is thus that Satan still seeks to compass the ruin of the soul. A long preparatory
process, unknown to the world, goes on in the heart before the Christian commits
open sin. The mind does not come down at once from purity and holiness to
depravity, corruption, and crime. It takes time to degrade those formed in the image of
God to the brutal or the satanic. By beholding we become changed. By the indulgence
of impure thoughts man can so educate his mind that sin which he once loathed will
become pleasant to him.--PP 459 (1890).
Those who use tobacco in any form are not clear before God. In such a filthy practice
it is impossible for them to glorify God in their bodies and spirits, which are His. And
while they are using slow and sure poisons, which are ruining their health and
debasing the faculties of the mind, God cannot approbate them. He may be merciful to
them while they indulge in this pernicious habit in ignorance of the injury it is doing
them, but when the matter is set before them in its true light, then they are guilty
before God if they continue to indulge this gross appetite.--4SG 126 (1864).
Slaves to Alcohol and Drugs.--On every side Satan seeks to entice the youth into the
path of perdition; and if he can once get their feet set in the way, he hurries them on in
their downward course, leading them from one dissipation to another, until his victims
lose their tenderness of conscience and have no more the fear of God before their
eyes. They exercise less and less self-restraint. They become addicted to the use of
wine and alcohol, tobacco and opium, and go from one stage of debasement to
another. They are slaves to appetite. Counsel which they once respected, they learn to
despise. They put on swaggering airs and boast of liberty when they are the servants
of corruption. They mean by liberty that they are slaves to selfishness, debased
appetite, and licentiousness.--ST, June 22, 1891. (Te 274.)
Satan's Weapons.--The indulgence of fleshly lusts wars against the soul. The apostle
in the most impressive manner, addresses Christians, I beseech you therefore,
brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy,
acceptable unto God (Romans 12:1). If the body is saturated with liquor and the
defilement of tobacco, it is not holy and acceptable to God. Satan knows that it cannot
be, and for this reason he brings his temptations to bear upon men upon the point of
appetite, that he may bring them into bondage to this propensity and thus work their
ruin.--RH, Sept 8, 1874.
The Deciding Factor of Passion and Appetite.--If men and women of intelligence
have their moral powers benumbed through intemperance of any kind, they are, in
many of their habits, elevated but little above the heathen. Satan is constantly drawing
the people from saving light to custom and fashion, irrespective of physical, mental,
and moral health. The great enemy knows that if appetite and passion predominate,
health of body and strength of intellect are sacrificed upon the altar of self-
gratification, and man is brought to speedy ruin. If enlightened intellect holds the
reins, controlling the animal propensities, keeping them in subjection to the moral
powers, Satan well knows that his power to overcome with his temptations is very
small.--RH, Sept 8, 1874. (MYP 237.)
What Might Have Been.--If parents in past generations had, with firmness of purpose,
kept the body servant to the mind and had not allowed the intellectual to be enslaved
by animal passions, there would be in this age a different order of beings upon the
earth.--HL (Part 2) 38, 1865. (2SM 431, 432.)
Teach the People.--Present before the people the need of resisting the temptation to
indulge appetite. This is where many are failing. Explain how closely body and mind
are related and show the need of keeping both in the very best condition.--Circular Lt
to Physicians and Evangelists, 1910. (CH 543.)
Chap. 10 - Understanding
A Work Requiring Discernment and Discrimination. --It is the nicest and most critical
work ever given to mortals to deal with minds. Those who engage in this work should
have clear discernment and good powers of discrimination.
An Exacting Task.--Since man cost heaven so much, the price of God's dear Son, how
carefully should ministers, teachers, and parents deal with the souls of those brought
under their influence. It is nice work to deal with minds, and it should be entered upon
with fear and trembling.
The Physician Encounters All Classes of Minds.--Dr. _____ should seek to add daily
to his stock of knowledge and to cultivate courteousness and refinement of
manners. ... He should bear in mind that he is associated with all classes of minds and
that the impressions he gives will be extended to other states and will be reflected
upon the Institute [Battle Creek Sanitarium].--3T 183, 184 (1872).
Patience and Wisdom Needed.--Ministers should be careful not to expect too much
from those who are still groping in the darkness of error. They should do their work
well, relying upon God to impart to inquiring minds the mysterious, quickening
influence of His Holy Spirit, knowing that without this their labors will be
unsuccessful. They should be patient and wise in dealing with minds, remembering
how manifold are the circumstances that have developed such different traits in
individuals. They should strictly guard themselves also, lest self get the supremacy
and Jesus be left out of the question.--GW 381 (1915).
The Love of Christ Wins Its Way.--Only He who reads the heart knows how to bring
men to repentance. Only His wisdom can give us success in reaching the lost. You
may stand up stiffly, feeling, I am holier that thou, and it matters not how correct your
reasoning or how true your words; they will never touch hearts. The love of Christ
manifested in word and act will win its way to the soul when the reiteration of precept
or argument would accomplish nothing.--MH 163 (1905).
With Compassion and Love.--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 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 (Jude 22, 23).--3T 269, 270 (1873).
A Passionate Man Not to Deal With Minds.--A lack of firm faith and of discernment
in sacred things should be regarded as sufficient to debar any man from connection
with the work of God. So also the indulgence of a quick temper, a harsh, overbearing
spirit, reveals that its possessor should not be placed where he will be called to decide
weighty questions that affect God's heritage.
A passionate man should have no part to act in dealing with human minds. He cannot
be trusted to shape matters which have a relation to those whom Christ has purchased
at an infinite price. If he undertakes to manage men, he will hurt and bruise their
souls; for he has not the fine touch, the delicate sensibility, which the grace of Christ
imparts. His own heart needs to be softened, subdued by the Spirit of God; the heart
of stone has not become a heart of flesh.--SpT Series A, No. 5, p 18, 1896. (TM 261.)
Patience, Tact, and Wisdom Needed.--To deal successfully with these different minds
the teacher needs to exercise great tact and delicacy in management, as well as
firmness in government. Dislike and even contempt for proper regulations will often
be manifested. Some will exercise their ingenuity in evading penalties, while others
will display a reckless indifference to the consequences of transgression. All this will
call for patience and forbearance and wisdom on the part of those entrusted with the
education of these youth.--CT 264 (1913).
A Course Which May Leave Irreparable Scars and Bruises.--A teacher may have
sufficient education and knowledge in the sciences to instruct, but has it been
ascertained that he has tact and wisdom to deal with human minds? If instructors have
not the love of Christ abiding in their hearts, they are not fit to bear the grave
responsibilities placed upon those who educate the youth. Lacking the higher
education themselves, they know not how to deal with human minds. Their own
insubordinate hearts are striving for control; and to subject the plastic minds and
characters of the children to such discipline is to leave upon the mind scars and
bruises that will never be removed.--CT 193 (1913).
The Finest Discrimination Required.--The Lord has presented to me, in many ways
and at various times, how carefully we should deal with the young--that it requires the
finest discrimination to deal with minds. Everyone who has to do with the education
and training of youth needs to live very close to the Great Teacher, to catch His spirit
and manner of work. Lessons are to be given which will affect their character and
lifework.--GW 333 (1915).
Personal Element Essential.--In all true teaching the personal element is essential.
Christ in His teaching dealt with men individually. It was by personal contact and
association that He trained the Twelve. It was in private, often to but one listener, that
He gave His most precious instruction. To the honored rabbi at the night conference
on the Mount of Olives, to the despised woman at the well of Sychar, He opened His
richest treasures; for in these hearers He discerned the impressible heart, the open
mind, the receptive spirit. Even the crowd that so often thronged His steps was not to
Christ an indiscriminate mass of human beings. He spoke directly to every mind and
appealed to every heart. He watched the faces of His hearers, marked the lighting up
of the countenance, the quick, responsive glance, which told that truth had reached the
soul; and there vibrated in His heart the answering chord of sympathetic joy.--Ed 231
(1903).
Overwork Unfits to Deal With Others.--The teachers themselves should give proper
attention to the laws of health, that they may preserve their own powers in the best
possible condition and by example as well as by precept may exert a right influence
upon their pupils. The teacher whose physical powers are already enfeebled by
disease or overwork should pay special attention to the laws of life. He should take
time for recreation. He should not take upon himself responsibility outside of his
school work, which will so tax him physically or mentally that his nervous system
will be unbalanced; for in this case he will be unfitted to deal with minds and cannot
do justice to himself or to his pupils.--CTBH 83, 1890. (FE 147.)
Understanding Different Needs.--I was shown that the physicians at our Institute
should be men and women of faith and spirituality. They should make God their trust.
There are many who come to the Institute who have by their own sinful indulgence
brought upon themselves disease of almost every type.
This class do not deserve the sympathy that they frequently require. And it is painful
to the physicians to devote time and strength to this class, who are debased physically,
mentally, and morally.
But there is a class who have, through ignorance, lived in violation of nature's laws.
They have worked intemperately and have eaten intemperately because it was the
custom to do so. Some have suffered many things from many physicians but have not
been made better, but decidedly worse. At length they are torn from business, from
society, and from their families; and as their last resort they come to the Health
Institute with some faint hope that they may find relief.
This class need sympathy. They should be treated with the greatest tenderness, and
care should be taken to make clear to their understanding the laws of their being, that
they may, be ceasing to violate them, and by governing themselves, avoid suffering
and disease--the penalty of nature's violated law.--3T 178 (1872).
Truth Not to Be Spoken at All Times.--But few who have moved in the society of the
world, and who view things from a worlding's standpoint are prepared to have a
statement of facts in regard to themselves presented before them. The truth even is not
to be spoken at all times. There is a fit time and opportunity to speak when words will
not offend. The physicians should not be overworked and their nervous systems
prostrated, for this condition of body will not be favorable to calm minds, steady
nerves, and a cheerful, happy spirit.--3T 182 (1872).
Christ Understands.--He who took humanity upon Himself knows how to sympathize
with the sufferings of humanity. Not only does Christ know every soul, and the
peculiar needs and trials of that soul, but He knows all the circumstances that chafe
and perplex the spirit. His hand is outstretched in pitying tenderness to every suffering
child. Those who suffer most have most of His sympathy and pity. He is touched with
the feeling of our infirmities, and He desires us to lay our perplexities and troubles at
His feet and leave them there.--MH 249 (1905).
Understanding Brings Closer Relationship to Christ.--Good deeds are the fruit that
Christ requires us to bear--kind words; deeds of benevolence; of tender regard for the
poor, the needy, the afflicted. When hearts sympathize with hearts burdened with
discouragement and grief, when the hand dispenses to the needy, when the naked are
clothed, the stranger made welcome to a seat in your parlor and a place in your heart,
angels are coming very near, and an answering strain is responded to in heaven.
Every act of justice, mercy, and benevolence makes melody in heaven. The Father
from His throne beholds those who do these acts of mercy and numbers them with His
most precious treasures. And they shall be Mine, saith the Lord of hosts, in that day
when I make up My jewels (Malachi 3:17). Every merciful act to the needy, the
suffering, is regarded as though done to Jesus. When you succor the poor, sympathize
with the afflicted and oppressed, and befriend the orphan, you bring yourselves into a
closer relationship to Jesus.--2T 25 (1868).
Christ Calls for Tenderness and Compassion.--True sympathy between man and his
fellowman is to be the sign distinguishing those who love and fear God from those
who are unmindful of His law. How great the sympathy that Christ expressed in
coming to this world to give His life a sacrifice for a dying world! His religion led to
the doing of genuine medical missionary work. He was a healing power. I will have
mercy, and not sacrifice, He said. This is the test that the Great Author of truth used to
distinguish between true religion and false. God wants His medical missionaries to act
with the tenderness and compassion that Christ would show were He in our world.--
SpT MM 8, 1893. (MM 251.)
Sum of Life's Happiness.--A cultivated intellect is a great treasure; but without the
softening influence of sympathy and sanctified love it is not of the highest value. We
should have words and deeds of tender consideration for others. We can manifest a
thousand little attentions in friendly words and pleasant looks, which will be reflected
upon us again. Thoughtless Christians manifest by their neglect of others that they are
not in union with Christ. It is impossible to be in union with Christ and yet be unkind
to others and forgetful of their rights. Many long intensely for friendly sympathy.
God has given each of us an identity of our own, which cannot be merged in that of
another; but our individual characteristics will be much less prominent if we are
indeed Christ's and His will is ours. Our lives should be consecrated to the good and
happiness of others, as was our Saviour's. We should be self-forgetful, ever looking
out for opportunities--even in little things--to show gratitude for the favors we have
received of others and watching for opportunities to cheer others and lighten and
relieve their sorrows and burdens by acts of tender kindness and little deeds of love.
These thoughtful courtesies that, commencing in our families, extend outside the
family circle, help make up the sum of life's happiness; and the neglect of these little
things makes up the sum of life's bitterness and sorrow.--3T 539, 540 (1875).
A Strength of Principle.--The truths of the Bible, received, will uplift mind and soul.
If the Word of God were appreciated as it should be, both young and old would
possess an inward rectitude, a strength of principle, that would enable them to resist
temptation.--MH 459 (1905).
The Only True Guide.--A familiar acquaintance with the Scriptures sharpens the
discerning powers and fortifies the soul against the attacks of Satan. The Bible is the
sword of the Spirit, which will never fail to vanquish the adversary. It is the only true
guide in all matters of faith and practice. The reason why Satan has so great control
over the minds and hearts of men is that they have not made the Word of God the man
of their counsel, and all their ways have not been tried by the true test. The Bible will
show us what course we must pursue to become heirs of glory.--RH Jan 4, 1881. (HC
31.)
Higher education calls for something greater, something more divine, than the
knowledge to be obtained merely from books. It means a personal, experimental
knowledge of Christ; it means emancipation from ideas, from habits and practices,
that have been gained in the school of the prince of darkness and which are opposed
to loyalty to God. It means to overcome stubbornness, pride, selfishness, worldly
ambition, and unbelief. It is the message of deliverance from sin.--CT 11, 12 (1913).
Inspires the Mind.--In the Word of God the mind finds subjects for the deepest
thought, the loftiest aspirations. Here we may hold communion with patriarchs and
prophets and listen to the voice of the Eternal as He speaks with men. Here we behold
the Majesty of heaven as He humbled Himself to become our substitute and surety, to
cope single-handed with the powers of darkness, and to gain the victory in our behalf.
A reverent contemplation of such themes as these cannot fail to soften, purify, and
ennoble the heart, and at the same time to inspire the mind with new strength and
vigor.--CT 52, 53 (1913).
It Reveals the Purpose of Life.--But that which above all other considerations should
lead us to prize the Bible is that in it is revealed to men the will of God. Here we learn
the object of our creation and the means by which that object may be attained. We
learn how to improve wisely the present life and how to secure the future life. No
other book can satisfy the questionings of the mind or the cravings of the heart. By
obtaining a knowledge of God's Word and giving heed thereto, men may rise from the
lowest depths of degradation to become the sons of God, the associates of sinless
angels.--CT 53, 54 (1913).
Parables to Impress and Awaken Minds.--God designs that our minds shall be
impressed, awakened, and instructed by His sacred parables. He would have nature
counteract the attempts made to divorce science from Bible Christianity. He desires
that the things of nature that greet our senses shall hold the attention and imprint
heavenly truths upon the mind.--YI, May 6, 1897.
The Bible Without a Rival.--As an educating power the Bible is without a rival.
Nothing will so impart vigor to all the faculties as requiring students to grasp the
stupendous truths of revelation. The mind gradually adapts itself to the subjects upon
which it is allowed to dwell. If occupied with commonplace matters only, to the
exclusion of grand and lofty themes, it will become dwarfed and enfeebled. If never
required to grapple with difficult problems or put to the stretch to comprehend
important truths, it will after a time almost lose the power of growth.--5T 24 (1882).
Accept It With Simple Faith.--God desires man to exercise his reasoning powers, and
the study of the Bible will strengthen and elevate the mind as no other study can do. It
is the best mental as well as spiritual exercise for the human mind. Yet we are to
beware of deifying reason, which is subject to the weakness and infirmity of
humanity.
If we would not have the Scriptures clouded to our understanding so that the plainest
truths shall not be comprehended, we must have the simplicity and faith of a little
child, ready to learn and beseeching the aid of the Holy Spirit. A sense of the power
and wisdom of God and of our inability to comprehend His greatness, should inspire
us with humility, and we should open His Word, as we would enter His presence, with
holy awe. When we come to the Bible, reason must acknowledge an authority
superior to itself, and heart and intellect must bow to the great I AM.--5T 703, 704
(1889).
Nothing to Be Studied That Clouds God's Word. --Jesus Christ is our spiritual
touchstone. He reveals the Father. Nothing should be given as food to the brain that
will bring before the mind any mist or cloud in regard to the Word of God. No
careless inattention should be shown in regard to the cultivation of the soil of the
heart. The mind must be prepared to appreciate the work and words of Christ, for He
came from heaven to waken a desire and to give the bread of life to all who hunger for
spiritual knowledge. --MS 15, 1898.
Scriptures Recognize Man's Moral Choice.--When we search the Word of God, angels
are by our side, reflecting bright beams of light upon its sacred pages. The Scriptures
appeal to man as having power to choose between right and wrong; they speak to him
in warning, in reproof, in entreaty, in encouragement. The mind must be exercised on
the solemn truths of God's Word, or it will grow weak.... We must examine for
ourselves and learn the reasons of our faith by comparing scripture with scripture.
Take the Bible, and on your knees plead with God to enlighten your mind.--RH, Mar
4, 1884.
Minds Find Noblest Development.--If the Bible were studied as it should be, men
would become strong in intellect. The subjects treated upon in the Word of God, the
dignified simplicity of its utterance, the noble themes which it presents to the mind,
develop faculties in man which cannot otherwise be developed. In the Bible a
boundless field is opened for the imagination. The student will come from a
contemplation of its grand themes, from association with its lofty imagery, more pure
and elevated in thought and feeling than if he had spent the time in reading any work
of mere human origin, to say nothing of those of a trifling character.
Youthful minds fail to reach their noblest development when they neglect the highest
source of wisdom--the Word of God. The reason why we have so few men of good
mind, of stability and solid worth, is that God is not feared, God is not loved, the
principles of religion are not carried out in the life as they should be.--CTBH 126,
1890. (FE 165.)
Search for Its Hidden Treasure.-The Bible, just as it reads, is to be our guide. Nothing
is so calculated to enlarge the mind and strengthen the intellect as the study of the
Bible. No other study will so elevate the soul and give vigor to the faculties as the
study of the living oracles. The minds of thousands of ministers of the gospel are
dwarfed because they are permitted to dwell upon commonplace things, and are not
exercised in searching for the hidden treasure of the Word of God. As the mind is
brought to the study of God's Word, the understanding will enlarge and the higher
powers will develop for the comprehension of high and ennobling truth.
It is according to the character of the matter with which the mind becomes familiar
that it is dwarfed or enlarged. If the mind is not raised up to make vigorous and
persistent effort in seeking to comprehend truth by comparing scripture with scripture,
it will surely become contracted and lose its tone. We should set our minds to the task
of searching for truths that do not lie directly upon the surface.--RH, Sept 28, 1897.
Bible Directs the Life Aright.--The whole Bible is a revelation of the glory of God in
Christ. Received, believed, obeyed, it is the great instrumentality in the transformation
of character. It is the grand stimulus, the constraining force, that quickens the
physical, mental, and spiritual powers and directs the life into right channels.
The reason why the youth, and even those of mature years, are so easily led into
temptation and sin is that they do not study the Word of God and meditate upon it as
they should. The lack of firm, decided willpower, which is manifest in life and
character, results from neglect of the sacred instruction of God's Word. They do not
by earnest effort direct the mind to that which would inspire pure, holy thought and
divert it from that which is impure and untrue.--MH 458 (1905).
It Reveals the Rules for Holy Living.--The Lord, in His great mercy, has revealed to
us in the Scriptures His rules of holy living, His commandments, and His laws. He
tells us therein the sins to shun; He explains to us the plan of salvation and points out
the way to heaven. If they obey His injunction to search the Scriptures, none need be
ignorant of these things.
The actual progress of the soul in virtue and divine knowledge is by the plan of
addition--adding constantly the graces which Christ made an infinite sacrifice to bring
within the reach of all. We are finite, but we are to have a sense of the infinite.
The mind must be taxed, contemplating God and His wonderful plan for our
salvation. The soul will thus be lifted above commonplace things and fastened upon
things that are eternal.
The thought that we are in God's world and in the presence of the great Creator of the
universe, who made man in His own image, after His own likeness, will lift the mind
into broader, higher fields for meditation than any fictitious story. The thought that
God's eye is watching us, that He loves us and cared so much for fallen man as to give
His dearly beloved Son to redeem us that we might not miserably perish, is a great
one, and whoever opens his heart to the acceptance and contemplation of these great
themes will never be satisfied with trivial, sensational subjects.--RH, Nov 9, 1886.
A New Heart Means a New Mind.--The words A new heart will I give you mean, A
new mind will I give you. This change of heart is always attended by a clear
conception of Christian duty, an understanding of truth. The clearness of our views of
truth will be proportionate to our understanding of the Word of God. He who gives
the Scriptures close, prayerful attention will gain clear comprehension and sound
judgment, as if in turning to God he had reached a higher grade of intelligence.-RH,
Nov 10, 1904.
Not to Be Casually Read.--It is not safe for us to turn from the Holy Scriptures with
only a casual reading of their sacred pages. . . . Rein the mind up to the high task that
has been set before it, and study with determined interest, that you may understand
divine truth. Those who do this will be surprised to find to what the mind can attain.--
YI, June 29, 1893. (HC 35.)
Memory Training Aids the Mind.--The mind must be restrained and not allowed to
wander. It should be trained to dwell upon the Scriptures and upon noble, elevating
themes. Portions of Scripture, even whole chapters, may be committed to memory to
be repeated when Satan comes in with his temptations. The fifty-eighth chapter of
Isaiah is a profitable one for this purpose. Wall the soul in with the restrictions and
instructions given by inspiration of the Spirit of God.
When Satan would lead the mind to dwell upon earthly and sensual things, he is most
effectually resisted with It is written. . . . When he suggests doubts as to whether we
are really the people whom God is leading, whom by tests and provings He is
preparing to stand in the great day, be ready to meet his insinuations by presenting the
clear evidence from the Word of God that this is the remnant people who are keeping
the commandments of God and the faith of Jesus.--RH, Apr 8, 1884.
Bible Study Produces Well-balanced Minds.--Those who are under the training of the
Holy Spirit will be able to teach the Word intelligently. And when it is made the study
book, with earnest supplication for the Spirit's guidance and a full surrender of the
heart to be sanctified through the truth, it will accomplish all that Christ has promised.
The result of such Bible study will be well-balanced minds; for the physical, mental,
and moral powers will be harmoniously developed. There will be no paralysis in
spiritual knowledge. The understanding will be quickened, the sensibilities will be
aroused, the conscience will become sensitive, the sympathies and sentiments will be
purified, a better moral atmosphere will be created, and a new power to resist
temptation will be imparted.--SpTEd 27, June 12, 1896. (FE 433, 434.)
An Antidote for Poisonous Insinuations.--When the mind is stored with Bible truth, its
principles take deep root in the soul, and the preference and tastes become wedded to
truth, and there is no desire for debasing, exciting literature that enfeebles the moral
powers and wrecks the faculties God has bestowed for usefulness. Bible knowledge
will prove an antidote for the poisonous insinuations received through unguarded
reading.--RH, Nov 9, 1886. (HC 202.)
Protects From Superstition.--If the teachings of this Word were made the controlling
influence in our lives, if mind and heart were brought under its restraining power, the
evils that now exist in churches and families would find no place . . . . The teachings
of the Word of God are to control mind and heart, that the home life may demonstrate
the power of the grace of God. . . .
Without the Bible we should be bewildered by false theories. The mind would be
subjected to the tyranny of superstition and falsehood. But having in our possession
an authentic history of the beginning of the world, we need not hamper ourselves with
human conjectures and unreliable theories.--RH, Nov 10, 1904.
It Improves the Reasoning Faculties.--If the mind is set to the task of studying the
Bible for information, the reasoning faculties will be improved. Under study of the
Scriptures the mind expands and becomes more evenly balanced than if occupied in
obtaining general information from the books that are used which have no connection
with the Bible. No knowledge is so firm, so consistent and far-reaching, as that
obtained from a study of the Word of God. It is the foundation of all true knowledge.
The Bible is like a fountain. The more you look into it, the deeper it appears. The
grand truths of sacred history possess amazing strength and beauty and are as far-
reaching as eternity. No science is equal to the science that reveals the character of
God.
Moses was educated in all the wisdom of the Egyptians, yet he said, Behold, I have
taught you statutes and judgments, even as the Lord my God commanded me, that ye
should do so in the land whither ye go to possess it. Keep therefore and do them; for
this is your wisdom and your understanding in the sight of the nations, which shall
hear all these statutes, and say, Surely this great nation is a wise and understanding
people.--RH, Feb 25, 1896. (FE 393.)
Endows the Faculties With Vigor.--Why should not this book--this precious treasure--
be exalted and esteemed as a valued friend? This is our chart across the stormy sea of
life. It is our guidebook showing us the way to the eternal mansions and the character
we must have to inhabit them. There is no book the perusal of which will so elevate
and strengthen the mind as the study of the Bible. Here the intellect will find themes
of the most elevated character to call out its powers. There is nothing that will so
endow with vigor all our faculties as bringing them in contact with the stupendous
truths of revelation. The effort to grasp and measure these great thoughts expands the
mind. We may dig down deep into the mine of truth and gather precious treasures
with which to enrich the soul.
Here we may learn the true way to live, the safe way to die.--RH, Jan 4, 1881. (HC
31.)
Bible Study Will Enlarge the Mind.--The Bible is our guide in the safe paths that lead
to eternal life. God has inspired men to write that which will present the truth to us,
which will attract, and which, if practiced, will enable the receiver to obtain moral
power to rank among the most highly educated minds. The minds of all who make the
Word of God their study will enlarge. Far more than any other study its influence is
calculated to increase the powers of comprehension and endow every faculty with a
new power. It brings the mind in contact with broad, ennobling principles of truth. It
brings all heaven into close connection with human minds, imparting wisdom and
knowledge and understanding.--YI, Oct 13, 1898, (SD 70.)
Chap. 12 - Diligence
[SEE CHAPTER 65, INDOLENCE.]
Strive and Achieve.-- It is hard study, hard toil, persevering diligence, that obtain
victories. Waste no hours, no moments. The results of work--earnest, faithful work--
will be seen and appreciated. Those who wish for stronger minds can gain them by
diligence. The mind increases in power and efficiency by use. It becomes strong by
hard thinking. He who uses most diligently his mental and physical powers will
achieve the greatest results. Every power of the being strengthens by action.--RH,
Mar 10, 1903.
Fine Mental Qualities Not the Result of Accident. --True success in any line of work
is not the result of chance or accident or destiny. It is the outworking of God's
providences, the reward of faith and discretion, of virtue and perseverance. Fine
mental qualities and a high moral tone are not the result of accident. God gives
opportunities; success depends upon the use made of them.--PK 486 (1917).
Difficulties will be met in all studies, but never cease through discouragement.
Search, study, and pray; face every difficulty manfully and vigorously; call the power
of will and the grace of patience to your aid, and then dig more earnestly till the gem
of truth lies before you, plain and beautiful, all the more precious because of the
difficulties involved in finding it.
Do not, then, continually dwell upon this one point, concentrating all the energies of
the mind upon it, constantly urging it upon the attention of others, but take another
subject, and carefully examine that. Thus mystery after mystery will be unfolded to
your comprehension. Two valuable victories will be gained by this course. You have
not only secured useful knowledge, but the exercise of the mind has increased mental
strength and power. The key found to unlock one mystery may develop also other
precious gems of knowledge heretofore undiscovered--4T 414 (1880).
The Law of the Mind.--It is a law of the mind that it will narrow or expand to the
dimensions of the things with which it becomes familiar. The mental powers will
surely become contracted and will lose their ability to grasp the deep meanings of the
Word of God unless they are put vigorously and persistently to the task of searching
for truth. The mind will enlarge if it is employed in tracing out the relation of the
subjects of the Bible, comparing scripture with scripture, and spiritual things with
spiritual. Go below the surface; the richest treasures of thought are waiting for the
skillful and diligent student.--RH, July 17, 1888. (MYP 262.)
Call Latent Powers to Action.--In the common walks of life there is many a toiler
patiently treading the round of his daily tasks, unconscious of latent powers that,
roused to action, would place him among the world's great leaders. The touch of a
skillful hand is needed to arouse and develop those dormant faculties. It was such men
whom Jesus connected with Himself, and He gave them the advantages of three years'
training under His own care. No course of study in the schools of the rabbis or the
halls of philosophy could have equaled this in value.--CT 511 (1913).
Angels Take Hold of Reasoning Minds.--The heavenly angels are . . . at work to take
hold of reasoning minds, and their power is mightier than the hosts of darkness. There
are minds dealing with sacred things who are not in close connection with God and
who do not discern the Spirit of God. Unless His grace transforms them into the
image of Christ's likeness, His Spirit will leave them as water leaves a leaky vessel.
Their only hope is to seek God with all their mind, heart, and soul. Then they will
lawfully strive for the mastery. Satan will steal the imagination and affections if you
give him a chance.--MS 11, 1893.
Stand in Your God-given Personality.--God has given us ability to think and to act,
and it is by acting with carefulness, looking to Him for wisdom, that you will become
capable of bearing burdens. Stand in your God-given personality. Be no other person's
shadow. Expect that the Lord will work in and by and through you.--MH 498, 499
(1905).
The Blighting Mildew of the World (admonition to a minister who loved
speculation).--You are a man who should not be a teacher of truth. You should be far
in advance of where you are in experience and in the knowledge of God. You should
be a man in understanding; for God has given you intellectual faculties which are
susceptible of the highest cultivation. Had you divorced yourself from your
speculating propensities, had you worked in the opposite direction, you would now be
able to do acceptable service for God.
Had you cultivated your mind aright and used your powers to God's glory, you would
have been fully qualified to bear the warning message to the world. But the mildew of
the world has so affected your mind that it is not sanctified. You have not been
cultivating the faculties that would make you a successful spiritual worker in the
cause of God. You may carry forward the work of educating your mind in right lines.
If you do not now become intelligent in regard to the truth, the fault will be all your
own.--Lt 3, 1878.
Unless it [the mind] flows in a heavenward direction, it becomes an easy prey to the
temptation of Satan to engage in worldly projects and enterprises that have no special
connection with God. And all zeal and devotion and restless energy and feverish
desire are brought into this work, and the devil stands by and laughs to see human
effort wrestling so perseveringly for an object that it will never gain, which eludes its
grasp. But if he can keep them infatuated with the baseless delusion that they will give
strength of brain and bone and muscle to the objects they never will realize, he is
gratified, for the powers of mind that belong to God, that God claims, are diverted
from the right aim, the proper objects.--Lt 17, 1886.
Enemy Need Not Hinder Daily Improvement.-- Resolve to reach a high and holy
standard; make your mark high; act with earnest purpose as did Daniel, steadily,
perseveringly; and nothing that the enemy can do will hinder your daily improvement.
Notwithstanding inconveniences, changes, perplexities, you may constantly advance
in mental vigor and moral power.
Knowledge is within the reach of all who desire it. God designs that the mind shall
become strong, thinking deeper, fuller, clearer. Walk with God as did Enoch; make
God your Counselor and you cannot but make improvement.--Lt 26d, 1887.
Take Hold of God and Move Forward.--God has given man intellect, and endowed
him with capacities for improvement. Then let there be a strong taking hold upon
God, a putting away of frivolity, amusement, and all uncleanness. Overcome all
defects of character.
God's High Ideal for His Children.--Higher than the highest human thought can reach
is God's ideal for His children. Godliness--godlikeness--is the goal to be reached.
Before the student there is opened a path of continual progress. He has an object to
achieve, a standard to attain, that includes everything good, and pure, and noble. He
will advance as fast and as far as possible in every branch of true knowledge. But his
efforts will be directed to objects as much higher than mere selfish and temporal
interests as the heavens are higher than the earth. --Ed 18, 19 ( 1903).
Guard the Avenues of the Soul.--We have a work to do to resist temptation. Those
who would not fall a prey to Satan's devices must guard well the avenues of the soul;
they must avoid reading, seeing, or hearing that which will suggest impure thoughts.
The mind should not be left to wander at random upon every subject that the
adversary of souls may suggest. Girding up the loins of your mind, says the apostle
Peter, be sober, . . . not fashioning yourselves according to your former lusts in . . .
your ignorance: but like as He which called you is holy, be ye yourselves also holy in
all manner of living (1 Peter 1:13-15, RV).
Says Paul, Whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever
things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever
things are of good report; if there be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think on
these things (Philippians 4:8). This will require earnest prayer and unceasing
watchfulness. We must be aided by the abiding influence of the Holy Spirit, which
will attract the mind upward, and habituate it to dwell on pure and holy things. And
we must give diligent study to the Word of God. Wherewithal shall a young man
cleanse his way? By taking heed thereto according to Thy Word. Thy Word, says the
psalmist, have I hid in mine heart, that I might not sin against Thee (Psalm 119:9,
11).--PP 460 (1890).
Some Books Confuse the Mind.--Many of the books piled up in the great libraries of
earth confuse the mind more than they aid the understanding. Yet men spend large
sums of money in the purchase of such books, and years in their study, when they
have within their reach a Book containing the words of Him who is the Alpha and
Omega of wisdom. The time spent in a study of these books might better be spent in
gaining a knowledge of Him whom to know aright is life eternal. Those only who
gain this knowledge will at last hear the words, Ye are complete in Him (Colossians
2:10).--(Pamphlet) Words of Counsel, 1903. (CH 369.)
Confused Understanding.--When the Word of God is laid aside for books that lead
away from God and that confuse the understanding regarding the principles of the
kingdom of heaven, the education given is a perversion of the name. Unless the
student has pure mental food, thoroughly winnowed from the so-called higher
education, which is mingled with infidel sentiments, he cannot truly know God. Only
those who cooperate with heaven in the plan of salvation can know what true
education in its simplicity means.--CT 15 (1913).
Despotic Power of Infidel Authors (words from the angel instructor).--Human minds
are easily charmed by Satan's lies; and these works produce a distaste for the
contemplation of the Word of God, which if received and appreciated, will ensure
eternal life to the receiver. You are creatures of habit and should remember that right
habits are blessings both in their effect on your own character and in their influence
for good over others; but wrong habits, when once established, exercise a despotic
power and bring minds into bondage. If you had never read one word in these books
[by infidel authors] you would today be far better able to comprehend that Book
which, above all other books, is worthy to be studied and which gives the only correct
ideas regarding higher education.--6T 162 (1900).
Superficial Reading Produces Diseased Imagination. --There are many of our youth
whom God has endowed with superior capabilities. He has given them the very best
of talents; but their powers have been enervated, their minds confused and enfeebled,
and for years they have made no growth in grace and in a knowledge of the reasons of
our faith, because they have gratified a taste for story reading. They have as much
difficulty to control the appetite for such superficial reading as the drunkard has to
control his appetite for intoxicating drink.
These might today be connected with our publishing houses and be efficient workers
to keep books, prepare copy for the press, or to read proof; but their talents have been
perverted until they are mental dyspeptics, and consequently are unfitted for a
responsible position anywhere. The imagination is diseased. They live an unreal life.
They are unfitted for the practical duties of life; and that which is the most sad and
discouraging is that they have lost all relish for solid reading.
They have become infatuated and charmed with just such food for the mind as the
intensely exciting stories contained in Uncle Tom's Cabin. That book did good in its
day to those who needed an awakening in regard to their false ideas of slavery; but we
are standing upon the very borders of the eternal world, where such stories are not
needed in the preparation for eternal life.--5T 518, 519 (1889).
Books That Enfeeble the Mind.--Love stories and frivolous, exciting tales constitute
another class of books that is a curse to every reader. The author may attach a good
moral and all through his work may weave religious sentiments, yet in most cases
Satan is but clothed in angel robes the more effectually to deceive and allure. The
mind is affected in a great degree by that upon which it feeds. The readers of
frivolous, exciting tales become unfitted for the duties lying before them. They live an
unreal life and have no desire to search the Scriptures, to feed upon the heavenly
manna. The mind is enfeebled and loses its power to contemplate the great problems
of duty and destiny.--7T 165 (1902).
Fiction and Sensual Thoughts.--The mental food for which he [the fiction reader] has
acquired a relish is contaminating in its effects, and leads to impure and sensual
thoughts. I have felt sincere pity for these souls as I have considered how much they
are losing by neglecting opportunities to gain a knowledge of Christ, in whom our
hopes of eternal life are centered. How much precious time is wasted, in which they
might be studying the Pattern of true goodness.--CTBH 123, 1890. (MYP 280.)
Mind Sinks Into Imbecility (words of caution to an invalid housewife).--For years
your mind has been like a babbling brook, nearly filled with rocks and weeds, the
water running to waste. Were your powers controlled by high purposes, you would
not be the invalid that you now are. You fancy you must be indulged in your caprice
of appetite and in your excessive reading.
I saw the midnight lamp burning in your room while you were poring over some
fascinating story, thus stimulating your already overexcited brain. This course has
been lessening your hold upon life and enfeebling you physically, mentally, and
morally. Irregularity has created disorder in your house, and if continued, will cause
your mind to sink into imbecility. Your God-given probation has been abused, your
God-given time wasted.--4T 498 (1880).
Mental Inebriates.--Readers of frivolous, exciting tales become unfitted for the duties
of practical life. They live in an unreal world. I have watched children who have been
allowed to make a practice of reading such stories. Whether at home or abroad, they
were restless, dreamy, unable to converse except upon the most commonplace
subjects. Religious thought and conversation was entirely foreign to their minds. With
the cultivation of an appetite for sensational stories, the mental taste is perverted, and
the mind is not satisfied unless fed upon this unwholesome food. I can think of no
more fitting name for those who indulge in such reading than mental inebriates.
Intemperate habits of reading have an effect upon the brain similar to that which
intemperate habits of eating and drinking have upon the body.--CT 134, 135 (1913).
Overtaxing the Mind.--The student who desires to put the work of two years into one
should not be permitted to have his own way. To undertake to do double work means,
with many, overtaxation of the mind and neglect of physical exercise. It is not
reasonable to suppose that the mind can assimilate an oversupply of mental food; and
it is as great a sin to overload the mind as it is to overload the digestive organs.--CT
296 (1913).
Investigate Also Your Conversational Food.--It is best for every soul to closely
investigate what mental food is served up for him to eat. When those come to you
who live to talk and who are all armed and equipped to say, Report, and we will
report it, stop and think if the conversation will give spiritual help, spiritual efficiency,
that in spiritual communication you may eat of the flesh and drink the blood of the
Son of God. To whom coming, as unto a living stone, disallowed indeed of men, but
chosen of God, and precious (1 Peter 2:4). These words express much.
We are not to be tattlers, or gossipers, or talebearers; we are not to bear false witness.
We are forbidden by God to engage in trifling, foolish conversation, in jesting, joking,
or speaking any idle words. We must give an account of what we say to God. We will
be brought into judgment for our hasty words that do no good to the speaker or to the
hearer. Then let us all speak words that will tend to edification. Remember that you
are of value with God. Allow no cheap, foolish talk or wrong principles to compose
your Christian experience.--MS 68, 1897. (FE 458.)
Sounds, Sights, and Influences Which Demoralize. --There is reason for deep
solicitude on your part for your children, who have temptations to encounter at every
advance step. It is impossible for them to avoid contact with evil associates. . . . They
will see sights, hear sounds, and be subjected to influences which are demoralizing
and which, unless they are thoroughly guarded, will imperceptibly but surely corrupt
the heart and deform the character.--Pacific Health Journal, June, 1890. (AH 406.)
Some Associations Like a Slow Poison.--Could my voice reach the parents all
through the land, I would warn them not to yield to the desires of their children in
choosing their companions or associates. Little do parents consider that injurious
impressions are far more readily received by the young than are divine impressions;
therefore their associations should be the most favorable for the growth of grace and
for the truth revealed in the Word of God to be established in the heart.
If children are with those whose conversation is upon unimportant, earthly things,
their minds will come to the same level. If they hear the principles of religion slurred
and our faith belittled, if sly objections to the truth are dropped in their hearing, these
things will fasten in their minds and mold their characters.
If their minds are filled with stories, be they true or fictitious, there is no room for the
useful information and scientific knowledge which should occupy them. What havoc
has this love for light reading wrought with the mind! How it has destroyed the
principles of sincerity and true godliness, which lie at the foundation of a symmetrical
character. It is like a slow poison taken into the system, which will sooner or later
reveal its bitter effects. When a wrong impression is left upon the mind in youth, a
mark is made, not on sand, but on enduring rock.--5T 544, 545 (1889).
Eyes Fixed Upon Christ.--When Christ took human nature upon Him, He bound
humanity to Himself by a tie of love that can never be broken by any power save the
choice of man himself. Satan will constantly present allurements to induce us to break
this tie--to choose to separate ourselves from Christ. Here is where we need to watch,
to strive, to pray, that nothing may entice us to choose another master; for we are
always free to do this. But let us keep our eyes fixed upon Christ, and He will
preserve us. Looking unto Jesus, we are safe. Nothing can pluck us out of His hand. In
constantly beholding Him, we are changed into the same image from glory to glory
even as by the Spirit of the Lord (2 Corinthians 3:18).--SC 72 (1892).
Chap. 14 - Exercise
The Law of Obedient Action.--All the heavenly beings are in constant activity, and
the Lord Jesus, in His practical lifework, has given an example for every man. God
has established in the heavens the law of obedient action. [NOTE: THE LAW OF
OBEDIENT ACTION IS WORTHY OF CAREFUL STUDY. ACTION NOT ONLY
ADVANCES PHYSICAL HEALTH BUT BRINGS US INTO HARMONY WITH
OTHERS AND WITH THE UNIVERSE.] Silent but ceaseless, the objects of His
creation do their appointed work. The ocean is in constant motion. The springing
grass, which today is, and tomorrow is cast into the oven, does its errand, clothing the
fields with beauty. The leaves are stirred by the wind, and yet no hand is seen to touch
them. The sun, moon, and stars are useful and glorious in fulfilling their appointed
mission. And man, his mind and body created in God's own similitude, must be active
in order to fill his appointed place. Man is not to be idle. Idleness is sin.--Lt 103,
1900. (SpT Series B, No. 1, pp 29, 30.)
Machinery of Body Must Continue Its Work.--Study the Lord's plan in regard to
Adam, who was created pure, holy, and healthy. Adam was given something to do.
He was to use the organs God had given him. He could not have been idle. His brain
must work, not in a mechanical way, like a mere machine. At all times the machinery
of the body continues its work; the heart throbs, doing its regular, appointed task like
a steam engine, forcing its crimson current unceasingly to all parts of the body.
Action, action, is seen pervading the whole living machine. Each organ must do its
appointed work. If physical inaction is continued, there will be less and less activity of
the brain.--Lt 103, 1900.
Exercise in the Open Air.--The whole system needs the invigorating influence of
exercise in the open air. A few hours of manual labor each day would tend to renew
the bodily vigor and rest and relax the mind.--4T 264, 265 (1876).
Air, air, the precious boon of heaven which all may have, will bless you with its
invigorating influence if you will not refuse it entrance. Welcome it, cultivate a love
for it, and it will prove a precious soother of the nerves. Air must be in constant
circulation to be kept pure. The influence of pure, fresh air is to cause the blood to
circulate healthfully through the system. It refreshes the body and tends to render it
strong and healthy, while at the same time its influence is decidedly felt upon the
mind, imparting a degree of composure and serenity. It excites the appetite, renders
the digestion of food more perfect, and induces sound and sweet sleep.--1T 702
(1868).
It does not require a frail, helpless, overdressed, simpering thing to make a lady. A
sound body is required for a sound intellect. Physical soundness and a practical
knowledge of all the necessary household duties will never be hindrances to a well-
developed intellect; both are highly important for a lady.--3T 152 (1872).
Mental Effort Restricted When Physical Exercise Neglected.--Those who are engaged
in constant mental labor, whether in study or preaching, need rest and change. The
earnest student is constantly taxing the brain, too often while neglecting physical
exercise, and as the result, the bodily powers are enfeebled and mental effort is
restricted. Thus the student fails of accomplishing the very work that he might have
done had he labored wisely.--GW 173 (1893).
Equalize Mental and Physical Taxation.--Equalize the taxation of the mental and the
physical powers, and the mind of the student will be refreshed. If he is diseased,
physical exercise will often help the system to recover its normal condition. When
students leave college, they should have better health and a better understanding of
the laws of life than when they enter it. The health should be as sacredly guarded as
the character.--CTBH 82, 83, 1890. (CG 343.)
Exercise Is a Remedial Agent.--When invalids have nothing to occupy their time and
attention, their thoughts become centered upon themselves, and they grow morbid and
irritable. Many times they dwell upon their bad feelings until they think themselves
much worse than they really are and wholly unable to do anything.
In all these cases well-directed physical exercise would prove an effective remedial
agent. In some cases it is indispensable to the recovery of health. The will goes with
the labor of the hands, and what these invalids need is to have the will aroused. When
the will is dormant, the imagination becomes abnormal, and it is impossible to resist
disease.--MH 239 (1905).
Inactivity Greatest Curse on Most Invalids.-- Inactivity is the greatest curse that could
come upon most invalids. This is especially true of those whose troubles have been
caused or aggravated by impure practices.
Light employment in the direction of useful labor, while it does not tax mind or body,
has a happy influence upon both. It strengthens the muscles, improves the circulation,
and gives the invalid the satisfaction of knowing that he is not wholly useless in this
busy world. He may be able to do but little at first; but he will soon find his strength
increasing, and the amount of work done can be increased accordingly.
Physicians often advise their patients to take an ocean voyage, to go to some mineral
spring, or to visit different places for change of climate, in order to regain health,
when in nine cases out of ten if they would eat temperately and take cheerful,
healthful exercise, they would become well and would save time and money.--Und
MS 90. (See MH 240 [1905].)
Exercise Must Be Systematic (counsel to an invalid mother).--The Lord has given you
a work to do which He does not propose to do for you. You should move out from
principle, in harmony with natural law, irrespective of feeling. You should begin to
act upon the light that God has given you. You may not be able to do this all at once,
but you can do much by moving out gradually in faith, believing that God will be
your helper, that He will strengthen you.
You could exercise in walking and in performing duties requiring light labor in your
family and not be so dependent upon others. The consciousness that you can do will
give you increased strength. If your hands were more employed and your brain less
exercised in planning for others, your physical and mental strength would increase.
Your brain is not idle, but there is not corresponding labor on the part of the other
organs of the body.
Some Manual Work Each Day.--The light given me is that if our ministers would do
more physical labor, they would reap blessings healthwise.... It is a positive necessity
to physical health and mental clearness to do some manual work during the day. Thus
the blood is called from the brain to other portions of the body.--Lt 168, 1899. (Ev
660, 661.)
Every Student Should Exercise.--Every Student should devote a portion of each day
to active labor. Thus habits of industry would be formed and a spirit of self-reliance
encouraged, while the youth would be shielded from many evil and degrading
practices that are so often the result of idleness. And this is all in keeping with the
primary object of education, for in encouraging activity, diligence, and purity we are
coming into harmony with the Creator.--PP 601 (1890).
The physical as well as the religious training practiced in the schools of the Hebrews
may be profitably studied. The worth of such training is not appreciated. There is an
intimate relation between the mind and the body, and in order to reach a high standard
of moral and intellectual attainment the laws that control our physical being must be
heeded. To secure a strong, well-balanced character, both the mental and the physical
powers must be exercised and developed. What study can be more important for the
young than that which treats of this wonderful organism that God has committed to us
and of the laws by which it may be preserved in health?--PP 601 (1890).
Physical Exercise Gives Life.--When the body is inactive, the blood flows sluggishly,
and the muscles decrease in size and strength....Physical exercise and a free use of air
and sunlight--blessings which Heaven has abundantly bestowed on all--would give
life and strength to many an emaciated invalid....
Work is a blessing, not a curse. Diligent labor keeps many, young and old, from the
snares of him who finds some mischief still or idle hands to do. Let no one be
ashamed of work, for honest toil is ennobling. While the hands are engaged in the
most common tasks, the mind may be filled with high and holy thoughts.--YI, Feb 27,
1902. (HC 223.)
If you cannot control your impulses, your emotions, as you may desire, you can
control the will, and thus an entire change will be wrought in your life. When you
yield up your will to Christ, your life is hid with Christ in God. It is allied to the
power which is above all principalities and powers. You have a strength from God
that holds you fast to His strength; and a new life, even the life of faith, is possible to
you.--CTBH 148 (ML 318.)
Emotions Controlled by Reason and Conscience. --The power of the truth should be
sufficient to sustain and console in every adversity. It is in enabling its possessor to
triumph over affliction that the religion of Christ reveals its true value. It brings the
appetites, the passions, and the emotions under the control of reason and conscience,
and disciplines the thoughts to flow in a healthful channel. And then the tongue will
not be left to dishonor God by expressions of sinful repining.--5T 314 (1885).
Doing God's Will Versus Feeling and Emotions (counsel to a young man).--It is not
your feelings, your emotions, that make you a child of God, but the doing of God's
will. A life of usefulness is before you if your will becomes God's will. Then you may
stand in your God-given manhood, an example of good works.
You will then help to maintain rules of discipline instead of helping to break them
down. You will then help to maintain order instead of despising it and inciting to
irregularity of life by your own course of action.
I tell you in the fear of God: I know what you may be if your will is placed on the side
of God. We are laborers together with God (1 Corinthians 3:9). You may be doing
your work for time and eternity in such a manner that it will stand the test of the
judgment. Will you try? Will you now turn square about? You are the object of
Christ's love and intercession. Will you now surrender to God and help those who are
placed as sentinels to guard the interests of His work, instead of causing them grief
and discouragement?--5T 515, 516 (1889).
You love to talk. If your words were such as would glorify God, there would be no sin
in them. But you do not realize peace and rest and enjoyment in the service of God.
You certainly are not a converted man to do God's will, therefore you cannot feel the
cheering, enlivening influence of His Holy Spirit.
When you decide that you cannot be a Christian and still do as you please, when you
realize that you must surrender your will to God's will, then you can comply with the
invitation of Christ, Come unto Me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will
give you rest. Take My yoke upon you and learn of Me; for I am meek and lowly in
heart; and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For My yoke is easy, and My burden is
light (Matthew 11:28-30).--MS 13, 1897.
Control of Inward Emotions.--You may be cheerful if you will bring even your
thoughts into subjection to the will of Christ. You should make no delay but closely
search your own heart and die to self daily.
You may inquire: How can I master my own actions and control my inward
emotions?
Many who profess not the love of God do control their spirit to a considerable extent
without the aid of the special grace of God. They cultivate self-control. This is indeed
a rebuke to those who know that from God they may obtain strength and grace and yet
do not exhibit the graces of the Spirit. Christ is our model. He was meek and lowly.
Learn of Him and imitate His example. The Son of God was faultless. We must aim at
this perfection and overcome as He overcame if we would have a seat at His right
hand.--3T 336 (1873).
Emotions Are as Changeable as Clouds.--But shall we wait till we feel that we are
cleansed? No; Christ has promised that if we confess our sins, He is faithful and just
to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness (1 John 1:9). You
are proved of God through the Word of God. You are not to wait for wonderful
emotions before you believe that God has heard you; feeling is not to be your
criterion, for emotions are as changeable as the clouds. You must have something
solid for the foundation of your faith. The word of the Lord is a word of infinite
power upon which you may rely, and He has said, Ask, and ye shall receive. Look to
Calvary. Has not Jesus said that He is your advocate? Has He not said that if you ask
anything in His name you shall receive? You are not to depend on your own goodness
or good works. You are to come depending upon the Sun of righteousness, believing
that Christ has taken away your sins and imputed to you His righteousness.--ST, Dec.
12, 1892. (1SM 328.)
The Rapture of Feeling No Evidence of Conversion. --Satan leads people to think that
because they have felt a rapture of feeling, they are converted. But their experience
does not change. Their actions are the same as before. Their lives show no good fruit.
They pray often and long and are constantly referring to the feelings they had at such
a time. But they do not live the new life. They are deceived. Their experience goes no
deeper than feeling. They build upon the sand, and when adverse winds come, their
house is swept away.--YI, Sept. 26, 1901. (4BC 1164.)
The Lord Wants to Disturb Minds.--Christ sees men so absorbed in worldly cares and
business perplexities that they have no time to become acquainted with Him. To them
heaven is a strange place, for they have lost it out of their reckoning. Not familiar with
heavenly things, they tire of hearing about them. They dislike to have their minds
disturbed concerning their needs of salvation, preferring to engage in amusements.
But the Lord wants to disturb their minds, that they may be led to take hold of eternal
realities. He is in earnest with them. Very, very soon they will all know Him, whether
they desire to or not.--MS 105, 1901.
And in a very great degree her physical health will be improved. A force will be
imparted to the lifesprings, the blood will not move sluggishly, as would be the case if
she were to yield to despondency and gloom. Her mental and moral health are
invigorated by the buoyancy of her spirits.--RH, July 25, 1899. (CH 79.)
Mother's Feelings Mold Disposition of Unborn Child. --The thoughts and feelings of
the mother will have a powerful influence upon the legacy she gives her child. If she
allows her mind to dwell upon her own feelings, if she indulges in selfishness, if she
is peevish and exacting, the disposition of her child will testify to the fact. Thus many
have received as a birthright almost unconquerable tendencies to evil.--ST, Sept 13,
1910. (Te 171.)
If the mother unswervingly adheres to right principles, if she is temperate and self-
denying, if she is kind, gentle, and unselfish, she may give her child these same
precious traits of character.--MH 373 (1905).
The Prenatal Influence of Peace.--She who expects to become a mother should keep
her soul in the love of God. Her mind should be at peace; she should rest in the love
of Jesus, practicing the words of Christ. She should remember that the mother is a
laborer together with God. --ST, Apr 9, 1896. (AH 259.)
Father to Become Acquainted With Physical Law. --The strength of the mother
should be tenderly cherished. Instead of spending her precious strength in exhausting
labor, her care and burdens should be lessened. Often the husband and father is
unacquainted with the physical laws which the well-being of his family requires him
to understand. Absorbed in the struggle for a livelihood, or bent on acquiring wealth
and pressed with cares and perplexities, he allows to rest upon the wife and mother
burdens that overtax her strength at the most critical period and cause feebleness and
disease.--MH 373 (1905).
Children Robbed of Mental Elasticity.--If the mother is deprived of the care and
comforts she should have, if she is allowed to exhaust her strength through overwork
or through anxiety and gloom, her children will be robbed of the vital force and of the
mental elasticity and cheerful buoyancy they should inherit. Far better will it be to
make the mother's life bright and cheerful, to shield her from want, wearing labor, and
depressing care, and let the children inherit good constitutions so that they may battle
their way through life with their own energetic strength.-- MH 375 (1905).
Wife's Responsibility.--Women who possess principle and who are well instructed
will not depart from simplicity of diet at this time [pregnancy] of all others. They will
consider that another life is dependent upon them and will be careful in all their
habits, and especially in diet.--2T 382 (1870).
Unwise advisers will urge upon the mother the gratification of every wish and
impulse as essential to the well-being of her offspring. Such advice is false and
mischievous. By the command of God Himself the mother is placed under the most
solemn obligation to exercise self-control. Whose voice shall we heed--the voice of
divine wisdom or the voice of human superstition?--ST, Feb. 26, 1902.
Pregnant Mother to Form Habits of Self-denial.--The mother who is a fit teacher for
her children must, before their birth, form habits of self-denial and self-control; for
she transmits to them her own qualities, her own strong or weak traits of character.
The enemy of souls understands this matter much better than do many parents. He
will bring temptation upon the mother, knowing that if she does not resist him, he can
through her affect her child. The mother's only hope is in God. She may flee to Him
for grace and strength. She will not seek help in vain. He will enable her to transmit to
her offspring qualities that will help them to gain success in this life and to win eternal
life.--ST, Feb. 26, 1902. (CD 219.)
The Basis of Right Character.--The basis of a right character in the future man is
made firm by habits of strict temperance in the mother prior to the birth of her
child. . . . This lesson should not be regarded with indifference. --GH, Feb, 1880. (AH
258.)
Race Groaning Under Weight of Accumulated Woe. --The race is groaning under a
weight of accumulated woe because of the sins of former generations. And yet with
scarcely a thought or care, men and women of the present generation indulge
intemperance by surfeiting and drunkenness and thereby leave, as a legacy for the
next generation, disease, enfeebled intellects, and polluted morals.--4T 31 (1876).
As a rule, every intemperate man who rears children transmits his inclinations and
evil tendencies to his offspring.--RH, Nov 21, 1882. (Te 170.)
Samson's Prenatal Life Regulated by God.--The words spoken to the wife of Manoah
contain a truth that the mothers of today would do well to study. In speaking to this
one mother, the Lord spoke to all the anxious, sorrowing mothers of that time and to
all the mothers of succeeding generations. Yes, every mother may understand her
duty. She may know that the character of her children will depend vastly more upon
her habits before their birth and her personal efforts after their birth than upon
external advantages or disadvantages.--ST, Feb 26, 1902. (CD 218.)
God had important work for the promised child of Manoah to do, and it was to secure
for him the qualifications necessary for this work that the habits of both the mother
and the child were to be so carefully regulated....The child will be affected for good or
evil by the habits of the mother. She must herself be controlled by principle and must
practice temperance and self-denial if she would seek the welfare of her child.--CTBH
38, 1890. (Te 90.)
Satan Seeks to Debase Minds.--I have been shown that Satan seeks to debase the
minds of those who unite in marriage, that he may stamp his own hateful image upon
their children....
He can mold their posterity much more readily than he could the parents, for he can
so control the minds of the parents that through them he may give his own stamp of
character to their children. Thus many children are born with the animal passions
largely in the ascendancy while the moral faculties are but feebly developed.--2T 480
(1870).
Diminished Energy Transmitted.--Men and women who have become sickly and
diseased have often in their marriage connections selfishly thought only of their own
happiness. They have not seriously considered the matter from the standpoint of
noble, elevated principles, reasoning in regard to what they could expect of their
posterity, but diminished energy of body and mind, which would not elevate society
but sink it still lower.--HL (Part 2) 28, 1865. (2SM 423.)
Disease Passed From Generation to Generation. --Sickly men have often won the
affections of women apparently healthy, and because they loved each other, they felt
themselves at perfect liberty to marry. . . . If those who thus enter the marriage
relation were alone concerned, the sin would not be so great. Their offspring are
compelled to be sufferers by disease transmitted to them. Thus disease has been
perpetuated from generation to generation.... They have thrown upon society an
enfeebled race, and done their part to deteriorate the race, by rendering disease
hereditary, and thus accumulating human suffering.--HL (Part 2) 28, 1865. (2SM
423.)
Thus a class of beings have been thrown upon the world as a burden to society. Their
parents were accountable in a great degree for the characters developed by their
children, which are transmitted from generation to generation.--HL (Part 2) 29, 30,
1865. (2SM 423, 424.)
God Will Hold Us Responsible for Prenatal Neglect. --Women have not always
followed the dictates of reason instead of impulse. They have not felt in a high degree
the responsibilities resting upon them to form such life connections as would not
enstamp upon their offspring a low degree of morals and a passion to gratify debased
appetites at the expense of health, and even life. God will hold them accountable in a
large degree for the physical health and moral characters thus transmitted to future
generations....
Very many of this class have married and left for an inheritance to their offspring the
taints of their own physical debility and depraved morals. The gratification of animal
passions and gross sensuality have been the marked characters of their posterity,
which have descended from generation to generation, increasing human misery to a
fearful degree and hastening the depreciation of the race.--HL (Part 2) 27, 28, 1865.
(2SM 422, 423.)
Parents Provide Child's Life Equipment.--What the parents are, that to a great extent
the children will be. The physical conditions of the parents, their dispositions and
appetites, their mental and moral tendencies, are to a greater or less degree reproduced
in their children.--MH 371 (1905).
Molding Society and Future.--The nobler the aims, the higher the mental and spiritual
endowments, and the better developed the physical powers of the parents, the better
will be the life equipment they give their children. In cultivating that which is best in
themselves, parents are exerting an influence to mold society and to uplift future
generations....
Through the indulgence of appetite and passion their energies are wasted, and
millions are ruined for this world and for the world to come. Parents should remember
that their children must encounter these temptations. Even before the birth of the
child, the preparation should begin that will enable it to fight successfully the battle
against evil.
Especially does responsibility rest upon the mother. She, by whose lifeblood the child
is nourished and its physical frame built up, imparts to it also mental and spiritual
influences that tend to the shaping of mind and character.--MH 371, 372 (1905).
Parents Have Given Children Their Own Stamp of Character.--Parents have given
their children their own stamp of character; and if some traits are unduly developed in
one child, and another reveals a different phase of character which is unlovely, who
should be as patient and forbearing and kind as the parents? Who should be as earnest
as they to cultivate in their children the precious graces of character revealed in Christ
Jesus?
Mothers do not half appreciate their privileges and possibilities. They do not seem to
understand that they can be in the highest sense missionaries, laborers together with
God in aiding their children to build up a symmetrical character. This is the great
burden of the work given them of God. The mother is God's agent to Christianize her
family.--RH, Sept 15, 1891.
More Than Human Wisdom Needed.--Parents should remember that their children
must encounter ... temptations. Even before the birth of the child, the preparation
should begin that will enable it to fight successfully the battle against evil.--MH 371
(1905).
Happy Are Those Whose Lives Reflect the Divine. --Happy are the parents whose
lives are a true reflection of the divine, so that the promises and commands of God
awaken in the child gratitude and reverence; the parents whose tenderness and justice
and long-suffering interpret to the child the love and justice and long-suffering of
God; and who, by teaching the child to love and trust and obey them, are teaching him
to love and trust and obey his Father in heaven. Parents who impart to a child such a
gift have endowed him with a treasure more precious than the wealth of all the ages--a
treasure as enduring as eternity.--MH 375, 376 (1905).
Children Often Inherit Disposition.--As a rule, children inherit the dispositions and
tendencies of their parents and imitate their example so that the sins of the parents are
practiced by the children from generation to generation. Thus the vileness and
irreverence of Ham were reproduced in his posterity, bringing a curse upon them for
many generations....
On the other hand, how richly rewarded was Shem's respect for his father; and what
an illustrious line of holy men appears in his posterity!--PP 118 (1890).
Moses, the first historian, gives quite a definite account of social and individual life in
the early days of the world's history, but we find no record that an infant was born
blind, deaf, crippled, or imbecile. Not an instance is recorded of a natural death in
infancy, childhood, or early manhood. . . . It was so rare for a son to die before his
father that such an occurrence was considered worthy of record: Haran died before his
father Terah. The patriarchs from Adam to Noah, with few exceptions, lived nearly a
thousand years. Since then the average length of life has been decreasing.
At the time of Christ's first advent the race had already so degenerated that not only
the old but the middle-aged and the young were brought from every city to the
Saviour to be healed of their diseases.--CTBH 7, 8, 1890. (CD 117, 118.)
Children to Avoid Wrong Habits of Parents.-- Disease never comes without a cause.
The way is prepared and disease invited by disregard of the laws of health. Many
suffer in consequence of the transgression of their parents. While they are not
responsible for what their parents have done, it is nevertheless their duty to ascertain
what are and what are not violations of the laws of health. They should avoid the
wrong habits of their parents and by correct living place themselves in better
conditions.--MH 234 (1905).
Evils of Tobacco Passed to Children.--Among children and youth the use of tobacco
is working untold harm. The unhealthful practices of past generations affect the
children and youth of today. Mental inability, physical weakness, disordered nerves,
and unnatural cravings are transmitted as a legacy from parents to children. And the
same practices, continued by the children, are increasing and perpetuating the evil
results. To this cause in no small degree is owing the physical, mental, and moral
deterioration which is becoming such a cause of alarm.--MH 328, 329 (1905).
Children Inherit Inclinations.--Children inherit inclinations to wrong, but they also
have many lovely traits of character. These should be strengthened and developed,
while the tendencies to evil should be carefully guarded against and repressed.
Children should never be flattered, for flattery is poison to them; but parents should
show a sanctified, tender regard for them, thus gaining their confidence and love.--
RH, Jan 24, 1907.
Angels Help Fight These Tendencies.--Angels are ever present where they are most
needed. They are with those who have the hardest battles to fight, with those who
must battle against inclination and hereditary tendencies, whose home surroundings
are the most discouraging.--RH, Apr 16, 1895. (ML 303.)
Lot's Daughters Ruined by Evil Environment. --Lot dwelt but a short time in Zoar.
Iniquity prevailed there as in Sodom, and he feared to remain, lest the city should be
destroyed. Not long after, Zoar was consumed, as God had purposed. Lot made his
way to the mountains and abode in a cave, stripped of all for which he had dared to
subject his family to the influences of a wicked city. But the curse of Sodom followed
him even here. The sinful conduct of his daughters was the result of the evil
associations of that vile place. Its moral corruption had become so interwoven with
their character that they could not distinguish between good and evil. Lot's only
posterity, the Moabites and Ammonites, were vile, idolatrous tribes, rebels against
God and bitter enemies of His people.--PP 167, 168 (1890).
Parents flock with their families to the cities because they fancy it easier to obtain a
livelihood there than in the country. The children, having nothing to do when not in
school, obtain a street education. From evil associates they acquire habits of vice and
dissipation. The parents see all this; but it will require a sacrifice to correct their error,
and they stay where they are until Satan gains full control of their children. Better
sacrifice any and every worldly consideration than to imperil the precious souls
committed to your care.--5T 232 (1882).
Childhood Bias Shapes Destiny.--At a very early age children become susceptible to
demoralizing influences, but parents who profess to be Christians do not seem to
discern the evil of their own course of management. Oh, that they might realize that
the bias which is given to a child in its earliest years gives a tendency to character and
shapes the destiny either for eternal life or eternal death! Children are susceptible to
moral and spiritual impressions, and those who are wisely trained in childhood may
be erring at times, but they will not go far astray.--ST, Apr 16, 1896. (CG 198.)
Parents Responsible in a Great Degree.--Parents are in a great degree responsible for
the mold given to the characters of their children. They should aim at symmetry and
proportion. There are few well-balanced minds because parents are wickedly
negligent of their duty to stimulate weak traits and repress wrong ones. They do not
remember that they are under the most solemn obligation to watch the tendencies of
each child, that it is their duty to train their children to right habits and right ways of
thinking.--5T 319 (1885).
Begin in Infancy.--The parents' work must begin with the child in its infancy, that it
may receive the right impress of character ere the world shall place its stamp on mind
and heart.--RH, Aug 30, 1881.(CG 193.)
The Importance of the First Three Years of Life. --Mothers, be sure that you properly
discipline your children during the first three years of their lives. Do not allow them to
form their wishes and desires. The mother must be mind for her child. The first three
years is the time in which to bend the tiny twig. Mothers should understand the
importance attaching to this period. It is then that the foundation is laid.--MS 64,
1899. (CG 194.)
The First Seven Years Have Much to Do With Character Formation.--Too much
importance cannot be placed on the early training of children. The lessons that the
child learns during the first seven years of life have more to do with forming his
character than all that it learns in future years.--MS 2, 1903. (CG 193.)
First Lessons Are Seldom Forgotten.--Neither infants, children, or youth should hear
an impatient word from father, mother, or any member of the household; for they
receive impressions very early in life, and what parents make them today, they will be
tomorrow, and the next day, and the next. The first lessons impressed upon the child
are seldom forgotten....
The impressions made on the heart early in life are seen in afteryears. They may be
buried, but they will seldom be obliterated.--MS 57, 1897. (CG 193, 194.)
Early Physical Development.--During the first six or seven years of a child's life
special attention should be given to its physical training, rather than the intellect.
After this period, if the physical constitution is good, the education of both should
receive attention. Infancy extends to the age of six or seven years. Up to this period
children should be left like little lambs, to roam around the house and in the yards, in
the buoyancy of their spirits, skipping and jumping, free from care and trouble.
Parents, especially mothers, should be the only teachers of such infant minds. They
should not educate from books. The children generally will be inquisitive to learn the
things of nature. They will ask questions in regard to the things they see and hear, and
parents should improve the opportunity to instruct and patiently answer these little
inquiries. They can in this manner get the advantage of the enemy and fortify the
minds of their children by sowing good seed in their hearts, leaving no room for the
bad to take root. The mother's loving instructions at a tender age is what is needed by
children in the formation of character.--HL (Part 2) 44. (2SM 437.)
Special Care for First Child.--The first child especially should be trained with great
care, for he will educate the rest. Children grow according to the influence of those
who surround them. If they are handled by those who are noisy and boisterous, they
become noisy and almost unbearable.--MS 64, 1899. (CG 27.)
Different Environment for Differing Children. --There are some children who need
more patient discipline and kindly training than others. They have received as a
legacy unpromising traits of character, and because of this they need the more of
sympathy and love. By persevering labor these wayward ones may be prepared for a
place in the work of the Master. They may possess undeveloped powers, which when
aroused, will enable them to fill places far in advance of those from whom more has
been expected.--CT 115, 116 (1913).
Habits Are Seldom Changed in Later Life.--What the child sees and hears is drawing
deep lines upon the tender mind, which no after circumstances in life can entirely
efface. The intellect is now taking shape and the affections receiving direction and
strength. Repeated acts in a given course become habits. These may be modified by
severe training, in afterlife, but are seldom changed.--GH, Jan, 1880. (CG 199, 200.)
Reaching God's Ideal.--Men and women can reach God's ideal for them if they will
take Christ as their helper. What human wisdom cannot do, His grace will accomplish
for those who give themselves to Him in loving trust. His providence can unite hearts
in bonds that are of heavenly origin. Love will not be a mere exchange of soft and
flattering words. The loom of heaven weaves with warp and woof finer, yet more
firm, than can be woven by the looms of earth. The result is not a tissue fabric but a
texture that will bear wear and test and trial. Heart will be bound to heart in the golden
bonds of a love that is enduring.--MH 362 (1905).
Real Union Is the Work of Years.--However carefully and wisely marriage may have
been entered into, few couples are completely united when the marriage ceremony is
performed. The real union of the two in wedlock is the work of the afteryears.--MH
359, 360 (1905).
Romantic Imagination Disappears.--As life with its burden of perplexity and care
meets the newly wedded pair, the romance with which imagination so often invests
marriage disappears. Husband and wife learn each other's character as it was
impossible to learn it in their previous association. This is a most critical period in
their experience. The happiness and usefulness of their whole future life depend upon
their taking a right course now. Often they discern in each other unsuspected
weaknesses and defects, but the hearts that love has united will discern excellencies
also heretofore unknown. Let all seek to discover the excellencies rather than the
defects. Often it is our own attitude, the atmosphere that surrounds ourselves, which
determines what will be revealed to us in another.
There are many who regard the expression of love as a weakness, and they maintain a
reserve that repels others. This spirit checks the current of sympathy. As the social
and generous impulses are repressed, they wither, and the heart becomes desolate and
cold. We should beware of this error. Love cannot long exist without expression. Let
not the heart of one connected with you starve for the want of kindness and
sympathy.--MH 360 (1905).
Love Stimulates to Nobler Aims.--Let each give love rather than exact it. Cultivate
that which is noblest in yourselves, and be quick to recognize the good qualities in
each other. The consciousness of being appreciated is a wonderful stimulus and
satisfaction. Sympathy and respect encourage the striving after excellence, and love
itself increases as it stimulates to nobler aims.--MH 361 (1905).
Individuality Not to Be Merged.--Neither the husband nor the wife should merge his
or her individuality in that of the other. Each has a personal relation to God. Of Him
each is to ask, What is right? What is wrong? How may I best fulfill life's purpose?
Let the wealth of your affection flow forth to Him who gave His life for you. Make
Christ first and last and best in everything. As your love for Him becomes deeper and
stronger your love for each other will be purified and strengthened.--MH 361 (1905).
We have an individuality of our own, and the wife's individuality is never to be sunk
into that of her husband. God is our Creator. We are His by creation, and we are His
by redemption. We want to see how much we can render back to God, because He
gives us the moral power, He gives us the efficiency, He gives us the intellect; and He
wants us to make the most of these precious gifts to His name's glory.--MS 12, 1895.
Entire Submission Only to Jesus.--God requires that the wife shall keep the fear and
glory of God ever before her. Entire submission is to be made only to the Lord Jesus
Christ, who has purchased her as His own child by the infinite price of His life.... Her
individuality cannot be merged into that of her husband, for she is the purchase of
Christ.--Lt 18b, 1891. (AH 116.)
Gentle Words and Smiles for the Family.--It is not only our privilege but our duty to
cultivate gentleness, to have the peace of Christ in the heart and as peacemakers and
followers of Christ to sow precious seed that will produce a harvest unto eternal life.
Professed followers of Christ may possess many good and useful qualities; but their
characters are greatly marred by an unkind, fretful, faultfinding, harshly judging
temper. The husband or the wife who cherishes suspicion and distrust creates
dissension and strife in the home. Neither of them should keep his gentle words and
smiles for strangers alone, and manifest irritability in the home, thus driving out peace
and contentment.--Lt 34, 1894. (HC 179.)
But your association with other women and girls has been a source of temptation to
them, leading them to take liberties and overstep the restraint which the marriage
relation imposes on every man and woman. You have not perceived it, but your love
of amusement and the spirit you have encouraged has not impressed others with the
sacredness of the marriage relation.
Practical homelife is the great test of character. By his tender thoughtfulness in the
home, by the exercise of patience, kindness, and love, a man determines his
character.--Lt 17, 1895.
Wives Pine for Words of Love.--Many women pine for words of love and kindness
and the common attentions and courtesies due them from their husbands who have
selected them as their life companions. How much trouble and what a tide of woe and
unhappiness would be saved if men, and women also, would continue to cultivate the
regard, attention, and kind words of appreciation and little courtesies of life which
kept love alive and which they felt were necessary in gaining the companions of their
choice.
If the husband and wife would only continue to cultivate these attentions which
nourish love, they would be happy in each other's society and would have a
sanctifying influence upon their families. They would have in themselves a little
world of happiness and would not desire to go outside this world for new attractions
and new objects of love. Many a wife has sickened and died prematurely for the want
of encouraging words of sympathy and love manifested in kindly attentions and in
words.--Lt 27, 1872.
Husband Can Shut the Door Against Disease.--The husband should manifest great
interest in his family. Especially should he be very tender of the feelings of a feeble
wife. He can shut the door against much disease. Kind, cheerful, and encouraging
words will prove more effective than the most healing medicines. These will bring
courage to the heart of the desponding and discouraged, and the happiness and
sunshine brought into the family by kind acts and encouraging words will repay the
effort tenfold.
The husband should remember that much of the burden of training his children rests
upon the mother, that she has much to do with molding their minds. This should call
into exercise his tenderest feelings, and with care should he lighten her burdens. He
should encourage her to lean upon his large affections, and direct her mind to heaven,
where there is strength and peace and a final rest for the weary.
He should not come into his home with a clouded brow, but should with his presence
bring sunlight into the family and should encourage his wife to look up and believe in
God. Unitedly they can claim the promises of God and bring His rich blessing into the
family. Unkindness, complaining, and anger shut Jesus from the dwelling. I saw that
angels of God will flee from a house where there are unpleasant words, fretfulness,
and strife.--1T 306, 307 (1862).
Husband Head of Household.--The husband and father is the head of the household.
The wife looks to him for love and sympathy and for aid in the training of the
children; and this is right. The children are his as well as hers, and he is equally
interested in their welfare. The children look to the father for support and guidance;
he needs to have a right conception of life and of the influences and associations that
should surround his family; above all, he should be controlled by the love and fear of
God and by the teaching of His Word, that he may guide the feet of his children in the
right way.--MH 390 (1905).
Wife a Help Meet for Husband.--God Himself gave Adam a companion. He provided
an help meet for him--a helper corresponding to him--one who was fitted to be his
companion and who could be one with him in love and sympathy. Eve was created
from a rib taken from the side of Adam, signifying that she was not to control him as
the head, nor to be trampled under his feet as an inferior, but to stand by his side as an
equal, to be loved and protected by him. A part of man, bone of his bone, and flesh of
his flesh, she was his second self, showing the close union and the affectionate
attachment that should exist in this relation. --PP 46 (1890).
How to Create Peace in Home Circle.--When the husband has the nobility of
character, purity of heart, elevation of mind, that every true Christian must possess, it
will be made manifest in the marriage relation.... He will seek to keep his wife in
health and courage. He will strive to speak words of comfort, to create an atmosphere
of peace in the home circle.--MS 17, 1891. (AH 228.)
Husbands should study the pattern and seek to know what is meant by the symbol
presented in Ephesians, the relation Christ sustains to the church. The husband is to be
as a Saviour in his family. Will he stand in his noble, God-given manhood, ever
seeking to uplift his wife and children? Will he breathe about him a pure, sweet
atmosphere? Will he not as assiduously cultivate the love of Jesus, making it an
abiding principle in his home, as he will assert his claims to authority.?--MS 17, 1891.
(AH 117.)
Wife Cheerfully to Help Husband Maintain Dignity.--I have also been shown that
there is often a great failure on the part of the wife. She does not put forth strong
efforts to control her own spirit and make home happy. There is often fretfulness and
unnecessary complaining on her part. The husband comes home from his labor weary
and perplexed, and meets a clouded brow instead of cheerful, encouraging words. He
is but human, and his affections become weaned from his wife, he loses the love of
his home, his pathway is darkened, and his courage destroyed. He yields his self-
respect and that dignity which God requires him to maintain.
The husband is the head of the family, as Christ is the head of the church; and any
course which the wife may pursue to lessen his influence and lead him to come down
from that dignified, responsible position is displeasing to God. It is the duty of the
wife to yield her wishes and will to her husband. Both should be yielding, but the
Word of God gives preference to the judgment of the husband. And it will not detract
from the dignity of the wife to yield to him whom she has chosen to be her counselor,
adviser, and protector. The husband should maintain his position in his family with all
meekness, yet with decision.--1T 307, 308 (1862).
Man a Social Being.--Among all the creatures that God had made on the earth, there
was not one equal to man. And God said, It is not good that the man should be alone;
I will make him an help meet for him (Genesis 2:18). Man was not made to dwell in
solitude; he was to be a social being. Without companionship, the beautiful scenes
and delightful employments of Eden would have failed to yield perfect happiness.
Even communion with angels could not have satisfied his desire for sympathy and
companionship. There was none of the same nature to love and to be loved.--PP 46
(1890).
Harmony in Home Possible Only by God's Spirit. --We must have the Spirit of God,
or we can never have harmony in the home. The wife, if she has the spirit of Christ,
will be careful of her words; she will control her spirit, she will be submissive, and yet
will not feel that she is bondslave, but a companion to her husband. If the husband is a
servant of God, he will not lord it over his wife; he will not be arbitrary and exacting.
We cannot cherish home affection with too much care; for the home, if the Spirit of
the Lord dwells there, is a type of heaven.--Lt 18-b 1891. (AH 118.)
The Inner Circle Paramount.--All our powers are to be used for Christ. This is the
debt we each owe to God. In forming a relationship with Christ, the renewed man is
but coming back to his appointed relationship with God. He is a representative of
Christ, and he is ever to pray and watch unto prayer. His duties lie around him, nigh
and afar off. His first duty is to his children and his nearest relatives. Nothing can
excuse him from neglecting the inner circle for the larger circle outside.
In the day of final reckoning, fathers and mothers will be required to answer in regard
to their children. Parents will be asked what they did and said to secure the salvation
of the souls they took upon themselves the responsibility of bringing into the world.
Did they neglect their lambs, leaving them to the care of strangers? Fathers and
mothers, are you allowing your children to grow up in impurity and sin? A great good
done for others will not cancel the debt you owe to God to care for your children. The
spiritual welfare of your family comes first. Take them with you to the cross of
Calvary, laboring for them as those that must give an account.--MS 56, 1899.
Parents Need to Understand Children.-- Parents should not forget their childhood
years, how much they yearned for sympathy and love and how unhappy they felt
when censured and fretfully chided. They should be young again in their feelings and
bring their minds down to understand the wants of their children. Yet with firmness,
mixed with love, they should require obedience from their children. The parents' word
should be implicitly obeyed.--1T 388 (1863).
God Has Appointed a Path.--Angels of God are watching the children with the
deepest interest to see what characters they develop. If Christ dealt with us as we
often deal with one another and with our children, we would stumble and fall through
utter discouragement. I saw that Jesus knows our infirmities and has Himself shared
our experience in all things but in sin; therefore He has prepared for us a path suited
to our strength and capacity, and like Jacob, has marched softly and in evenness with
the children as they were able to endure, that He might entertain us by the comfort of
His company and be to us perpetual guide. He does not despise, neglect, or leave
behind the children of the flock. He has not bidden us move forward and leave them.
He has not traveled so hastily as to leave us with our children behind. Oh, no; but He
has evened the path to life, even for children. And parents are required in His name to
lead them along the narrow way. God has appointed us a path suited to the strength
and capacity of children.--1T 388, 389 (1863).
Fretfulness Should Be Repressed.--Parents, when you feel fretful, you should not
commit so great a sin as to poison the whole family with this dangerous irritability. At
such times set a double watch over yourselves and resolve in your heart not to offend
with your lips, that you will utter only pleasant, cheerful words. Say to yourselves: I
will not mar the happiness of my children by a fretful word. By thus controlling
yourselves you will grow stronger. Your nervous system will not be so sensitive. You
will be strengthened by the principles of right. The consciousness that you are
faithfully discharging your duty will strengthen you. Angels of God will smile upon
your efforts and help you.
When you feel impatient, you too often think the cause is in your children, and you
blame them when they do not deserve it. At another time they might do the very same
things, and all would be acceptable and right. Children know and mark and feel these
irregularities, and they are not always the same. At times they are somewhat prepared
to meet changeable moods, and at other times they are nervous and fretful, and cannot
bear censure....
Some parents are of a nervous temperament, and when fatigued with labor or
oppressed with care, they do not preserve a calm state of mind, but manifest to those
who should be dearest to them on earth a fretfulness and lack of forbearance which
displeases God and brings a cloud over the family. Children, in their troubles, should
often be soothed with tender sympathy. Mutual kindness and forbearance will make
home a paradise and attract holy angels into the family circle.--1T 386, 387 (1863).
Some parents do not even take care to keep their children with them when in the
house of God. Young girls attend meetings and take their seats, it may be, with their
parents, but more frequently back in the congregation. They are in the habit of making
an excuse to leave the house. Boys understand this and go out before or after the exit
of the girls, and then, as the meeting closes, they accompany them home. Parents are
none the wiser of this. Again, excuses are made to walk, and boys and girls assemble
in the fairgrounds or some other secluded place, and there play and have a regular
high time, with no experienced eye upon them to caution them.--2T 481, 482 (1870).
Diet and Parental Influences.--If parents had lived healthfully, being satisfied with
simple diet, much expense would have been saved. The father would not have been
obliged to labor beyond his strength in order to supply the wants of his family. A
simple nourishing diet would not have had an influence to unduly excite the nervous
system and the animal passions, producing moroseness and irritability. If he had
partaken only of plain food, his head would have been clear, his nerves steady, his
stomach in a healthy condition, and with a pure system he would have had no loss of
appetite, and the present generation would be in a much better condition than it now
is.
But even now, in this late period, something can be done to improve our condition.
Temperance in all things is necessary. A temperate father will not complain if he has
no great variety upon his table. A healthful manner of living will improve the
condition of the family in ever sense and will allow the wife and mother time to
devote to her children.
The great study with the parents will be in what manner can they best train their
children for usefulness in this world and for heaven hereafter. They will be content to
see their children with neat, plain, but comfortable garments, free from embroidery
and adornment. They will earnestly labor to see their children in the possession of the
inward adorning, the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit, which is in the sight of God
of great price.--HL (Part 2) 45, 1865. (2SM 437, 438.)
Father, the Family House-Band.--A Christian father is the house-band of his family,
binding them close to the throne of God. Never is his interest in his children to flag.
The father who has a family of boys should not leave these restless boys wholly to the
care of the mother. This is too heavy a burden for her. He should make himself their
companion and friend. He should exert himself to keep them from evil associates. It
may be hard for the mother to exercise self-control. If the husband sees that his wife's
weakness is endangering the safety of the children, he should take more of the burden
upon himself, doing all in his power to lead his boys to God.--RH, July 8, 1902.
Mothers Not to Seek Excitement.--Mothers who have youthful minds to train and the
characters of children to form should not seek the excitement of the world in order to
be cheerful and happy. They have an important lifework, and they and theirs cannot
afford to spend time in an unprofitable manner. Time is one of the important talents
which God has entrusted to us and for which He will call us to account. A waste of
time is a waste of intellect. The powers of the mind are susceptible of high cultivation.
It is the duty of mothers to cultivate their minds and keep their hearts pure. They
should improve every means within their reach for their intellectual and moral
improvement that they may be qualified to improve the minds of their children.
Those who indulge their disposition to be in company will soon feel restless unless
visiting or entertaining visitors. Such have not the power of adaptation to
circumstances. The necessary, sacred home duties seem commonplace and
uninteresting to them. They have no love for self-examination or self-discipline. The
mind hungers for the varying, exciting scenes of worldly life; children are neglected
for the indulgence of inclination; and the recording angel writes, Unprofitable
servants. God designs that our minds should not be purposeless but should accomplish
good in this life.--3T 146, 147 (1872).
Nursing Mother to Preserve a Happy State.--The character also of the child is more or
less affected by the nature of the nourishment received from the mother. How
important, then, that the mother, while nursing her infant, should preserve a happy
state of mind, having perfect control of her own spirit. By thus doing, the food of the
child is not injured, and the calm, self-possessed course the mother pursues in the
treatment of her child has much to do in molding the mind of the infant. If it is
nervous and easily agitated, the mother's careful, unhurried manner will have a
soothing and correcting influence, and the health of the infant will be much
improved.--RH, July 25, 1899. (CH 80.)
Mother Should Endeavor to Be Self-possessed.--The more quiet and simple the life of
a child, the more favorable it will be to both physical and mental development. At all
times the mother should endeavor to be quiet, calm, and self-possessed. Many infants
are extremely susceptible to nervous excitement, and the mother's gentle, unhurried
manner will have a soothing influence that will be of untold benefit to the child.--MH
381 (1905).
And the mother should not wound the heart of her sensitive child by treating the
matter with indifference or by refusing to be troubled with such small matters. That
which may be small to the mother is large to them. And a word of direction, or
caution, at the right time will often prove of great value. An approving glance, a word
of encouragement and praise from the mother, will often cast a sunbeam into their
young hearts for a whole day.--HL (Part 2) 46, 47, 1865. (2SM 438, 439.)
Deal Gently With Little Ones.--Mothers, deal gently with your little ones. Christ was
once a little child. For His sake honor the children. Look upon them as a sacred
charge, not to be indulged, petted, and idolized but to be taught to live pure, noble
lives. They are God's property; He loves them and calls upon you to cooperate with
Him in helping them to form perfect characters.--ST, Aug. 23, 1899. (AH 280.)
Your Child Is the Property of God.--My sister, can you be surprised that your
daughter has little confidence in her mother's word? You have educated her to be
untruthful; and the Lord is grieved to see one of His little ones led in the wrong path
by her mother. Your child is not your own; you cannot do with her as you like, for she
is the property of the Lord. Exercise a steady persevering control over her; teach her
that she belongs to God. With such a training she will grow up to be a blessing to
those around her. But clear, sharp discernment will be necessary in order that you may
repress her inclination to rule you both, to have her own will and way, and to do as
she pleases.--Lt 69, 1896.
Sunny Dispositions and Sweet Tempers.--Teach your children from the cradle to
practice self-denial and self-control. Teach them to enjoy the beauties of nature, and
in useful employment to exercise all the powers of mind and body. Bring them up to
have sound constitutions and good morals, to have sunny dispositions and sweet
tempers. Teach them that to yield to temptation is weak and wicked; to resist is noble
and manly.--CT 127 (1913).
When the Wish of Child Is Law.--In some families the wish of the child is law.
Everything he desires is given him. Everything he dislikes, he is encouraged to
dislike. Indulgence is supposed to make the child happy, but it only makes him
restless and discontented. Indulgence has spoiled his appetite for plain, healthful food
and for the plain use of his time; self-gratification has done the work of unsettling his
character for time and for eternity.--RH, May 10, 1898.
Satan Seeks to Control Children's Minds.--Parents, you know something of the
inducements by which Satan tries to lead your children into folly. He is working with
all his powers to lead them astray. With a determination that many do not dream of he
is seeking to gain control of their minds and to make the commandments of God of no
effect in their lives.--MS 93, 1909.
Parents to Bind Children to Their Hearts.--Do not let your children see you with a
clouded brow. If they yield to temptation, and afterward see and repent of their error,
forgive them just as freely as you hope to be forgiven by your Father in heaven.
Kindly instruct them and bind them to your hearts. It is a critical time for children.
Influences will be thrown around them to wean them from you, which you must
counteract. Teach them to make you their confidant. Let them whisper in your ear
their trials and joys. By encouraging this, you will save them from many a snare that
Satan has prepared for their inexperienced feet.
Do not treat your children only with sternness, forgetting your own childhood and
forgetting that they are but children. Do not expect them to be perfect or try to make
them men and women in their acts at once. By so doing you will close the door of
access which you might otherwise have to them and will drive them to open a door for
injurious influences, for others to poison their young minds before you awake to their
danger.--IT 387 (1863).
The early years are the time for the training process, not only that the child may
become most serviceable and full of grace and truth in this life, but that he may secure
the place prepared in the home above for all who are true and obedient. In our own
training of children and in the training of the children of others, we have proved that
they never love parents and guardians less for restraining them from doing evil.--RH,
May 10, 1898.
With deep earnestness the mother of Jesus watched the unfolding of His powers and
beheld the impress of perfection upon His character. With delight she sought to
encourage that bright, receptive mind. Through the Holy Spirit she received wisdom
to cooperate with the heavenly agencies in the development of this child, who could
claim only God as His Father.--DA 68, 69 (1898).
Preoccupation of Mind Rules Out Low Thoughts. --Educate the faculties and tastes of
your dear ones; seek to preoccupy their minds so that there shall be no place for low,
debasing thoughts or indulgences. The grace of Christ is the only antidote or
preventive of evil. You may choose, if you will, whether the minds of your children
shall be occupied with pure, uncorrupted thoughts or with the evils that are existing
everywhere-- pride and forgetfulness of their Redeemer.--Lt 27, 1890. (CG 188.)
Surrounded by a Wall Not Easily Broken Down. --Every Christian home should have
rules; and parents should, in their words and in their deportment toward each other,
give to the children a precious living example of what they desire them to be. Purity
in speech and true Christian courtesy should be constantly practiced. Let there be no
encouragement of sin, no evil surmising or evil speaking.
Teach the children and youth to respect themselves, to be true to God, true to
principle; teach them to respect and obey the law of God. Then these principles will
control their lives and will be carried out in their association with others. They will
love their neighbor as themselves. They will create a pure atmosphere, one that will
have an influence to encourage weak souls in the path that leads to holiness and
heaven. Let every lesson be of an elevating, ennobling character, and the records
made in the books of heaven will be such as you will not be ashamed to meet in the
judgment.
Children who receive this kind of instruction will not be a burden, a cause of anxiety,
in our institutions [educational, medical, publishing, etc.]; but they will be a strength,
a support to those who bear responsibility. They will be prepared to fill places of trust
and by precept and example will be constantly aiding others to do right. Those whose
moral sensibilities have not been blunted will appreciate right principles and will
practice them. They will put a right estimate upon their endowments and will make
the best use of their physical, mental, and moral powers.
Such souls are constantly fortified against temptation; they are surrounded by a wall
not easily broken down. All such characters are, with the blessing of God, light-
bearers; their influence tends to elevate others for a practical Christian life. The mind
may be so elevated that divine thoughts and contemplations come to be as natural as
the breath.--Lt 74, 1896.
Effective Agencies for Formation of Character. --God designs that the families of
earth shall be a symbol of the family in heaven. Christian homes, established and
conducted in accordance with God's plan, are among His most effective agencies for
the formation of Christian character and for the advancement of His work.--6T 430
(1900).
Worship at Home.--I had pious parents, who in every way tried to acquaint us with
our heavenly Father. Every morning and every evening we had family prayer. We
sang the praises of God in our household. There were eight children in the family, and
every opportunity was improved by our parents to lead us to give our hearts to Jesus.--
MS 80, 1903.
Greater the Unity, Greater the Influence.--The more closely the members of a family
are united in their work in the home, the more uplifting and helpful will be the
influence that father and mother and sons and daughters will exert outside the home.--
Lt 189, 1903. (AH 37.)
Home an Object Lesson.--God would have our families symbols of the family in
heaven. Let parents and children bear this in mind every day, relating themselves to
one another as members of the family of God. Then their lives will be of such a
character as to give to the world an object lesson of what families who love God and
keep His commandments may be. Christ will be glorified; His peace and grace and
love will pervade the family circle like a precious perfume.--RH, Nov 17, 1896. (AH
17.)
The Peace Principle.--There is no fretfulness seen in the home if Christ is the peace
principle exercised in your soul. There is no uncourteousness there. There is no
roughness or sharp speech there. Why? Because we believe and act out that we are
members of the Royal Family, children of the Heavenly King, bound to Jesus Christ
by the strongest tie of love--that love which works by faith and purifies the soul. You
love Jesus and you are constantly at work to overcome all selfishness and to be a
blessing, and comfort, and strength, and a support to the souls He has purchased with
His blood.
I cannot see why we should not the more earnestly try to bring the peace of Christ
right into our family than to labor for those that have no living connection with us; but
if we have religion in the home, it will extend outside of the home. You will have it
everywhere. You will carry it with you to the church. You can carry it with you when
you go out to your work. It will be with you wherever you shall be. What we want is
religion in the home. What we need is the peace principle which shall control our
spirit and our life and character after the Christlife He has given as His example.--MS
36, 1891.
Love Revealed in Action.--From every Christian home a holy light should shine forth.
Love should be revealed in action. It should flow out in all home intercourse, showing
itself in thoughtful kindness, in gentle, unselfish courtesy. There are homes where this
principle is carried out--homes where God is worshiped and truest love reigns. From
these homes, morning and evening prayer ascends to God as sweet incense, and His
mercies and blessings descend upon the suppliants like the morning dew.--PP 144
(1890).
Purity in the Home.--Order is heaven's first law, and the Lord desires His people to
give in their homes a representation of the order and harmony that pervade the
heavenly courts. Truth never places her delicate feet in a path of uncleanness or
impurity. Truth does not make men and women coarse or rough and untidy. It raises
all who accept it to a high level. Under Christ's influence a work of constant
refinement goes on. . . .
He who was so particular that the children of Israel should cherish habits of
cleanliness will not sanction any impurity in the homes of His people today. God
looks with disfavor on uncleanness of any kind. How can we invite Him into our
homes unless all is neat and clean and pure?--RH, June 10, 1902. (CH 101.)
Location of the Home.--Better than any other inheritance of wealth you can give to
your children will be the gift of a healthy body, a sound mind, and a noble character.
Those who understand what constitutes life's true success will be wise betimes. They
will keep in view life's best things in their choice of a home.
Instead of dwelling where only the works of men can be seen, where the sights and
sounds frequently suggest thoughts of evil, where turmoil and confusion bring
weariness and disquietude, go where you can look upon the works of God. Find rest
of spirit in the beauty and quietude and peace of nature. Let the eye rest on the green
fields, the groves, and the hills. Look up to the blue sky, unobscured by the city's dust
and smoke, and breathe the invigorating air of heaven. Go where, apart from the
distractions and dissipations of city life, you can give your children your
companionship, where you can teach them to learn of God through His works and
train them for lives of integrity and usefulness.--MH 366, 367 (1905).
Fine Furniture Does Not Make a Home.--Four walls and costly furniture, velvet
carpets, elegant mirrors, and fine pictures do not make a home if sympathy and love
are wanting. That sacred word does not belong to the glittering mansion where the
joys of domestic life are unknown. . . .
In fact the comfort and welfare of the children are the last things thought of in such a
home. They are neglected by the mother, whose whole time is devoted to keeping up
appearances and meeting the claims of fashionable society. Their minds are untrained;
they acquire bad habits and become restless and dissatisfied. Finding no pleasure in
their own homes, but only uncomfortable restrictions, they break away from the
family circle as soon as possible. They launch out into the great world with little
reluctance, unrestrained by home influence and the tender counsel of the
hearthstone.--ST, Oct 2, 1884. (AH 155.)
Faultfinding Opens the Door for Satan.--Fathers and mothers, be on guard. Let your
conversation in the home be pleasant and encouraging. Always speak kindly, as if in
the presence of Christ. Let there be no faultfinding, no accusing. Words of this kind
wound and bruise the soul. It is natural for human beings to speak sharp words. Those
who yield to this inclination open the door for Satan to enter their hearts and to make
them quick to remember the mistakes and errors of others. Their failings are dwelt
upon, their deficiencies noted, and words are spoken that cause a lack of confidence in
one who is doing his best to fulfill his duty as a laborer together with God. Often the
seeds of distrust are sown because one thinks that he ought to have been favored but
was not.--Lt 169, 1904.
The Influence of Parental Defects.--It seems perfectly natural for some men to be
morose, selfish, exacting, and overbearing. They have never learned the lesson of self-
control and will not restrain their unreasonable feelings, let the consequences be what
they may. Such men will be repaid by seeing their companions sickly and dispirited
and their children bearing the peculiarities of their own disagreeable traits of
character.--HL (Part 2) 36, 1865. (2SM 430.)
Angels Not Attracted to Discordant Home.--Angels are not attracted to the home
where discord reigns supreme. Let fathers and mothers cease all faultfinding and
murmuring. Let them educate their children to speak pleasant words, words that bring
sunshine and joy. Shall we not now enter the home-school as Christ's students? Bring
practical godliness into the home. Then see if the words you speak do not cause joy.
Parents, begin the work of grace in the church in your own home, so conducting
yourselves that your children will see that you are cooperating with the heavenly
angels. Be sure that you are converted every day. Train yourselves and your children
for life eternal in the kingdom of God. Angels will be your strong helpers. Satan will
tempt you, but do not yield. Do not speak one word of which the enemy can take an
advantage.--MS 93, 1901.
A Plea for More Home Hospitality.--Even among those who profess to be Christians,
true hospitality is little exercised. Among our own people the opportunity of showing
hospitality is not regarded as it should be, as a privilege and blessing. There is
altogether too little sociability, too little of a disposition to make room for two or three
more at the family board without embarrassment or parade. Some plead that it is too
much trouble. It would not be if you would say, We have made no special preparation,
but you are welcome to what we have. By the unexpected guest a welcome is
appreciated far more than is the most elaborate preparation. --6T 343 (1900).
Things That Make a Happy Home.--Pleasant voices, gentle manners, and sincere
affection that finds expression in all the actions, together with industry, neatness, and
economy, make even a hovel the happiest of homes. The Creator regards such a home
with approbation.--ST, Oct 2, 1884. (AH 422.)
Cultivation of True Refinement.--There is great need of the cultivation of true
refinement in the home. This is a powerful witness in favor of the truth. In
whomsoever they may appear, vulgarity of language and of demeanor indicate a
vitiated heart. Truth of heavenly origin never degrades the receiver, never makes him
coarse or rough. Truth is softening and refining in its influence. When received into
the heart, it makes the youth respectful and polite. Christian politeness is received
only under the working of the Holy Spirit. It does not consist in affectation or
artificial polish, in bowing and simpering. This is the class of politeness possessed by
those of the world, but they are destitute of true Christian politeness.
True polish, true politeness, is obtained only from a practical knowledge of the gospel
of Christ. True politeness, true courtesy, is a kindness shown to all, high or low, rich
or poor.--MS 74, 1900. (AH 422, 423.)
He Identified Himself With the Interests of His Hearers.--He taught in a way that
made them feel the completeness of His identification with their interests and
happiness. His instruction was so direct, His illustrations were so appropriate, His
words so sympathetic and cheerful, that His hearers were charmed.--MH 24 (1905).
He Understands the Hidden Working of the Human Mind.--He who has paid the
infinite price to redeem men reads with unerring accuracy all the hidden workings of
the human mind and knows just how to deal with every soul. And in dealing with
men, He manifests the same principles that are manifest in the natural world.--SpT
Series A, No. 3, p 17, 1895. (TM 189, 190.)
He Works Through Calm, Regular Operation of Laws.--God works through the calm,
regular operation of His appointed laws. So it is in spiritual things. Satan is constantly
seeking to produce effects by rude and violent thrusts, but Jesus found access to
minds by the pathway of their most familiar associations. He disturbed as little as
possible their accustomed train of thought, by abrupt actions or prescribed rules. He
honored man with His confidence, and thus placed him on his honor. He introduced
old truths in a new and precious light. Thus when only twelve years old He astonished
the doctors of the law by His questions in the temple.--MS 44, 1894. (Ev 139, 140.)
Always Surrounded With Peace.--His tender compassion fell with a touch of healing
upon weary and troubled hearts. Even amid the turbulence of angry enemies He was
surrounded with an atmosphere of peace. The beauty of His countenance, the
loveliness of His character, above all, the love expressed in look and tone, drew to
Him all who were not hardened in unbelief. Had it not been for the sweet, sympathetic
spirit that shone out in every look and word, He would not have attracted the large
congregations that He did. The afflicted ones who came to Him felt that He linked His
interest with theirs as a faithful and tender friend, and they desired to know more of
the truths He taught. Heaven was brought near. They longed to abide in His presence,
that the comfort of His love might be with them continually.--DA 254, 255 (1898).
His Life Was Harmonious.--In His life Jesus of Nazareth differed from all other men.
His entire life was characterized by disinterested benevolence and the beauty of
holiness. In His bosom existed the purest love, free from every taint of selfishness and
sin. His life was perfectly harmonious. He is the only true model of goodness and
perfection. From the beginning of His ministry men began more clearly to
comprehend the character of God.
Up to the time of Christ's first advent, men worshiped cruel, despotic gods. Even the
Jewish mind was reached through fear and not love. Christ's mission on the earth was
to reveal to men that God was not a despot but a heavenly Father, full of love and
mercy for His children.--MS 132, 1902.
He Was Not Devoid of Warmth and Sunniness. --There are many who have an
erroneous idea of the life and character of Christ. They think He was devoid of
warmth and sunniness, that He was stern, severe, and joyless. In many cases the
whole religious experience is colored by these gloomy views.--SC 120 (1892).
His Heart a Wellspring of Life.--It is often said that Jesus wept, but that He was never
known to smile. Our Saviour was indeed a Man of sorrows and acquainted with grief,
for He opened His heart to all the woes of men. But though His life was self-denying
and shadowed with pain and care, His spirit was not crushed. His countenance did not
wear an expression of grief and repining but ever one of peaceful serenity. His heart
was a well-spring of life, and wherever He went He carried rest and peace, joy and
gladness.--SC 120 (1892).
Christ Was Never Passionate.--Christ carried out in His life His own divine teachings.
His zeal never led Him to become passionate. He manifested consistency without
obstinacy, benevolence without weakness, tenderness and sympathy without
sentimentalism. He was highly social; yet He possessed a reserved dignity that did not
encourage undue familiarity. His temperance never led to bigotry or austerity. He was
not conformed to this world; yet He was not indifferent to the wants of the least
among men. He was awake to the needs of all.--MS 132, 1902. (Ev 636.)
Tact to Meet Prejudiced Minds.--His messages of mercy were varied to suit His
audience. He knew how to speak a word in season to him that is weary (Isaiah 50:4);
for grace was poured upon His lips that He might convey to men in the most attractive
way the treasures of truth. He had tact to meet the prejudiced minds and to surprise
them with illustrations that won their attention.--DA 254 (1898).
He Reached to Depths of Human Woe.--He traversed every path where souls were
straying. He reached to the very depths of human woe and misery.--Lt 50, 1897.
Combats Satan's Power Over Mind.--He [Christ] saw the power--the deceptive
power--of Satan upon human minds, and He engaged [bound Himself by a pledge] to
come to this earth. He lays aside the robes of His royalty, He lays off His royal crown,
He lays off His high command, He steps down from the throne of His glory as High
Commander in all heaven, and clothes His divinity with humanity, that humanity
might touch humanity. That is what He came here for. He came right down to our
earth to take upon Himself the nature of man, to pass through all the trials, all the
afflictions and temptations wherewith man should be beset, and here He wrestled with
these temptations, passing over the ground where Adam fell, that He might redeem
the disgraceful failure and fall of Adam.
In human nature, as our substitute, as our surety, He laid hold upon the very hope that
it is our privilege to take hold of, and that is infinite power. Through this, our Saviour
overcame the temptations of the enemy and obtained the victory. For whom? Why, in
our behalf. Why? That not one of the members of the human family need to stumble
in the road that leads to everlasting life. Because He has traveled it before us, He
knows every obstruction, He knows every difficulty that every soul upon the face of
the earth must meet. He knows this, and therefore at His baptism, when He offered up
His petition to heaven, that prayer cleaved directly through the hellish shadow of
Satan that is thrown on your path, that is thrown on my path, and faith entered into
that within the veil (Hebrews 6:19).--MS 12, 1895.
Helps Seeker to Exercise Faith.--Christ knew every thought of her mind [the woman
who touched His garment], and He was making His way to where she stood. He
realized her great need, and He was helping her to exercise faith.--MH 60 (1905).
To Meet Varied Minds.--All who profess to be children of God should bear in mind
that as missionaries they will be brought into contact with all classes of minds. There
are the refined and the coarse, the humble and the proud, the religious and the
skeptical, the educated and the ignorant, the rich and the poor. These varied minds
cannot be treated alike; yet all need kindness and sympathy. By mutual contact our
minds should receive polish and refinement. We are dependent upon one another,
closely bound together by the ties of human brotherhood.--MH 495, 496 (1905).
Mind to Become One With His Mind.--When we submit ourselves to Christ, the heart
is united with His heart, the will is merged in His will, the mind becomes one with
His mind, the thoughts are brought into captivity to Him; we live His life. This is what
it means to be clothed with the garment of His righteousness. Then as the Lord looks
upon us He sees, not the fig-leaf garment, not the nakedness and deformity of sin, but
His own robe of righteousness, which is perfect obedience to the law of Jehovah.--
COL 312 (1900).
In the home and the sanctuary, through the things of nature and of art, in labor and in
festivity, in sacred building and memorial stone, by methods and rites and symbols
unnumbered, God gave to Israel lessons illustrating His principles and preserving the
memory of His wonderful works. Then, as inquiry was made, the instruction given
impressed mind and heart.--Ed 41 (1903).
The Highest Development of Mental Powers.--It is right for the youth to feel that they
must reach the highest development of their mental powers. We would not restrict the
education to which God has set no limit. But our attainments avail nothing if not put
to use for the honor of God and the good of humanity. It is not well to crowd the mind
with studies that require intense application but that are not brought into use in
practical life.--MH 449, 450 (1905).
Dangers of Some Schools.--Many youth come forth from institutions of learning with
morals debased and physical powers enfeebled, with no knowledge of practical life
and little strength to perform its duties.
As I have seen these evils, I have inquired, Must our sons and daughters become
moral and physical weaklings in order to obtain an education in the schools? This
should not be; it need not be, if teachers and students will but be true to the laws of
nature, which are also the laws of God. All the powers of mind and body should be
called into active exercise that the youth may become strong, well-balanced men and
women.--ST, June 29, 1882. (FE 71.)
Education to Be Guarded.--The mind will be of the same character as that upon which
it feeds, the harvest of the same nature as the seed sown. Do not these facts
sufficiently show the necessity of guarding from the earliest years the education of the
youth? Would it not be better for the youth to grow up in a degree of ignorance as to
what is commonly accepted as education than for them to become careless in regard
to the truth of God?--6T 194 (1900).
God's Relation to Man to Be Made Plain.--It is of the highest importance that every
human being to whom God has given reasoning powers understand his relation to
God. It is for his present and eternal good to inquire at every step, Is this the way of
the Lord?...We need to call most earnestly upon every human being to compare his
character with the law of God, the standard of character for all who would enter His
kingdom, and become citizens of the heavenly country.--MS 67, 1898.
Teacher's Habits Exert Influence.--The principles and habits of the teacher should be
considered of greater importance than even his literary qualifications. If the teacher is
a sincere Christian, he will feel the necessity of having an equal interest in the
physical, mental, moral, and spiritual education of his scholars. In order to exert the
right influence he should have perfect control over himself, and his own heart should
be richly imbued with love for his pupils, which will be seen in his looks, words, and
acts. He should have firmness of character; then can he mold the minds of his pupils,
as well as instruct them in the sciences.
The early education of youth generally shapes their character for life. Those who deal
with the young should be very careful to call out the qualities of the mind that they
may better know how to direct their powers and that they may be exercised to the very
best account.--RH, July 14, 1885.
Call Forth High Qualities of the Mind.--The greatest care should be taken in the
education of youth to vary the manner of instruction so as to call forth the high and
noble powers of the mind. Parents and teachers of schools are certainly disqualified to
educate children properly if they have not first learned the lessons of self-control,
patience, forbearance, gentleness, and love. What an important position for parents,
guardians, and teachers! There are very few who realize the most essential wants of
the mind and how to direct the developing intellect, the growing thoughts and feelings
of youth. --RH, July 14, 1885.
To Be Inspired by the Holy Spirit.--Dealing with human minds is the most delicate
work that can be done, and teachers need to be inspired by the Spirit of God, that they
may be able to do their work aright.--MS 8, 1899.
Coping With Misdoings.--Never educate them by giving publicity to the errors and
misdoings of any scholar, for they will consider it a virtue in them to expose the
wrongs of another. Never humiliate a scholar by presenting his grievances and
mistakes and sins before the school: you cannot do a work more effectual to harden
his heart and confirm him in evil than in doing this. Talk and pray with him alone, and
show the same tenderness Christ has evidenced to you who are teachers. Never
encourage any one student to criticize and talk of the faults of another. Hide a
multitude of sins in every way possible by pursuing Christ's way to cure him. This
kind of educating will be a blessing, made to tell in this life and stretching into the
future immortal life.--MS 34, 1893.
Fully Qualified to Deal With Human Minds.--Every teacher needs Christ abiding in
his heart by faith and to possess a true, self-denying, self-sacrificing spirit for Christ's
sake. One may have sufficient education and knowledge in science to instruct, but has
it been ascertained that he has tact and wisdom to deal with human minds? If
instructors have not the love of Christ abiding in the heart, they are not fit to be
brought into connection with children, and to bear the grave responsibilities placed
upon them, of educating these children and youth. They lack the higher education and
training in themselves, and they know not how to deal with human minds. There is the
spirit of their own insubordinate, natural hearts that is striving for the control, and to
subject the plastic minds and characters of children to such a discipline is to leave
scars and bruises upon the mind that will never be effaced.
If a teacher cannot be made to feel the responsibility and the carefulness he should
ever reveal in dealing with human minds, his education has in some cases been very
defective. In the home life the training has been harmful to the character, and it is a
sad thing to reproduce this defective character and management in the children
brought under his control.--CEd 145, 1893. (FE 260, 261.)
There are all kinds of characters to deal with in the children and youth. Their minds
are impressible. Anything like a hasty, passionate exhibition on the part of the teacher
may cut off her influence for good over the students whom she is having the name of
educating. And will this education be for the present good and future eternal good of
the children and youth? There is the correct influence to be exerted upon them for
their spiritual good.--MS 34, 1893.
I must state to you that I have been shown that the best methods have not always been
practiced in dealing with the errors and mistakes of students, and the result has been
that souls have been imperiled and some lost. Evil tempers in the teachers, unwise
movements, self-dignity have done a bad work. There is no form of vice, worldliness,
or drunkenness that will do a more baleful work upon the character, embittering the
soul, and setting in train evils that overbear good, than human passions not under the
control of the Spirit of God. Anger, getting touched [being aroused], stirred up, will
never pay.
How many prodigals are kept out of the kingdom of God by the slovenly character of
those whom claim to be Christians. Jealousy, envy, pride, uncharitable feelings, self-
righteousness, being easily provoked, thinking evil, harshness, coldness, lack of
sympathy--these are the attributes of Satan. Teachers will meet with these things in
the student's characters. It is a terrible thing to have these things to deal with; but in
seeking to cast out these evils, the worker has in many instances developed similar
attributes which have marred the soul of the one with whom he is dealing.--Lt 50,
1893.
Need Well-balanced Mind.--The teachers who work in this part of the Lord's vineyard
need to be self-possessed, to keep their temper and feelings under control and in
subjection to the Holy Spirit. They should give evidence of having, not a one-sided
experience, but a well-balanced mind, a symmetrical character.--CT 191 (1913).
Faculties of Mind Not Half Used.--It is important that we should have intermediate
schools and academies. . . . From home and abroad are coming many urgent calls for
workers. Young men and women, the middle-aged, and in fact all who are able to
engage in the Master's service, should be putting their minds to the stretch in an effort
to prepare to meet these calls. From the light God has given me, I know that we do not
use the faculties of the mind half as diligently as we should in an effort to fit ourselves
for greater usefulness.--CT 209 (1903).
Combine Natural With Spiritual and Reach for Highest Attainments.--The natural and
the spiritual are to be combined in the studies of our schools. The operations of
agriculture illustrate the Bible lessons. The laws obeyed by the earth reveal the fact
that it is under the masterly power of an infinite God. The same principles run through
the spiritual and the natural world. Divorce God and His wisdom from the acquisition
of knowledge, and you have a lame, one-sided education, dead to all the saving
qualities which give power to man, so that he is incapable of acquiring immortality
through faith in Christ. The author of nature is the author of the Bible. Creation and
Christianity have one God.
All who engage in the acquisition of knowledge should aim to reach the highest round
of progress. Let them advance as fast and as far as they can; let their field of study be
as broad as their powers can compass, making God their wisdom, clinging to Him
who is infinite in knowledge, who can reveal the secrets hidden for ages, who can
solve the most difficult problems for minds that believe in Him who only hath
immortality, dwelling in the light that no man can approach unto. The living witness
for Christ, following on to know the Lord, shall know that His goings forth are
prepared as the morning. Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap (Galatians
6:7). By honesty and industry, with a proper care of the body, applying every power
of the mind to the acquisition of knowledge and wisdom in spiritual things, every soul
may be complete in Christ, who is the perfect pattern of a complete man.--SpTEd
April 22, 1895. (FE 375, 376.)
Correct Lessons Cannot Impress Minds Who Know Not the Truth of God's Word.--
But the fallen race will not understand. The science of nature is supposed to control
the God of nature. Correct lessons cannot impress the minds of those who know not
truth or the Word of God. When the heart and mind is submitted to God, when man is
willing to be instructed as a little child, the science of education will be found in the
Word of God. Higher education of the world has proved itself a farce. When teachers
and students come down from their stilts and enter Christ's school to learn of Him,
they will talk intelligently of higher education because they will understand that it is
that knowledge which enables men to understand the essence of science.--MS 45,
1898.
Visual Aids Needed.--The use of object lessons, blackboards, maps, and pictures will
be an aid in explaining these [spiritual] lessons and fixing them in the memory.
Parents and teachers should constantly seek for improved methods.--Ed 186 (1903).
Avoid Too Great a Variety of Mental Food.--God would have the mental faculties
kept pure and clean. But often too great a variety of food is given to the mind. It is
impossible for this to be properly taken care of and used. The brain should be relieved
of all unnecessary burden. Only the studies which will be of the most use not only
here but in the future life, which will provide the best instruction for body and soul,
will be carried over into eternity.--MS 15, 1898.
Study and Practical Life.--It is not well to crowd the mind with a class of studies that
require intense application and exertion but that are not brought into use in the
practical life. An education of this kind will be a loss to the student, for these studies
take away his desire and inclination for the studies which would fit him for usefulness
and enable him to fulfill his appointed responsibilities as laborers together with God
to help those whom he should by precept and example assist to secure immortality.--
MS 15, 1898.
Need for Practical Training.--The study of Latin and Greek is of far less consequence
to ourselves, to the world, and to God than the thorough study and use of the whole
human machinery. It is a sin to study books to the neglect of how to become familiar
with the various branches of usefulness in practical life. With some, close application
to books is a dissipation. The physical machinery being untaxed leads to a great
amount of activity in the brain. This becomes the devil's workshop. Never can the life
that is ignorant of the house we live in be an all-around life.--Lt 103, 1897.
Textbooks and Thought Patterns. [SEE CHAPTER 13, FOOD FOR THE MIND.]--
With solemn voice the Speaker continued: Do you find with these [infidel] authors
that which you can recommend as essential to true higher education? Would you dare
recommend their study to students who are ignorant of their true character? Wrong
habits of thought, when once accepted, become a despotic power that fastens the mind
as in a grasp of steel. If many who have received and read these books had never seen
them but had accepted the words of the Divine Teacher in their place, they would be
far in advance of where they now are in a knowledge of the divine truths of the Word
of God, which make men wise unto salvation. These books have led thousands where
Satan led Adam and Eve--to a knowledge that God forbade them to have. Through
their teachings, students have turned from the Word of the Lord to fables.--RH, Mar
12, 1908.
Broad Principles of Bible to Control Concepts. [SEE CHAPTER 11, BIBLE STUDY
AND THE MIND.]--Upon the mind of every student should be impressed the thought
that education is a failure unless the understanding has learned to grasp the truths of
divine revelation and unless the heart accepts the teachings of the gospel of Christ.
The student who, in the place of the broad principles of the Word of God, will accept
common ideas and will allow the time and attention to be absorbed in commonplace,
trivial matters will find his mind will become dwarfed and enfeebled; he will lose the
power of growth. The mind must be trained to comprehend the important truths that
concern eternal life.--Lt 64, 1909.
Best Use of Parts Composing Human Machinery. --Had teachers been learning that
lessons the Lord would have them learn, there would not be a class of students whose
bills must be settled by someone or else they leave the college with a heavy debt
hanging over them. Educators are not doing half their work when they know a young
man to be devoting years of close application to the study of books, not seeking to
earn means to pay his own way, and yet do nothing in the matter. Every case should
be investigated, every youth kindly and interestedly inquired after, and his financial
situation ascertained.
One of the studies put before him as most valuable should be the exercise of his God-
given reason in harmony with his physical powers, head, body, hands, and feet. The
right use of one's self is the most valuable lesson that can be learned. We are not to do
brain work and stop there, or make physical exertions and stop there; but we are to
make the very best use of the various parts composing the human machinery--brain,
bone, and muscle, body, head, and heart. No man is fit for the ministry who does not
understand how to do this.--Lt 103, 1897.
I cannot in any way sanction the idea that children must feel that they are under a
constant distrust and cannot act as children. But let the teachers join in the
amusements of the children, be one with them, and show that they want them to be
happy, and it will give the children confidence. They may be controlled by love, but
not by following them at their meals and in their amusements with a stern, unbending
severity.--5T 653 (1889).
Manifest Confidence in Pupils.--The wise educator, in dealing with his pupils, will
seek to encourage confidence and to strengthen the sense of honor. Children and
youth are benefited by being trusted. Many, even of the little children, have a high
sense of honor; all desire to be treated with confidence and respect, and this is their
right. They should not be led to feel that they cannot go out or come in without being
watched. Suspicion demoralizes, producing the very evils it seeks to prevent. Instead
of watching continually, as if suspecting evil, teachers who are in touch with their
pupils will discern the workings of the restless mind and will set to work influences
that will counteract evil. Lead the youth to feel that they are trusted, and there are few
who will not seek to prove themselves worthy of the trust.--Ed 289, 290 (1903).
Confidence of Pupils Essential.--The teacher must have aptness for his work. He must
have the wisdom and tact required in dealing with minds. However great his scientific
knowledge, however excellent his qualifications in other lines, if he does not gain the
respect and confidence of his pupils, his efforts will be in vain.--Ed 278, 279 (1903).
Helping the Backward and Unpromising.--If you manifest kindness, love, tender
thoughtfulness, to your students, you will reap the same in return. If teachers are
severe, critical, overbearing, not sensitive of others' feelings, they will receive the
same in return. A man who wishes to preserve his self-respect and dignity must be
careful not to sacrifice the respect and dignity of others. This rule should be sacredly
observed toward the dullest, the youngest, and most blundering scholars.
What God shall do with these apparently uninteresting youth, you do not know. God
has accepted and chosen, in the past, just such specimens to do a great work for Him.
His Spirit, operating upon the heart, has acted like an electric battery, arousing the
apparently benumbed faculties to vigorous and persevering action. The Lord saw in
these rough, uninteresting, unhewn stones precious metal that will endure the test of
storm and tempest and the fiery ordeal of heat. God seeth not as man seeth, God
judgeth not as man judgeth--He searcheth the heart.--MS 2, 1881.
Dealing With the Dull Scholar.--Teachers must consider that they are dealing with
children, not men and women. They are children who have everything to learn, and it
is much more difficult for some to learn than others. The dull scholar needs much
more encouragement than he receives. If teachers are placed over these varied minds
who naturally love to order and dictate and magnify themselves in their authority,
who will deal with partiality, having favorites to whom they will show preferences
while others are treated with exactitude and severity, it will create a state of confusion
and insubordination.--CEd 154, 1893. (FE 269, 270.)
But if they go in a provoked, irritated spirit into the schoolroom, the moral
atmosphere surrounding their souls is leaving its impression upon the children who
are under their care, and in the place of being fitted to instruct the children, they need
one to teach them the lessons of Jesus Christ.--CEd 149, 150, 1893. (FE 265, 266.)
Brethren and sisters, do not hold yourselves aloof from the dear youth, as though you
have no particular concern or responsibility for them. You who have long professed to
be Christians have a work to do to patiently and kindly lead them in the right way.
You should show them that you love them because they are younger members of the
Lord's family, the purchase of His blood.--RH, Aug. 26, 1884. (FE 89, 90.)
Distinct From Any Other Principle.--Pure love is simple in its operations and is
distinct from any other principle of action.--2T 136 (1868).
A Tender Plant to Be Cultivated and Cherished. --Love is a tender plant, and it must
be cultivated and cherished, and the roots of bitterness all have to be plucked up
around it in order for it to have room to circulate, and then it will bring in under its
influence all the powers of the mind, all the heart, so that we shall love God
supremely and our neighbor as ourselves.--MS 50, 1894. (HC 173.)
Love Not an Impulse but a Divine Principle.-- Supreme love for God and unselfish
love for one another--this is the best gift that our heavenly Father can bestow. This
love is not an impulse but a divine principle, a permanent power. The unconsecrated
heart cannot originate or produce it. Only in the heart where Jesus reigns is it found.
We love Him, because He first loved us (1 John 4:19). In the heart renewed by divine
grace, love is the ruling principle of action.--AA 551 (1911).
Uproots Selfishness and Strife.--The golden chain of love, binding the hearts of the
believers in unity, in bonds of fellowship and love, and in oneness with Christ and the
Father, makes the connection perfect and bears to the world a testimony of the power
of Christianity that cannot be controverted.... Then will selfishness be uprooted and
unfaithfulness will not exist. There will not be strife and divisions. There will not be
stubbornness in anyone who is bound up with Christ. Not one will act out the
stubborn independence of the wayward, impulsive child who drops the hand that is
leading him and chooses to stumble on alone and walk in his own ways.--Lt 110,
1893. (HC 173.)
The Fruit of Pure Love.--Whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even
so to them (Matthew 7:12). Blessed results would appear as the fruit of such a course.
With what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you again (verse 2). Here are
strong motives which should constrain us to love one another with a pure heart,
fervently. Christ is our example. He went about doing good. He lived to bless others.
Love beautified and ennobled all His actions.
We are not commanded to do to ourselves what we wish others to do unto us; we are
to do unto others what we wish them to do to us under like circumstances. The
measure we mete is always measured to us again. . . .
The love of influence and the desire for the esteem of others may produce a well-
ordered life and frequently a blameless conversation. Self-respect may lead us to
avoid the appearance of evil. A selfish heart may perform generous actions,
acknowledge the present truth, and express humility and affection in an outward
manner, yet the motives may be deceptive and impure; the actions that flow from such
a heart may be destitute of the savor of life and the fruits of true holiness, being
destitute of the principles of pure love. Love should be cherished and cultivated, for
its influence is divine.--2T 136 (1868).
Love Governs the Motives and Actions.--The most careful attention to the outward
proprieties of life is not sufficient to shut out all fretfulness, harsh judgment, and
unbecoming speech. True refinement will never be revealed so long as self is
considered as the supreme object. Love must dwell in the heart. A thoroughgoing
Christian draws his motives of action from his deep heart-love for his Master. Up
through the roots of his affection for Christ springs an unselfish interest in his
brethren. Love imparts to its possessor grace, propriety, and comeliness of
deportment. It illuminates the countenance and subdues the voice; it refines and
elevates the entire being.--GW 123 (1915).
Love Favorably Interprets Another's Motives. --Charity doth not behave itself
unseemly, seeketh not her own, is not easily provoked, thinketh no evil (1 Corinthians
13:5). Christlike love places the most favorable construction on the motives and acts
of others. It does not needlessly expose their faults; it does not listen eagerly to
unfavorable reports, but seeks rather to bring to mind the good qualities of others.--
AA 319 (1911).
Love Sweetens the Entire Life.--Those who love God cannot harbor hatred or envy.
When the heavenly principle of eternal love fills the heart, it will flow out to others. . .
.
This love is not contracted so as merely to include me and mine but is as broad as the
world and as high as heaven, and is in harmony with that of the angel workers. This
love cherished in the soul sweetens the entire life and sheds a refining influence on all
around. Possessing it, we cannot but be happy, let fortune smile or frown.
If we love God with all the heart, we must love His children also. This love is the
Spirit of God. It is the heavenly adorning that gives true nobility and dignity to the
soul and assimilates our lives to that of the Master. No matter how many good
qualities we may have, however honorable and refined we may consider ourselves, if
the soul is not baptized with the heavenly grace of love to God and one another, we
are deficient in true goodness and unfit for heaven, where all is love and unity.--4T
223, 224 (1876).
True Love Is Spiritual.--Love, lifted out of the realm of passion and impulse, becomes
spiritualized and is revealed in words and acts. A Christian must have a sanctified
tenderness and love, in which there is no impatience or fretfulness; the rude, harsh
manners must be softened by the grace of Christ.--5T 335 (1885).
Love Lives on Action.--Love cannot live without action, and every act increases,
strengthens, and extends it. Love will gain the victory when argument and authority
are powerless. Love works not for profit nor reward; yet God has ordained that great
gain shall be the certain result of every labor of love. It is diffusive in its nature and
quiet in its operation, yet strong and mighty in its purpose to overcome great evils. It
is melting and transforming in its influence and will take hold of the lives of the sinful
and affect their hearts when every other means has proved unsuccessful.
Wherever the power of intellect, of authority, or of force is employed, and love is not
manifestly present, the affections and will of those whom we seek to reach assume a
defensive, repelling position, and their strength of resistance is increased. Jesus was
the Prince of peace. He came into the world to bring resistance and authority into
subjection to Himself. Wisdom and strength He could command, but the means He
employed with which to overcome evil were the wisdom and strength of love.--2T
135, 136 (1868).
Evidences a New Principle of Life.--When men are bound together, not by force or
self-interest, but by love, they show the working of an influence that is above every
human influence. Where this oneness exists, it is evidence that the image of God is
being restored in humanity, that a new principle of life has been implanted. It shows
that there is power in the divine nature to withstand the supernatural agencies of evil
and that the grace of God subdues the selfishness inherent in the natural heart.--DA
678 (1898).
Source of True Human Affection.--Our affection for one another springs from our
common relation to God. We are one family, we love one another as He loved us.
When compared with this true, sanctified, disciplined affection, the shallow courtesy
of the world, the meaningless expression of effusive friendship, are as chaff to the
wheat.--Lt 63, 1896. (SD 101.)
To love as Christ loved means to manifest unselfishness at all times and in all places,
by kind words and pleasant looks. . . . Genuine love is a precious attribute of heavenly
origin, which increases its fragrance in proportion as it is dispensed to others.--MS 17,
1899. (SD 101.)
Love Binds Heart to Heart.--Let there be mutual love, mutual forbearance. Then
marriage, instead of being the end of love, will be as it were the very beginning of
love. The warmth of true friendship, the love that binds heart to heart, is a foretaste of
the joys of heaven. . . . Let each give love rather than exact it.--MH 360, 361 (1905).
Love Cannot Exist Without Expression.--As the social and generous impulses are
repressed, they wither, and the heart becomes desolate and cold.... Love cannot long
exist without expression. Let not the heart of one connected with you starve for the
want of kindness and sympathy.--MH 360 (1905).
In all the deportment of one who possesses true love, the grace of God will be shown.
Modesty, simplicity, sincerity, morality, and religion will characterize every step
toward an alliance in marriage.--RH, Sept 25, 1888. (MYP 459.)
True Love Preparation for Successful Marriage. --True love is a high and holy
principle, altogether different in character from that love which is awakened by
impulse and which suddenly dies when severely tested. It is by faithfulness to duty in
the parental home that the youth are to prepare themselves for homes of their own. Let
them here practice self-denial and manifest kindness, courtesy, and Christian
sympathy. Thus love will be kept warm in the heart, and he who goes out from such a
household to stand at the head of a family of his own will know how to promote the
happiness of her whom he has chosen as a companion for life. Marriage, instead of
being the end of love, will be only its beginning.--PP 176 (1890).
Love and Self-discipline Bind Family Together.--Let parents seek, in their own
character and in their homelife, to exemplify the love and beneficence of the heavenly
Father. Let the home be full of sunshine. This will be worth far more to your children
than lands or money. Let the home love be kept alive in their hearts, that they may
look back upon the home of their childhood as a place of peace and happiness next to
heaven. The members of the family do not all have the same stamp of character, and
there will be frequent occasion for the exercise of patience and forbearance; but
through love and self-discipline all may be bound together in the closest union.--PP
176 (1890).
You are not worthy of your wife. She is too good for you. She is a frail, sensitive
plant; she needs to be cared for tenderly. She earnestly desires to do the will of God.
But she has a proud spirit and is timid, shrinking from reproach. It is as death to her to
be the subject of observation or remark. Let your wife be loved, honored, and
cherished, in fulfillment of the marriage vow, and she will come out of that reticent,
diffident position which is natural to her.--2T 416 (1870).
Soul Craves Higher Love.--Your wife should make strong efforts to come out of her
retired, dignified reserve and cultivate simplicity in all her actions. And when the
higher order of faculties is aroused in you and strengthened by exercise, you will
better understand the wants of women; you will understand that the soul craves love
of a higher, purer order than exists in the low order of the animal passions. These
passions have been strengthened in you by encouragement and exercise. If now in the
fear of God you keep your body under, and seek to meet your wife with pure, elevated
love, the wants of her nature will be met. Take her to your heart; esteem her highly.--
2T 415 (1870).
Love Finds Expression in Words and Deeds.-- L_____ needs to cultivate love for his
wife, love that will find expression in words and deeds. He should cultivate tender
affection. His wife has a sensitive, clinging nature and needs to be cherished. Every
word of tenderness, every word of appreciation and affectionate encouragement, will
be remembered by her and will reflect back in blessings upon her husband. His
unsympathizing nature needs to be brought into close contact with Christ, that that
stiffness and cold reserve may be subdued and softened by divine love.
It will not be weakness or a sacrifice of manhood and dignity to give his wife
expressions of tenderness and sympathy in words and acts; and let it not end with the
family circle, but extend to those outside the family. L_____ has a work to do for
himself that no one can do for him. He may grow strong in the Lord by bearing
burdens in His cause. His affection and love should be centered upon Christ and
heavenly things, and he should be forming a character for everlasting life.--3T 530,
531 (1875).
The Little Acts Which Reveal True Love.--Love can no more exist without revealing
itself in outward acts than fire can be kept alive without fuel. You, Brother C, have
felt that it was beneath your dignity to manifest tenderness by kindly acts and to
watch for an opportunity to evince affection for your wife by words of tenderness and
kind regard. You are changeable in your feelings and are very much affected by
surrounding circumstances.... Leave your business cares and perplexities and
annoyances when you leave your business. Come to your family with a cheerful
countenance, with sympathy, tenderness, and love. This will be better than expending
money for medicines or physicians for your wife. It will be health to the body and
strength to the soul.--1T 695 (1868).
Let patience, gratitude, and love keep sunshine in the heart though the day may be
ever so cloudy.--MH 393 (1905).
Power of Parents' Example.--The best way to educate children to respect their father
and mother is to give them the opportunity of seeing the father offering kindly
attentions to the mother and the mother rendering respect and reverence to the father.
It is by beholding love in their parents that children are led to obey the fifth
commandment and to heed the injunction, Children, obey your parents in the Lord:
for this is right.--RH, Nov 15, 1892. (AH 198, 199.)
Love of Jesus Mirrored in Parents.--When the mother has gained the confidence of
her children and taught them to love and obey her, she has given them the first lesson
in the Christian life. They must love and trust and obey their Saviour as they love and
trust and obey their parents. The love which in faithful care and right training the
parent manifests for the child faintly mirrors the love of Jesus for His faithful
people.--ST, Apr 4, 1911. (AH 199.)
Mother's Love Is Illustration of Love of Christ.--As the mother teaches her children to
obey her because they love her, she is teaching them the first lessons in the Christian
life. The mother's love represents to the child the love of Christ, and the little ones
who trust and obey their mother are learning to trust and obey the Saviour.--DA 515
(1898).
Not only does God require you to control your thoughts, but also your passions and
affections. . . . Passion and affection are powerful agents....Positively guard your
thoughts, your passions, and your affections. Do not degrade these to minister to lust.
Elevate them [passions and affections] to purity, devote them to God.--2T 561, 564
(1870).
All animal propensities are to be subjected to the higher powers of the soul.--Ms 1,
1888. (AH 128.)
Those who regard the marriage relation as one of God's sacred ordinances, guarded by
His holy precept, will be controlled by the dictates of reason.--HL, No. 2, p. 48.
Very few feel it to be a religious duty to govern their passions. . . . The marriage
covenant covers sin of the darkest hue. . . . Health and life are sacrificed upon the altar
of base passion. The higher, nobler powers are brought into subjection to the animal
propensities. . . . Love is a pure and holy principle; but lustful passion will not admit
of restraint and will not be dictated to or controlled by reason.--2T 472, 473 (1870).
We feel every day a most earnest desire for a more sacred nearness to God. This is my
prayer when I lie down, when I awake in the night, and when I arise in the morning,
Nearer my God to Thee, nearer to Thee....
I sleep alone. This seems to be Mary's preference as well as mine. I can have a better
opportunity for reflection and prayer. I prize my [being] all to myself unless graced
with your presence. I want to share my bed only with you.--Lt 6, 1876.
Jesus and the Family Relationship.--Jesus did not enforce celibacy upon any class of
men. He came not to destroy the sacred relationship of marriage but to exalt it and
restore it to its original sanctity. He looks with pleasure upon the family relationship
where sacred and unselfish love bears sway.--MS 126, 1903. (AH 121.)
He [Christ] ordained that men and women should be united in holy wedlock, to rear
families whose members, crowned with honor, should be recognized as members of
the family above. --MH 356 (1905).
God's Purpose Fulfilled in Marriage.--All who enter into matrimonial relations with a
holy purpose--the husband to obtain the pure affections of a woman's heart, the wife
to soften and improve her husband's character and give it completeness--fulfill God's
purpose for them.--MS 16, 1899. (AH 99.)
The Privilege of the Marriage Relation.--They [Christians who have married] should
duly consider the result of every privilege of the marriage relation, and sanctified
principle should be the basis of every action.--2T 380 (1870).
[She wrote of] the fortifications preserving sacred the privacy and privileges of the
family relation.--2T 90 (1868).
The Danger of Carrying the Lawful to Excess.--There is in itself no sin in eating and
drinking or in marrying and giving in marriage. It was lawful to marry in the time of
Noah, and it is lawful to marry now, if that which is lawful is properly treated and not
carried to sinful excess....
In Noah's day it was the inordinate, excessive love of that which in itself was lawful,
when properly used, that made marriage sinful before God. There are many who are
losing their souls in this age of the world by becoming absorbed in the thoughts of
marriage and in the marriage relation itself....
God has placed men in the world, and it is their privilege to eat, to drink, to trade, to
marry, and to be given in marriage; but it is safe to do these things only in the fear of
God. We should live in this world with reference to the eternal world.--RH, Sept 25,
1888.
Marriage No License for Giving Loose Rein to Lustful Passions.--Very few feel it to
be a religious duty to govern their passions. They have united themselves in marriage
to the object of their choice and therefore reason that marriage sanctifies the
indulgence of the baser passions. Even men and women professing godliness give
loose rein to their lustful passions and have no thought that God holds them
accountable for the expenditure of vital energy, which weakens their hold on life and
enervates the entire system.
The marriage covenant covers sins of the darkest hue. Men and women professing
godliness debase their own bodies through the indulgence of the corrupt passions and
thus lower themselves beneath the brute creation. They abuse the powers which God
has given them to be preserved in sanctification and honor. Health and life are
sacrificed upon the altar of base passion. The higher, nobler powers are brought into
subjection to the animal propensities. Those who thus sin are not acquainted with the
result of their course.--2T 472 (1870).
The Delicate Balance Between Love and Lustful Passion.--It is not pure love which
actuates a man to make his wife an instrument to minister to his lust. It is the animal
passions which clamor for indulgence.
How few men show their love in the manner specified by the apostle: Even as Christ
also loved the church, and gave Himself for it; that He might [not pollute it but]
sanctify and cleanse it;... that it should be holy and without blemish (Ephesians 5:25-
27). This is the quality of love in the marriage relation which God recognizes as holy.
Love is a pure and holy principle, but lustful passion will not admit of restraint and
will not be dictated to or controlled by reason. It is blind to consequences; it will not
reason from cause to effect.
Many women are suffering from great debility and settled disease because the laws of
their being have been disregarded; nature's laws have been trampled upon. The brain
nerve power is squandered by men and women, being called into unnatural action to
gratify base passions; and this hideous monster--base, low passion--assumes the
delicate name of love.--2T 473, 474 (1870).
Love Versus the Passion of the Natural Human Heart.--Love ... is not unreasonable; it
is not blind. It is pure and holy. But the passion of the natural heart is another thing
altogether. While pure love will take God into all its plans and will be in perfect
harmony with the Spirit of God, passion will be headstrong, rash, unreasonable,
defiant of all restraint, and will make the object of its choice an idol. In all the
deportment of one who possesses true love, the grace of God will be shown.--RH,
Sept 25, 1888. (AH 50.)
Keep Confidences Within the Sacred Family Circle. --Around every family there is a
sacred circle that should be kept unbroken. Within this circle no other person has a
right to come. Let not the husband or the wife permit another to share the confidences
that belong solely to themselves.--MH 361 (1905).
Marriage Not Designed to Cover Sensuality and Base Practices.--God never designed
that marriage should cover the multitude of sins that are practiced. Sensuality and
base practices in a marriage relation are educating the mind and moral taste for
demoralizing practices outside the marriage relation.--RH, May 24, 1887.
Sexual Excesses Endangering Health and Life.--It is not pure, holy love which leads
the wife to gratify the animal propensities of her husband at the expense of health and
life....
It may be necessary to humbly and affectionately urge, even at the risk of his
displeasure, that she cannot debase her body by yielding to sexual excess. She should,
in a tender, kind manner, remind him that God has the first and highest claim upon her
entire being and that she cannot disregard this claim, for she will be held accountable
in the great day of God.--2T 475 (1870).
Sexual excess will effectually destroy a love for devotional exercises, will take from
the brain the substance needed to nourish the system, and will most effectively
exhaust the vitality.--2T 477 (1870).
He knows that if he can excite the baser passions and keep them in the ascendancy, he
has nothing to be troubled about in their Christian experience; for the moral and
intellectual faculties will be subordinate, while the animal propensities will
predominate and keep in the ascendancy; and these baser passions will be
strengthened by exercise, while the nobler qualities will become weaker and weaker.--
2T 480 (1870).
Men are corrupting their own bodies, and the wife has become a bed servant to their
inordinate, base lusts until there is no fear of God before their eyes. To indulge
impulse that degrades both body and soul is the order of the marriage life.--MS 14,
1888.
Prenatal Influences.--Satan seeks to debase the minds of those who unite in marriage
that he may stamp his own hateful image upon their children. . . .
He can mold their posterity much more readily than he could the parents, for he can
so control the minds of the parents that through them he may give his own stamp of
character to their children. Thus many children are born with the animal passions
largely in the ascendancy, while the moral faculties are but feebly developed. These
children need the most careful culture to bring out, strengthen, and develop the moral
and intellectual powers, that these may take the lead.--2T 480 (1870).
The Degrading Process.--The mind of a man or woman does not come down in a
moment from purity and holiness to depravity, corruption, and crime. It takes time to
transform the human to the divine or to degrade those formed in the image of God to
the brutal or the satanic.
By beholding we become changed. Though formed in the image of his Maker, man
can so educate his mind that sin which he once loathed will become pleasant to him.
As he ceases to watch and pray, he ceases to guard the citadel, the heart, and engages
in sin and crime. The mind is debased, and it is impossible to elevate it from
corruption while it is being educated to enslave the moral and intellectual powers and
bring them in subjection to grosser passions.
Constant war against the carnal mind must be maintained; and we must be aided by
the refining influence of the grace of God, which will attract the mind upward and
habituate it to meditate upon pure and holy things.--2T 478, 479 (1870).
Counsel to Women.--I write with a distressed heart that the women in this age, both
married and unmarried, too frequently do not maintain the reserve that is necessary.
They act like coquettes. They encourage the attentions of single and married men, and
those who are weak in moral power will be ensnared.
These things, if allowed, deaden the moral senses and blind the mind so that crime
does not appear sinful. Thoughts are awakened that would not have been if woman
had kept her place in all modesty and sobriety. She may have had no unlawful
purpose or motive herself, but she has given encouragement to men who are tempted
and who need all the help they can get from those associated with them.
Women as Tempters.--Shall not the women professing the truth keep strict guard over
themselves lest the least encouragement be given to unwarrantable familiarity? They
may close many a door of temptation if they will observe at all time strict reserve and
propriety of deportment.--5T 602 (1889).
Women are too often tempters. On one pretense or another they engage the attention
of men, married or unmarried, and lead them on till they transgress the law of God,
till their usefulness is ruined, and their souls are in jeopardy.--5T 596 (1889).
Sympathetic Pastor.--Be men of God, on the gaining side. Knowledge is within the
reach of all who desire it. God designs the mind shall become strong, thinking deeper,
fuller, clearer. Walk with God as did Enoch; make God your counselor and you
cannot but make improvement. . . .
There are men who claim to keep God's commandments, who will visit the flock of
God under their charge and lead unwary souls into a train of thought that results in
shameless liberties and familiarities. . . .
He [a minister] will, as he visits families, begin to inquire the secrets of their married
life. Do they live happily with their husbands? Do they feel that they are appreciated?
Is there harmony in their married life? And thus the unsuspecting woman is led on by
these ensnaring questions to open her secret life, her disappointments, her little trials
and grievances, to a stranger as the Catholics do to their priests.
Then this sympathizing pastor puts in a chapter of his own experience; that his wife
was not the woman of his choice; that there is no real affinity between them. He does
not love his wife. She does not meet his expectations. The barrier is thus broken
down, and women are seduced. They believe their life is one great disappointment,
and this shepherd has great sympathy for his flock. Lovesick sentimentalism is
encouraged, and the mind and soul is spoiled of its purity, if this kind of work does
not result in the breaking of the seventh commandment.
Polluted thoughts harbored become habit, and the soul is scarred and defiled. Once do
a wrong action and a blot is made which nothing can heal but the blood of Christ; and
if the habit is not turned from with firm determination, the soul is corrupted and the
streams flowing from this defiling fountain corrupt others. His influence is a curse.
God will certainly destroy all those who continue this work. . . .
Men, Women, and Youth Involved in Moral Depravity.--The moral dangers to which
all, both old and young, are exposed are daily increasing. Moral derangement, which
we call depravity, finds ample room to work, and an influence is exerted by men,
women, and youth professing to be Christians that is low, sensual, devilish. --Lt 26d,
1887.
Satan is making masterly efforts to involve married men and women and children and
youth in impure practices. His temptations find acceptance in many hearts, because
they have not been elevated, purified, refined, and ennobled by the sacred truth which
they claim to believe. Not a few have been low and vile in thought and common in
talk and deportment so that when Satan's temptations come, they have no moral
power to resist them and fall an easy prey.--Lt 26d, 1887. (HP 199.)
Then, when he is disconnected from God, passion obtains control over reason, and
impulse over principle, and he becomes sinful in thought and action, his judgment is
perverted, his reason seems to be enfeebled, and he needs to be restored to himself by
being restored to God by a correct view of himself in the light of God's word.--Lt 24,
1890.
Avoid Reading, Seeing, and Hearing Impurity. --Those who would not fall a prey to
Satan's devices must guard well the avenues of the soul; they must avoid reading,
seeing, or hearing that which will suggest impure thoughts. The mind must not be left
to dwell at random upon every subject that the enemy of souls may suggest. The heart
must be faithfully sentineled, or evils without will awaken evils within, and the soul
will wander in darkness.--AA 518 (1911).
You will have to become a faithful sentinel over your eyes, ears, and all your senses if
you would control your mind and prevent vain and corrupt thoughts from staining
your soul. The power of grace alone can accomplish this most desirable work.--2T
561 (1870).
In the cars, photographs of females in a state of nudity are frequently circulated for
sale. These disgusting pictures are also found in daguerrean saloons [photographic
studios], and are hung upon the walls of those who deal in engravings. This is an age
when corruption is teeming everywhere.
The lust of the eye and corrupt passions are aroused by beholding and by reading. . . .
The mind takes pleasure in contemplating scenes which awaken the lower and baser
passions. These vile images, seen through defiled imagination, corrupt the morals and
prepare the deluded, infatuated beings to give loose rein to lustful passions. Then
follow sins and crimes which drag beings formed in the image of God down to a level
with the beasts, sinking them at last in perdition. Avoid reading and seeing things
which will suggest impure thoughts. Cultivate the moral and intellectual powers.--2T
410 (1870).
The Mind the Determining Factor.--Said Paul, With my mind serve I the law of God.
Becloud this mind through indulgence of animal appetite and passions, and the moral
powers are weakened so that the sacred and common are placed upon a level.--Lt 2,
1873.
Many professed Christians are so benumbed by the same practice that their moral
sensibilities cannot be aroused to understand that it is sin, and that if continued its sure
results will be utter shipwreck of body and mind. Man, the noblest being upon the
earth, formed in the image of God, transforms himself into a beast! He makes himself
gross and corrupt.
Every Christian will have to learn to restrain his passions and be controlled by
principle. Unless he does this, he is unworthy of the Christian name.
Some who make high profession do not understand the sin of self-abuse and its sure
results. Long-established habit has blinded their understanding. They do not realize
the exceeding sinfulness of this degrading sin, which is enervating the system and
destroying their brain nerve power.
Moral principle is exceedingly weak when it conflicts with established habit. Solemn
messages from heaven cannot forcibly impress the heart that is not fortified against
the indulgence of this degrading vice. The sensitive nerves of the brain have lost their
healthy tone by morbid excitation to gratify an unnatural desire for sensual
indulgence. The brain nerves which communicate with the entire system are the only
medium through which Heaven can communicate to man and affect his inmost life.
Whatever disturbs the circulation of the electric currents in the nervous system lessens
the strength of the vital powers, and the result is a deadening of the sensibilities of the
mind.--2T 347 (1870).
Some children begin to practice self-pollution in their infancy; and as they increase in
years the lustful passions grow with their growth and strengthen with their strength.
Their minds are not at rest. Girls desire the society of boys, and boys that of the girls.
Their deportment is not reserved and modest. They are bold and forward and take
indecent liberties. The habit of self-abuse has debased their minds and tainted their
souls.--2T 481 (1870).
You were shown me in her [N's] society hours of the night; you know best in what
manner these hours were spent. You called on me to speak whether you had broken
God's commandments. I ask you, Have you not broken them?
How was your time employed hours together night after night? Were your position,
your attitude, your affections such that you would want them all registered in the
ledger of heaven? I saw, I heard things that would make angels blush.... No young
man should do as you have done to N, unless married to her; and I was much
surprised to see that you did not sense this matter more keenly.
Why I write now is to implore you for your soul's sake to dally with temptation no
longer. Make short work in breaking this spell that like a fearful nightmare has
brooded over you. Cut yourself loose now and forever, if you have any desire for the
favor of God....
You have spent hours of the night in her company because you were both
infatuated.... In the name of the Lord, cease your attention to N or marry her.... You
might as well marry her as to be in her society and conduct yourselves as only man
and wife should conduct themselves toward each other....
If through the period of your life you wish to enjoy the society of N as you now
appear to enjoy it and be fascinated with it, why not go a step farther than you already
have and make yourself her lawful protector and have an undisputed right to devote
the hours you choose in her company? ... Your acts and conversation are offensive to
God.--Lt 3, 1879.
Sodom's Dissolute Morals.--We are not ignorant of the fall of Sodom because of the
corruption of its inhabitants. The prophet has here [Ezekiel 16:49] specified the
particular evils which led to dissolute morals. We see the very sins now existing in the
world which were in Sodom and which brought upon her the wrath of God, even to
her utter destruction.--HR, July, 1873. (4BC 1161.)
Invading the Church Today.--Impurity is today widespread, even among the professed
followers of Christ. Passion is unrestrained; the animal propensities are gaining
strength by indulgence, while the moral powers are constantly becoming weaker....
The sins that destroyed the antediluvians and the cities of the plain exist today--not
merely in heathen lands, not only among popular professors of Christianity, but with
some who profess to be looking for the coming of the Son of man. If God should
present these sins before you as they appear in His sight, you would be filled with
shame and terror.--5T 218 (1882).
Shutting the Eyes to Light.--Indulgence of the baser passions will lead very many to
shut their eyes to the light, for they fear that they will see sins which they are
unwilling to forsake. All may see if they will. If they choose darkness rather than
light, their criminality will be none the less.
Why do not men and women read and become intelligent upon these things which so
decidedly affect their physical, intellectual, and moral strength? God has given you a
habitation to care for and preserve in the best condition for His service and glory.
Your bodies are not your own.--2T 352 (1885).
Sincere Repentance and Determined Effort Necessary.--Those who corrupt their own
bodies cannot enjoy the favor of God until they sincerely repent, make an entire
reform, and perfect holiness in the fear of the Lord.--AM 29 (1864).
The only hope for those who practice vile habits is to forever leave them if they place
any value upon health here and salvation hereafter. When these habits have been
indulged in for quite a length of time, it requires a determined effort to resist
temptation and refuse the corrupt indulgence.--AM 27 (1864).
The Sin of Fantasying.--You are responsible to God for your thoughts. If you indulge
in vain imaginations, permitting your mind to dwell upon impure subjects, you are, in
a degree, as guilty before God as if your thoughts were carried into action. All that
prevents the action is the lack of opportunity.--2T 561 (1870).
Bring the Thoughts Under Control.--You should control your thoughts. This will not
be an easy task; you cannot accomplish it without close and even severe effort. . . .
Not only does God require you to control your thoughts, but also your passions and
affections. Your salvation depends upon your governing yourself in these things.
Passion and affection are powerful agents. If misapplied, if set in operation through
wrong motives, if misplaced, they are powerful to accomplish your ruin and leave you
a miserable wreck, without God and without hope.--2T 561 (1870).
Harbored Thoughts Become Habit.--Polluted thoughts harbored become habit, and the
soul is scarred and defiled. Once do a wrong action and a blot is made which nothing
can heal but the blood of Christ; and if the habit is not turned from with firm
determination, the soul is corrupted, and the streams flowing from this defiling
fountain corrupt others.--Lt 26d, 1887. (HP 197.)
Thoughts Rightly Controlled.--We need to place a high value upon the right control of
our thoughts, for such control prepares the mind and soul to labor harmoniously for
the Master. It is necessary for our peace and happiness in this life that our thoughts
center in Christ. As a man thinketh, so is he. Our improvement in moral purity
depends on right thinking and right acting. . . .
Evil thoughts destroy the soul. The converting power of God changes the heart,
refining and purifying the thoughts. Unless a determined effort is made to keep the
thoughts centered on Christ, grace cannot reveal itself in the life. The mind must
engage in the spiritual warfare. Every thought must be brought into captivity to the
obedience of Christ. All the habits must be brought under God's control.
We need a constant sense of the ennobling power of pure thoughts and the damaging
influence of evil thoughts. Let us place our thoughts upon holy things. Let them be
pure and true, for the only security for any soul is right thinking. We are to use every
means that God has placed within our reach for the government and cultivation of our
thoughts. We are to bring our minds into harmony with His mind. His truth will
sanctify us, body and soul and spirit, and we shall be enabled to rise above
temptations.--Lt 123, 1904. (HP 164.)
Diet an Important Factor.--It cannot be too often repeated that whatever is taken into
the stomach affects not only the body but ultimately the mind as well. Gross and
stimulating food fevers the blood, excites the nervous system, and too often dulls the
moral perceptions so that reason and conscience are overborne by the sensual
impulses. It is difficult, and often well-nigh impossible, for one who is intemperate in
diet to exercise patience and self-control.--CTBH 134, 1890. (CG 461.)
Meat Excites and Strengthens Lower Passions.-- Meat should not be placed before our
children. Its influence is to excite and strengthen the lower passions, and has a
tendency to deaden the moral powers. Grains and fruits prepared free from grease and
in as natural a condition as possible should be the food for the tables of all who claim
to be preparing for translation to heaven. The less feverish the diet, the more easily
can the passions be controlled. Gratification of taste should not be consulted
irrespective of physical, intellectual, or moral health.--2T 352 (1869).
Put Temptation to Death.--The lower passions have their seat in the body and work
through it. The words flesh or fleshly or carnal lusts embrace the lower, corrupt
nature; the flesh of itself cannot act contrary to the will of God. We are commanded to
crucify the flesh, with the affections and lusts. How shall we do it? Shall we inflict
pain on the body? No; but put to death the temptation to sin.
Exchange Impure Suggestions for Pure, Elevating Thoughts.--The mind must be kept
meditating upon pure and holy subjects. An impure suggestion must be dismissed at
once, and pure, elevating thoughts, holy contemplation, be entertained, thus obtaining
more and more knowledge of God by training the mind in the contemplation of
heavenly things. God has simple means open to every individual case, sufficient to
secure the great end, the salvation of the soul.
Resolve to reach a high and holy standard; make your mark high; act with earnest
purpose, as did Daniel, steadily, perseveringly, and nothing that the enemy can do will
hinder your improvement. Notwithstanding inconveniences, changes, perplexities,
you may constantly advance in mental vigor and moral power.--Lt 26d, 1887. (HP
197.)
Don't Create an Emergency.--Every unholy passion must be kept under the control of
sanctified reason through the grace abundantly bestowed of God in every emergency.
But let no arrangement be made to create an emergency, let there be no voluntary act
to place one where he will be assailed with temptation or give the least occasion for
others to think him guilty of indiscretion.--Lt 18, 1891.
Keep Away From the Brink.--Do not see how close you can walk upon the brink of a
precipice and be safe. Avoid the first approach to danger. The soul's interests cannot
be trifled with. Your capital is your character. Cherish it as you would a golden
treasure. Moral purity, self-respect, a strong power of resistance, must be firmly and
constantly cherished. . . .
Let no one think he can overcome without the help of God. You must have the
energy, the strength, the power, of an inner life developed within you. You will then
bear fruit unto godliness and will have an intense loathing of vice. You need to
constantly strive to work away from earthliness, from cheap conversation, from
everything sensual, and aim for nobility of soul and a pure and unspotted character.
Your name may be kept so pure that it cannot justly be connected with anything
dishonest or unrighteous but will be respected by all the good and pure, and it may be
written in the Lamb's book of life.-- MS 4a, 1885. (MM 143, 144.)
Satan or Christ in Control.--When the mind is not under the direct influence of the
Spirit of God, Satan can mold it as he chooses. All the rational powers which he
controls he will carnalize. He is directly opposed to God in his tastes, views,
preferences, likes and dislikes, choice of things and pursuits; there is no relish for
what God loves or approves but a delight in those things which He despises. . . .
If Christ is abiding in the heart, He will be in all our thoughts. Our deepest thoughts
will be of Him, His love, His purity. He will fill all the chambers of the mind. Our
affections will center about Jesus. All our hopes and expectations will be associated
with Him. To live the life we now live by faith in the Son of God, looking forward to
and loving His appearing, will be the soul's highest joy. He will be the crown of our
rejoicing.--Lt 8, 1891. (HP 163.)
A Lifelong Vigilance.--As long as life shall last there is need of guarding the
affections and the passions with a firm purpose. There is inward corruption, there are
outward temptations, and wherever the work of God shall be advanced, Satan plans so
to arrange circumstances that temptation shall come with overpowering force upon
the soul. Not one moment can we be secure only as we are relying upon God, the life
hid with Christ in God.--Lt 8b, 1891. (2BC 1032.)
God is Preparing a People.--God's people must not only know His will, but they must
practice it. Many will be purged out from the numbers of those who know the truth
because they are not sanctified by it. The truth must be brought into their hearts,
sanctifying and cleansing them from all earthliness and sensuality in the most private
life. The soul temple must be cleansed. Every secret act is as if we were in the
presence of God and holy angels, as all things are open before God, and from Him
nothing can be hid. . . .
God is purifying a people to have clean hands and pure hearts to stand before Him in
the judgment. The standard must be elevated, the imagination purified; the infatuation
clustering around debasing practices must be given up, and the soul uplifted to pure
thoughts, holy practices. All who will stand the test and trial just before us will be
partakers of the divine nature, having escaped, not participated in, the corruptions that
are in the world through lust.--RH, May 24, 1887.
Self May Obscure Love.--Love is an active principle; it keeps the good of others
continually before us, thus restraining us from inconsiderate actions lest we fail of our
object in winning souls to Christ. Love seeks not its own. It will not prompt men to
seek their own ease and indulgence of self. It is the respect we render to I that so often
hinders the growth of love.--5T 124 (1882).
Love Transforms Character.--To those who know not the truth, let the love of Jesus be
presented, and it will work like leaven for the transformation of character.-- 8T 60
(1904).
Selfish Love.--God would have His children realize that in order to glorify Him their
affection must be given to those who most need it. . . . No selfishness in look, word,
or deed is to be manifested when dealing with those of like precious faith, . . . whether
they be high or low, rich or poor. The love that gives kind words to only a few, while
others are treated with coldness and indifference, is not love but selfishness. It will not
in any way work for the good of souls or the glory of God. Our love is not to be
sealed up for special ones, to the neglect of others. Break the bottle, and the fragrance
will fill the house.--MS 17, 1899. (HC 231.)
Ability No Substitute for Love.--Talk, Pharisaism, and self-praise are abundant; but
these will never win souls to Christ. Pure, sanctified love, such love as was expressed
in Christ's lifework, is as a sacred perfume. Like Mary's broken box of ointment, it
fills the whole house with fragrance. Eloquence, knowledge of truth, rare talents,
mingled with love, are all precious endowments. But ability alone, the choicest talents
alone, cannot take the place of love.--6T 84 (1900).
Giving Genuine Love a Sign of Discipleship.--No matter how high the profession, he
whose heart is not filled with love for God and his fellowmen is not a true disciple of
Christ. Though he should possess great faith and have power even to work miracles,
yet without love his faith would be worthless. He might display great liberality; but
should he, from some other motive than genuine love, bestow all his goods to feed the
poor, the act would not commend him to the favor of God. In his zeal he might even
meet a martyr's death, yet if not actuated by love, he would be regarded by God as a
deluded enthusiast or an ambitious hypocrite.--AA 318, 319 (1911).
The Heart in Which Love Rules.--The heart in which love rules will not be filled with
passion or revenge, by injuries which pride and self-love would deem unbearable.
Love is unsuspecting, ever placing the most favorable construction upon the motives
and acts of others.--5T 168, 169 (1882).
The activity of Satan's army, the danger that surrounds the human soul, calls for the
energies of every worker. But no compulsion shall be exercised. Man's depravity is to
be met by the love, the patience, the long-suffering of God.--6T 237 (1900).
Corrects Peculiarities.--When man is a partaker of the divine nature, the love of Christ
will be an abiding principle in the soul, and self and its peculiarities will not be
exhibited.--6T 52 (1900).
Only Love of Christ Can Heal.--Only the love that flows from the heart of Christ can
heal. Only he in whom that love flows, even as the sap in the tree or as the blood in
the body, can restore the wounded soul.--Ed 114 (1903).
Prepares for Every Eventuality.--Everyone who truly loves God will have the spirit of
Christ and a fervent love for his brethren. The more a person's heart is in communion
with God, and the more his affections are centered in Christ, the less will he be
disturbed by the roughness and hardships he meets in this life.--5T 483, 484 (1889).
Brotherhood Never Gained Through Compromise. --Those who love Jesus and the
souls for whom He has died will follow after the things which make for peace. But
they must take care lest in their efforts to prevent discord they surrender truth, lest in
warding off division they sacrifice principle. True brotherhood can never be
maintained by compromising principle. As Christians approach the Christlike model
and become pure in spirit and action they will feel the venom of the serpent. The
opposition of the children of disobedience is excited by a Christianity that is
spiritual. . . . That peace and harmony which are secured by mutual concessions to
avoid all differences of opinion are not worthy of the name. On points of feeling
between man and man, concessions should sometimes be made; but never should one
iota of principle be sacrificed to obtain harmony.--RH, Jan 16, 1900.
Divine Love Impartial.--Christ came to this earth with a message of mercy and
forgiveness. He laid the foundation for a religion by which Jew and Gentile, black and
white, free and bond, are linked together in one common brotherhood, recognized as
equal in the sight of God. The Saviour has a boundless love for every human being. In
each one He sees capacity for improvement. With divine energy and hope He greets
those for whom He has given His life.--7T 225 (1902).
Enfolds Human Brotherhood in God's Embrace.-- Sanctified love for one another is
sacred. In this great work Christian love for one another--far higher, more constant,
more courteous, more unselfish, than has been seen--preserves Christian tenderness,
Christian benevolence, and politeness, and enfolds the human brotherhood in the
embrace of God, acknowledging the dignity with which God has invested the rights of
man. This dignity Christians must ever cultivate for the honor and glory of God.--Lt
10, 1897. (5BC 1140, 1141.)
Your Love for Souls Measures Your Love for God. --The love revealed in Christ's life
of self-denial and self-sacrifice is to be seen in the lives of His followers. We are
called so to walk, even as He walked.. . . It is our privilege to stand with the light of
heaven upon us. It was thus that Enoch walked with God. It was no easier for Enoch
to live a righteous life than it is for us at the present time. The world in his time was
no more favorable to growth in grace and holiness than it is now. . . . We are living in
the perils of the last days, and we must receive our strength from the same source. We
must walk with God. . . .
God calls upon you to put all your strength into the work. You will have to render an
account for the good you might have done had you been standing in the right position.
It is time you were co-workers with Christ and the heavenly angels. Will you awake?
There are souls among you who need your help. Have you felt a burden to bring them
to the cross? Bear in mind that just the degree of love you have for God you will
reveal for your brethren, and for souls who are lost and undone, out of Christ.-- RH,
Jan 9, 1900.
Perfect Love in the Church, the Aim of Christ.-- Jesus could have flashed bright
beams of light on the darkest mysteries of science, but He would not spare a moment
from teaching the knowledge of the science of salvation. His time, His knowledge,
His faculties, His life itself, were appreciated only as the means of working out the
salvation of the souls of men. O what love, what matchless love!
Contrast our tame, lifeless, half-paralyzed efforts with the work of the Lord Jesus.
Listen to His words, to His prayer to the Father, I have declared unto them Thy name,
and will declare it: that the love wherewith Thou hast loved Me may be in them, and I
in them (John 17:26). What language is this! How deep, how broad, how full! The
Lord Jesus desires to shed abroad His love through every member of the body, His
church, that the vitality of that love may circulate through every part of the body and
dwell in us as it dwells in Him. The Lord then can love fallen man as He does His
own Son; and He declares that He will be satisfied with nothing less than this in our
behalf.--MS 11, 1892.
The history of the great conflict between good and evil, from the time it first began in
heaven to the final overthrow of rebellion and the total eradication of sin, is also a
demonstration of God's unchanging love.-- PP 33 (1890).
God is love is written upon every opening bud, upon every spire of springing grass.
The lovely birds making the air vocal with their happy songs, the delicately tinted
flowers in their perfection perfuming the air, the lofty trees of the forest with their rich
foliage of living green-- all testify to the tender, fatherly care of our God and to His
desire to make His children happy.--SC 9, 10 (1892).
Jesus and the Law of Sympathetic Love.--The law of God was changeless in its
character, and therefore Christ gave Himself a sacrifice in behalf of fallen man, and
Adam lost Eden and was placed with all his posterity upon probation.
Had the law of God been changed in one precept since the expulsion of Satan from
heaven, he would have gained on earth after his fall that which he could not gain in
heaven before his fall. He would have received all that he asked for. We know that he
did not. . . . The law . . . remains unalterable as the throne of God, and the salvation of
every soul is determined by obedience or disobedience. . . .
Jesus, by the law of sympathetic love, bore our sins, took our punishment, and drank
the cup of the wrath of God apportioned to the transgressor. . . . He bore the cross of
self-denial and self-sacrifice for us, that we might have life, eternal life. Will we bear
the cross for Jesus?--Lt 110, 1896. (KH 289.)
Sensitive, Loving Nature of Christ.--His life, from its beginning to its close, was one
of self-denial and self-sacrifice. Upon the cross of Calvary He made the great sacrifice
of Himself in behalf of all men that the whole world might have salvation if they
would. Christ was hid in God, and God stood revealed to the world in the character of
His Son. . . .
Love for a lost world was manifested every day, in every act of His life. Those who
are imbued by His spirit will work in the same lines as those in which Christ worked.
In Christ the light and love of God were manifested in human nature. No human being
has ever possessed so sensitive a nature as did the sinless, Holy One of God, who
stood as head and representative of what humanity may become through the imparting
of the divine nature.--YI, Aug 16, 1894. (KH 288.)
God's Love a Living Spring.--The love of God is something more than a mere
negation; it is a positive and active principle, a living spring, ever flowing to bless
others. If the love of Christ dwells in us, we shall not only cherish no hatred toward
our fellows, but we shall seek in every way to manifest love toward them.--MB 58
(1896).
Universe Expresses God's Love.--Would that everyone could rightly estimate the
precious gift our heavenly Father has made to our world. The disciples felt that they
could not express the love of Christ. They could only say, Herein is love. The entire
universe gives expression to this love and to God's unbounded benevolence.
God might have sent His Son into the world to condemn the world. But amazing
grace! Christ came to save, not to destroy. The apostles never touched this theme
without their hearts glowing with the inspiration of the matchless love of the Saviour.
The apostle John cannot find words to express his feelings. He exclaims, Behold,
what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us, that we should be called the
sons of God: therefore the world knoweth us not, because it knew Him not (1 John
3:1). How much the Father loved us we can never compute. There is no standard with
which to compare it.--Lt 27, 1901.
Satan Responsible for Conception of a Harsh, Stern God.-- Satan led men to conceive
of God as a being whose chief attribute is stern justice--one who is a severe judge, a
harsh, exacting creditor. He pictured the Creator as a being who is watching with
jealous eye to discern the errors and mistakes of men that He may visit judgments
upon them. It was to remove this dark shadow, by revealing to the world the infinite
love of God, that Jesus came to live among men.--SC 11 (1892).
Love Between the Father and the Son a Type.-- However much a shepherd may love
his sheep, he loves his sons and daughters more. Jesus is not only our shepherd; He is
our everlasting Father. And He says, I know Mine own, and Mine own know Me,
even as the Father knoweth me, and I know the Father (John 10:14, RV). What a
statement is this!--the only-begotten Son, He who is in the bosom of the Father, He
whom God has declared to be the man that is my fellow (Zechariah 13:7)--the
communion between Him and the eternal God is taken to represent the communion
between Christ and His children on the earth!--DA 483 (1898).
God loves the followers of Christ as He loves His only-begotten Son.--MS 67, 1894.
Reviewing God's Love.--Thank God for the bright pictures which He has presented to
us. Let us group together the blessed assurances of His love that we may look upon
them continually: The Son of God leaving His Father's throne, clothing His divinity
with humanity, that He might rescue man from the power of Satan; His triumph in our
behalf, opening heaven to men, revealing to human vision the presence chamber
where the Deity unveils His glory; the fallen race uplifted from the pit of ruin into
which sin had plunged it, and brought again into connection with the infinite God, and
having endured the divine test through faith in our Redeemer, clothed in the
righteousness of Christ, and exalted to His throne--these are the pictures which God
would have us contemplate.--SC 118 (1892).
Love Makes Our Heaven.--It is the love of Christ that makes our heaven. But when
we seek to tell of this love, language fails us. We think of His life on earth, of His
sacrifice for us; we think of His work in heaven as our advocate, of the mansions He
is preparing for those who love Him; and we can but exclaim, Oh, the heights and
depths of the love of Christ! As we linger beneath the cross, we gain a faint
conception of the love of God, and we say, Herein is love, not that we loved God, but
that He loved us, and sent His Son to be the propitiation for our sins (1 John 4:10).
But in our contemplation of Christ, we are only lingering round the edge of a love that
is measureless. His love is like a vast ocean, without bottom or shore.--RH, May 6,
1902.
God's Love Infinite, Exhaustless.--All the paternal love which has come down from
generation to generation through the channel of human hearts, all the springs of
tenderness which have opened in the souls of men, are but as a tiny rill to the
boundless ocean when compared with the infinite, exhaustless love of God. Tongue
cannot utter it; pen cannot portray it. You may meditate upon it every day of your life;
you may search the Scriptures diligently in order to understand it; you may summon
every power and capability that God has given you, in the endeavor to comprehend
the love and compassion of the heavenly Father; and yet there is an infinity beyond.
You may study that love for ages; yet you can never fully comprehend the length and
the breadth, the depth and the height, of the love of God in giving His Son to die for
the world. Eternity itself can never fully reveal it. Yet as we study the Bible and
meditate upon the life of Christ and the plan of redemption, these great themes will
open to our understanding more and more.--5T 740 (1889).
God's Love Progressive.--The years of eternity, as they roll, will bring richer and still
more glorious revelations of God and of Christ. As knowledge is progressive, so will
love, reverence, and happiness increase. The more men learn of God, the greater will
be their admiration of His character.--GC 678 (1911).
Chap. 28 - Self-respect
Developing Self-respect.--If we wish to do good to souls, our success with these souls
will be in proportion to their belief in our belief in, and appreciation of, them. Respect
shown to the struggling human soul is the sure means through Christ Jesus of the
restoration of the self-respect the man has lost. Our advancing ideas of what he may
become are a help we cannot ourselves fully appreciate. --Lt 50, 1893. (FE 281.)
Maintain Self-respect.--Some with whom you are brought in contact may be rough
and uncourteous, but do not, because of this, be less courteous yourself. He who
wishes to preserve his own self-respect must be careful not to wound needlessly the
self-respect of others. This rule should be sacredly observed toward the dullest, the
most blundering. What God intends to do with these apparently unpromising ones,
you do not know. He has in the past accepted persons no more promising or attractive
to do a great work for Him. His Spirit, moving upon the heart, has roused every
faculty to vigorous action. The Lord saw in these rough, unhewn stones precious
material, which would stand the test of storm and heat and pressure. God does not see
as man sees. He does not judge from appearances, but searches the heart and judges
righteously.--GW 122, 123 (1915).
By Wrong Habits the Student Destroys Self-respect. --By wrong habits he loses his
power of self-appreciation. He loses self-control. He cannot reason correctly about
matters that concern him most closely. He is reckless and irrational in his treatment of
mind and body. By wrong habits he makes of himself a wreck. Happiness he cannot
have, for his neglect to cultivate pure, healthful principles places him under the
control of habits that ruin his peace. His years of taxing study are lost, for he has
destroyed himself. He has misused his physical and mental powers, and the temple of
the body is in ruins. He is ruined for this life and for the life to come. By acquiring
earthly knowledge he thought to gain a treasure, but by laying his Bible aside he
sacrificed a treasure worth everything else.--COL 108, 109 (1900).
Ownership Aids Poor to Gain Self-respect.--The sense of being owners of their own
homes would inspire them [the poor] with a strong desire for improvement. They
would soon acquire skill in planning and devising for themselves; their children
would be educated to habits of industry and economy, and the intellect would be
greatly strengthened. They would feel that they are men, not slaves, and would be
able to regain to a great degree their lost self-respect and moral independence.--HS
165, 166, 1886. (AH 373.)
Self-culture and Dignity.--It is important for ministers of Christ to see the necessity of
self-culture in order to adorn their profession and maintain a becoming dignity.
Without mental training they will certainly fail in everything they undertake.--2T 500,
501 (1870).
Beware of Self-pity.--We need to beware of self-pity. Never indulge the feeling that
you are not esteemed as you should be, that your efforts are not appreciated, that your
work is too difficult. Let the memory of what Christ has endured for us silence every
murmuring thought. We are treated better than was our Lord. Seekest thou great
things for thyself? seek them not (Jeremiah 45:5). --MH 476 (1905).
Christ Restores Self-respect.--It should not be difficult to remember that the Lord
desires you to lay your troubles and perplexities at His feet, and leave them there. Go
to Him, saying, Lord, my burdens are too heavy for me to carry. Wilt Thou bear them
for me? And He will answer, I will take them. 'With everlasting kindness will I have
mercy on thee.' I will take your sins and will give you peace. Banish no longer your
self-respect; for I have bought you with the price of My own blood. You are Mine.
Your weakened will I will strengthen. Your remorse for sin I will remove.--Lt 2, 1914
(TM 519, 520.)
Counsel to One Who Had Lost Self-respect.--Jesus loves you, and He has given me a
message for you. His great heart of infinite tenderness yearns over you. He sends you
the message that you may recover yourself from the snare of the enemy. You may
regain your self-respect. You may stand where you regard yourself, not as a failure,
but as a conqueror, in and through the uplifting influence of the Spirit of God. Take
hold of the hand of Christ and do not let it go.--Lt 228, 1903. (MM 43.)
Cultivate Self-respect.--It is not pleasing to God that you should demerit yourself.
You should cultivate self-respect by living so that you will be approved by your own
conscience and before men and angels. . . . It is your privilege to go to Jesus and be
cleansed, and to stand before the law without shame or remorse. There is therefore
now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus, who walk not after the flesh,
but after the Spirit (Romans 8:1). While we should not think of ourselves more highly
than we ought, the Word of God does not condemn a proper self-respect. As sons and
daughters of God, we should have a conscious dignity of character, in which pride and
self-importance have no part.--RH, Mar 27, 1888. (HC 143.)
Dependence Upon God Is Absolute.--God would have every soul for whom Christ has
died become a part of the vine, connected with the parent stock, drawing nourishment
from it. Our dependence on God is absolute and should keep us very humble; and
because of our dependence on Him, our knowledge of Him should be greatly
increased. God would have us put away every species of selfishness and come to Him,
not as the owner of ourselves, but as the Lord's purchased possession.--SpT Series A,
No. 8, pp 8, 9, 1897. (TM 324, 325.)
Depend Upon God, Not Man.--God desires to bring men into direct relation with
Himself. In all His dealings with human beings He recognizes the principle of
personal responsibility. He seeks to encourage a sense of personal dependence and to
impress the need of personal guidance. He desires to bring the human into association
with the divine that men may be transformed into the divine likeness. Satan works to
thwart this purpose. He seeks to encourage dependence upon men. When minds are
turned away from God, the tempter can bring them under his rule. He can control
humanity.--MH 242, 243 (1905).
Make God your entire dependence. When you do otherwise, then it is time for a halt
to be called. Stop right where you are and change the order of things. . . . In sincerity,
in soul-hunger, cry after God. Wrestle with the heavenly agencies until you have the
victory. Put your whole being into the Lord's hands--soul, body, and spirit--and
resolve to be His loving, consecrated agency, moved by His will, controlled by His
mind, infused by His Spirit; . . . then you will see heavenly things clearly.--MS 24,
1891. (SD 105.)
Make God Your Counselor.--In the place of bearing your perplexities to a brother or a
minister, take them to the Lord in prayer. Do not place the minister where God should
be but make him a subject of your prayers. We have all erred on this point. The
minister of Christ is like other men. True, he bears more sacred responsibilities than a
common businessman, but he is not infallible. He is compassed with infirmity, and
needs grace and divine enlightenment. He needs the heavenly unction to do his work
with exactitude and success, giving full proof of his ministry. There are those who are
ignorant of the way of life and salvation, and these will find in the godly minister one
who will teach them what they shall do to be saved.
Those who know how to pray, who know what are the invitations of the gospel of
Christ, who know the immutability of His promises, show dishonor to God when they
lay their burden upon finite men. It is right, always, to counsel together. It is right to
converse together. It is right to make the difficulties that present themselves in any
enterprise plain before your brethren and your minister. But do not so greatly dishonor
God as to depend on man for wisdom. Seek God for the wisdom that cometh from
above. Ask your fellow laborers to pray with you, and the Lord will fulfill His word,
Where two or three are gathered together in My name, there am I in the midst of them
(Matthew 18:20).--MS 23, 1899.
Working Relationships
One Man's Mind.--It is a mistake to make men believe that the workers for Christ
should make no move save that which has first been brought before some responsible
man. Men must not be educated to look to men as to God. While it is necessary that
there be a counseling together and a unity of action among the laborers, one man's
mind and one man's judgment must not be the controlling power.--RH, Aug 7, 1894.
To Grow in Efficiency.--God is the ruler of His people, and He will teach those who
give their minds to Him how to use their brains. As they employ their executive
ability, they will grow in efficiency. The Lord's heritage is made up of vessels large
and small, but each one has his individual work. The mind of one man, or the minds
of two or three men, are not to be depended on as certain to be safe for all to follow.
Let all look to God, trust in Him, and believe fully in His power. Yoke up with Christ
and not with men, for men have no power to keep you from falling.--Lt 88, 1896.
Counsel to an Executive.--Your dependence must be in God. You are not to let other
men empty their minds into your mind. You are not to allow them by their
persuasions to lead you into false paths. Put your trust wholly in Him who declares, I
will never leave thee, nor forsake thee (Hebrews 13:5).--Lt 92, 1903.
Dependence Upon God Builds Confidence.--When men cease to depend upon men,
when they make God their efficiency, then there will be more confidence manifested
one in another. Our faith in God is altogether too feeble and our confidence in one
another altogether too meager.--SpT Series A, No. 3, p 48, 1895. (TM 214.)
Dependence on Others May Mean Immaturity.-- Men who ought to be as true in every
emergency as the needle to the pole have become inefficient by their efforts to shield
themselves from censure and by evading responsibilities for fear of failure. Men of
giant intellect are babes in discipline because they are cowardly in regard to taking
and bearing the burdens they should. They are neglecting to become efficient. They
have too long trusted one man to plan for them and to do the thinking which they are
highly capable of doing themselves in the interest of the cause of God. Mental
deficiencies meet us at every point.
Men who are content to let others plan and do their thinking for them are not fully
developed. If they were left to plan for themselves, they would be found judicious,
close-calculating men. But when brought into connection with God's cause, it is
entirely another thing to them; they lose this faculty almost altogether. They are
content to remain as incompetent and inefficient as though others must do the
planning and much of the thinking for them. Some men appear to be utterly unable to
hew out a path for themselves. Must they ever rely upon others to do their planning
and their studying, and to be mind and judgment for them? God is ashamed of such
soldiers. He is not honored by their having any part to act in His work while they are
mere machines.--3T 495, 496 (1875).
Independent Men Are Needed.--Independent men of earnest endeavor are needed, not
men as impressible as putty. Those who want their work made ready to their hand,
who desire a fixed amount to do and a fixed salary, and who wish to prove an exact fit
without the trouble of adaptation or training are not the men whom God calls to work
in His cause. A man who cannot adapt his abilities to almost any place if necessity
requires is not the man for this time.
Men whom God will connect with His work are not limp and fiberless, without
muscle or moral force of character. It is only by continued and persevering labor that
men can be disciplined to bear a part in the work of God. These men should not
become discouraged if circumstances and surroundings are the most unfavorable.
They should not give up their purpose as a complete failure until they are convinced
beyond a doubt that they cannot do much for the honor of God and the good of
souls.-- 3T 496 (1875).
Independence of Spirit.--There have ever been in the church those who are constantly
inclined toward individual independence. They seem unable to realize that
independence of spirit is liable to lead the human agent to have too much confidence
in himself and to trust in his own judgment rather than to respect the counsel and
highly esteem the judgment of his brethren, especially of those in the offices that God
has appointed for the leadership of His people. God has invested His church with
special authority and power, which no one can be justified in disregarding and
despising; for he who does this despises the voice of God.--AA 163, 164 (1911).
Self-sufficiency Exposes Us to Wiles of Satan.-- We are living amid the perils of the
last days, and if we have a spirit of self-sufficiency and independence, we shall be
exposed to the wiles of Satan and be overcome. --3T 66 (1872).
The Law of Mutual Dependence.--We are all woven together in the great web of
humanity, and whatever we can do to benefit and uplift others will reflect in blessing
upon ourselves. The law of mutual dependence runs through all classes of society.
The poor are not more dependent upon the rich than are the rich upon the poor. While
the one class ask a share in the blessings which God has bestowed upon their
wealthier neighbors, the other need the faithful service, the strength of brain and bone
and muscle, that are the capital of the poor.--PP 534, 535 (1890).
Duty to Obey Individual Religious Convictions.-- Many are the ways by which Satan
works through human influence to bind his captives. He secures multitudes to himself
by attaching them by the silken cords of affection to those who are enemies of the
cross of Christ. Whatever this attachment may be--parental, filial, conjugal, or social--
the effect is the same; the opposers of truth exert their power to control the
conscience, and the souls held under their sway have not sufficient courage or
independence to obey their own convictions of duty.-- GC 597 (1911).
Independently to Stand for Right.--It will require courage and independence to rise
above the religious standard of the Christian world. They do not follow the Saviour's
example of self-denial; they make no sacrifice; they are constantly seeking to evade
the cross which Christ declares to be the token of discipleship.--5T 78 (1882).
Individual Independence Needed.--There are men who flatter themselves that they
might do something great and good if they were only circumstanced differently, while
they make no use of the faculties they already have by working in the positions where
Providence has placed them. Man can make his circumstances, but circumstances
should never make the man. Man should seize circumstances as his instruments with
which to work. He should master circumstances, but should never allow
circumstances to master him. Individual independence and individual power are the
qualities now needed. Individual character need not be sacrificed, but it should be
modulated, refined, elevated.--3T 496, 497 (1875).
Peter exhorts his brethren: Likewise, ye younger, submit yourselves unto the elder.
Yea, all of you be subject one to another, and be clothed with humility: for God
resisteth the proud, and giveth grace to the humble. The apostle Paul also exhorts his
Philippian brethren to unity and humility: If there be therefore any consolation in
Christ, if any comfort of love, if any fellowship of the Spirit, if any bowels and
mercies, fulfill ye my joy, that ye be like-minded, having the same love, being of one
accord, of one mind. Let nothing be done through strife or vain-glory; but in lowliness
of mind let each esteem other better than themselves.--3T 360 (1875).
God's Power Our Dependence.--Brethren, I entreat you to move with an eye single to
the glory of God. Let His power be your dependence, His grace your strength. By
study of the Scriptures and earnest prayer seek to obtain clear conceptions of your
duty, and then faithfully perform it. It is essential that you cultivate faithfulness in
little things, and in so doing you will acquire habits of integrity in greater
responsibilities. The little incidents of everyday life often pass without our notice, but
it is these things that shape the character. Every event of life is great for good or for
evil. The mind needs to be trained by daily tests that it may acquire power to stand in
any difficult position. In the days of trial and of peril you will need to be fortified to
stand firmly for the right, independent of every opposing influence.--4T 561 (1881).
Confuses the Senses.--Today, as in Christ's day, Satan rules the minds of many. Oh,
that his terrible, fearful work could be discerned and resisted! Selfishness has
perverted principles, selfishness has confused the senses and clouded the judgment. It
seems so strange that notwithstanding all the light that is shining from God's blessed
Word, there should be such strange ideas held, such a departure from the spirit and
practice of truth.
The desire to grasp large wages, with a determination to deprive others of their God-
given rights, has its origin in Satan's mind, and by their obedience to his will and way
men place themselves under his banner. Little dependence can be placed on those that
have been taken in this snare, unless they are thoroughly converted and renovated; for
they have been leavened by wrong principles which they could not perceive were
deleterious in their effect.--SpT Series A, No. 10, p 26, Feb 6, 1896. (TM 392, 393.)
Talk Less of Self (counsel to one who was overbearing and dictatorial).--Let your
heart be softened and melted under the divine influence of the Spirit of God. You
should not talk so much about yourself, for this will strengthen no one. You should
not make yourself a center and imagine that you must be constantly caring for
yourself and leading others to care for you. Get your mind off from yourself into a
more healthy channel. Talk of Jesus, and let self go; let it be submerged in Christ, and
let this be the language of your heart: I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me
(Galatians 2:20). Jesus will be to you a present help in every time of need. He will not
leave you to battle with the powers of darkness alone. Oh, no; He has laid help upon
One that is mighty to save to the uttermost.--2T 320, 321 (1869).
Living for Self Dishonors God.--The perils of the last days are upon us. Those who
live to please and gratify self are dishonoring the Lord. He cannot work through them,
for they would misrepresent Him before those who are ignorant of the truth. . . . God
may see that you are fostering pride. He may see that it is necessary to remove from
you blessings which, instead of improving, you have used for the gratification of
selfish pride.--MS 24, 1904. (1SM 87.)
This explains it all. They feel that they are rich, and increased with goods, and have
need of nothing, while Heaven pronounces them poor, miserable, blind, and naked.
To these the True Witness says, I counsel thee to buy of Me gold tried in the fire, that
thou mayest be rich; and white raiment, that thou mayest be clothed, and that the
shame of thy nakedness do not appear; and anoint thine eyes with eyesalve, that thou
mayest see (Revelation 3:17, 18). Your very self-complacency shows you to be in
need of everything. You are spiritually sick and need Jesus as your physician.--5T 265
(1882).
Your own course is daily bringing upon you disease through your own wrong habits.
The apostle entreats his brethren to consecrate their bodies to God. I beseech you
therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye present your bodies a living
sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service. And be not
conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye
may prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God (Romans 12:1,
2).--Lt 27, 1872.
Self-forgetfulness the Basis of True Greatness.-- It was not enough for the disciples of
Jesus to be instructed as to the nature of His kingdom. What they needed was a
change of heart that would bring them into harmony with its principles. Calling a little
child to Him, Jesus set him in the midst of them; then tenderly folding the little one in
His arms, He said, Except ye be converted, and become as little children, ye shall not
enter into the kingdom of heaven. The simplicity, the self-forgetfulness, and the
confiding love of a little child are the attributes that Heaven values. These are the
characteristics of real greatness.--DA 437 (1898).
Self-expiation the Principle of Prayer in False Religions.--The heathen looked upon
their prayers as having in themselves merit to atone for sin. Hence the longer the
prayer the greater the merit. If they could become holy by their own efforts, they
would have something in themselves in which to rejoice, some ground for boasting.
This idea of prayer is an outworking of the principle of self-expiation which lies at the
foundation of all systems of false religion. The Pharisees had adopted this pagan idea
of prayer, and it is by no means extinct in our day, even among those who profess to
be Christians. The repetition of set, customary phrases when the heart feels no need of
God is of the same character as the vain repetitions of the heathen.--MB 86 (1896).
The Holy Watcher from heaven is present at this season to make it one of soul
searching, of conviction of sin, and of the blessed assurance of sins forgiven. Christ in
the fullness of His grace is there to change the current of the thoughts that have been
running in selfish channels. The Holy Spirit quickens the sensibilities of those who
follow the example of their Lord.
As the Saviour's humiliation for us is remembered, thought links with thought; a chain
of memories is called up, memories of God's great goodness and of the favor and
tenderness of earthly friends. Blessings forgotten, mercies abused, kindnesses
slighted, are called to mind. Roots of bitterness that have crowded out the precious
plant of love are made manifest. Defects of character, neglect of duties, ingratitude to
God, coldness toward our brethren, are called to remembrance. Sin is seen in the light
in which God views it. Our thoughts are not thoughts of self-complacency but of
severe self-censure and humiliation. The mind is energized to break down every
barrier that has caused alienation. Evil-thinking and evilspeaking are put away. Sins
are confessed, they are forgiven. The subduing grace of Christ comes into the soul,
and the love of Christ draws hearts together in a blessed unity.--DA 650, 651 (1898).
Training That Produces Mental and Moral Weakness. --The severe training of youth--
without properly directing them to think and act for themselves as their own capacity
and turn of mind will allow, that by this means they may have growth of thought,
feelings of self-respect, and confidence in their own ability to perform-- will ever
produce a class who are weak in mental and moral power. And when they stand in the
world to act for themselves, they will reveal the fact that they were trained like the
animals, and not educated. Their wills, instead of being guided, were forced into
subjection by the harsh discipline of parents and teachers.--3T 133 (1872).
The Mind to Be Educated to Rule the Life.--Children have an intelligent will, which
should be directed to control all their powers. Dumb animals need to be trained, for
they have not reason and intellect. But the human mind must be taught self-control. It
must be educated to rule the human being, while animals are controlled by a master
and are trained to be submissive to him. The master is mind, judgment, and will for
his beast. A child may be so trained as to have, like the beast, no will of his own.
Even his individuality may be merged in the one who superintends his training; his
will, to all intents and purposes, is subject to the will of the teacher.
Children who are thus educated will ever be deficient in moral energy and individual
responsibility. They have not been taught to move from reason and principle; their
wills have been controlled by another, and the mind has not been called out, that it
might expand and strengthen by exercise. They have not been directed and disciplined
with respect to their peculiar constitutions and capabilities of mind to put forth their
strongest powers when required. Teachers should not stop here but should give
special attention to the cultivation of the weaker faculties, that all the powers may be
brought into exercise and carried forward from one degree of strength to another, that
the mind may attain due proportions.--3T 132 (1872).
Many Incapable of Thinking for Themselves. --There are many families of children
who appear to be well trained while under the training discipline; but when the system
which has held them to set rules is broken up, they seem to be incapable of thinking,
acting, or deciding for themselves. These children have been so long under iron rule--
not allowed to think and act for themselves in those things in which it was highly
proper that they should--that they have no confidence in themselves to move out upon
their own judgment, having an opinion of their own.
And when they go out from their parents to act for themselves, they are easily led by
others' judgment in the wrong direction. They have not stability of character. They
have not been thrown upon their own judgment as fast and as far as practicable, and
therefore their minds have not been properly developed and strengthened. They have
so long been absolutely controlled by their parents that they rely wholly upon them;
their parents are mind and judgment for them.--3T 132, 133 (1872).
The Results of Controlling Through Force or Fear. --Those parents and teachers who
boast of having complete control of the minds and wills of the children under their
care would cease their boastings could they trace out the future lives of the children
who are thus brought into subjection by force or through fear. These are almost
wholly unprepared to share in the stern responsibilities of life. When these youth are
no longer under their parents and teachers, and are compelled to think and act for
themselves, they are almost sure to take a wrong course and yield to the power of
temptation. They do not make this life a success, and the same deficiencies are seen in
their religious life.--3T 133, 134 (1872).
Discipline Which Stimulates and Strengthens.-- Beyond the discipline of the home
and the school, all have to meet the stern discipline of life. How to meet this wisely is
a lesson that should be made plain to every child and to every youth. It is true that
God loves us, that He is working for our happiness, and that, if His law had always
been obeyed, we should never have known suffering; and it is no less true that in this
world--as the result of sin--suffering, trouble, burdens, come to every life. We may do
the children and the youth a lifelong good by teaching them to meet bravely these
troubles and burdens. While we should give them sympathy, let it never be such as to
foster self-pity. What they need is that which stimulates and strengthens rather than
weakens.--Ed 295 (1903).
Reaction to Ironclad Rules.--Into your discipline bring not a particle of harshness. Lay
no rigid injunctions on the youth. It is these ironclad rules and commands that
sometimes lead them to feel that they must and will do the thing they are charged not
to do. When giving caution or reproof to the youth, do it as one who has a special
interest in them. Let them see that you have an earnest desire for them to make a good
record in the books of heaven.--Lt 67, 1902. (MM 180).
Hard for Youth to Bear Burdens.--The young can exert a powerful influence if they
will give up their pride and selfishness and devote themselves to God; but as a general
thing they will not bear burdens for others. They have to be carried themselves. The
time has come when God requires a change in this respect. He calls upon young and
old to be zealous and repent. If they continue in their state of lukewarmness, He will
spew them out of His mouth. Says the True Witness, I know thy works. Young man,
young woman, your works are known, whether they be good or whether they be evil.
Are you rich in good works? Jesus comes to you 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 (Revelation 3:18).--1T 485 (1867).
Thoughts Become Habits.--We need a constant sense of the ennobling power of pure
thoughts. The only security for any soul is right thinking. As a man thinketh in his
heart, so is he (Proverbs 23:7). The power of self-restraint strengthens by exercise.
That which at first seems difficult, by constant repetition grows easy, until right
thoughts and actions become habitual. If we will, we may turn away from all that is
cheap and inferior and rise to a high standard; we may be respected by men and
beloved of God.--MH 491 (1905).
It is said that Hume, the skeptic, was in early life a conscientious believer in the Word
of God. Being connected with a debating society, he was appointed to present the
arguments in favor of infidelity. He studied with earnestness and perseverance, and
his keen and active mind became imbued with the sophistry of skepticism. Erelong he
came to believe its delusive teachings, and his whole afterlife bore the dark impress of
infidelity.--ST, Oct 11, 1910. (CG 196.)
The Influence of Reading. [SEE CHAPTER 13, FOOD FOR THE MIND.]--Many
youth are eager for books. They read anything that they can obtain. I appeal to the
parents of such children to control their desire for reading. Do not permit upon your
tables the magazines and newspapers in which are found love stories. Supply their
place with books that will help the youth to put into their character building the very
best material--the love and fear of God, the knowledge of Christ. Encourage your
children to store the mind with valuable knowledge, to let that which is good occupy
the soul and control its powers, leaving no place for low, debasing thoughts. Restrict
the desire for reading matter that does not furnish good food for the mind. The money
expended for story magazines may not seem much, but it is too much to spend for that
which gives so much that is misleading and so little that is good in return.--CT 133
(1913).
Mind Takes Level of Things It Observes.--The understanding takes the level of the
things with which it becomes familiar. If all would make the Bible [SEE CHAPTER
11, BIBLE STUDY AND THE MIND.] their study, we should see a people further
developed, capable of thinking more deeply, and showing a greater degree of
intelligence than the most earnest efforts in studying merely the sciences and histories
of the world could make them. The Bible gives the true seeker an advanced mental
discipline, and he comes from contemplation of divine things with his faculties
enriched; self is humbled, while God and His revealed truth are exalted.-- RH, Aug
21, 1888. (FE 130.)
We must do something ourselves. No one else can do our work. None but ourselves
can work out our salvation with fear and trembling. This is the very work which the
Lord has left for us to do.--2T 505, 506 (1870).
Youth Need Discipline of Labor.--And now, as in the days of Israel, every youth
should be instructed in the duties of practical life. Each should acquire a knowledge of
some branch of manual labor by which, if need be, he may obtain a livelihood. This is
essential, not only as a safeguard against the vicissitudes of life, but from its bearing
upon physical, mental, and moral development. Even if it were certain that one would
never need to resort to manual labor for his support, still he should be taught to work.
Without physical exercise, no one can have a sound constitution and vigorous health;
and the discipline of well-regulated labor is no less essential to the securing of a
strong and active mind and a noble character.--PP 601 (1890).
It is her right to understand the mechanism of the human body and the principles of
hygiene, the matters of diet and dress, labor and recreation, and countless others that
intimately concern the well-being of her household. It is her right to obtain such a
knowledge of the best methods of treating disease that she can care for her children in
sickness, instead of leaving her precious treasures in the hands of stranger nurses and
physicians.-- ST, June 29, 1882. (FE 75.)
Why there is no more stability among women is because of so little mental culture, so
little reflection. Leaving the mind in a state of inaction, they lean upon others to do
the brain work, to plan, and think, and remember for them, and thus grow more and
more inefficient. Some need to discipline the mind by exercise. They should force it
to think. While they depend upon someone to think for them, to solve their
difficulties, and they refuse to tax the mind with thought, the inability to remember, to
look ahead and discriminate, will continue. Efforts must be made by every individual
to educate the mind.-- 2T 187, 188 (1868).
Women's Dress an Index of the Mind.--Dress is an index of the mind and heart. That
which is hung upon the outside is the sign of what is within. It does not require
intellect or a cultivated mind to overdress. The very fact that women can hang upon
their persons such an amount of needless articles of clothing shows that they cannot
have time to cultivate their intellects and store their minds with useful knowledge.--
MS 76, 1900.
Need for Purity in Thought and Action.--I urge upon you the necessity of purity in
every thought, in every word, in every action. We have an individual accountability to
God, an individual work which no one can do for us. It is to make the world better by
precept, personal effort, and example. While we should cultivate sociability, let it not
be merely for amusement but for a purpose. There are souls to save.--RH, Nov 10,
1885. (Ev 495.)
Masturbation Debases the Mind. [ SEE CHILD GUIDANCE, PP. 439-468.]-- Some
children begin to practice self-pollution in their infancy; and as they increase in years,
the lustful passions grow with their growth and strengthen with their strength. Their
minds are not at rest. Girls desire the society of boys, and boys that of the girls. Their
deportment is not reserved and modest. They are bold and forward, and take indecent
liberties. The habit of self-abuse has debased their minds and tainted their souls. Vile
thoughts, and the reading of novels, love stories, and vile books excite their
imagination, and just such suit their depraved minds.
They do not love work, and when engaged in labor they complain of fatigue; their
backs ache, their heads ache. Is there not sufficient cause? Are they fatigued because
of their labor? No, no! Yet the parents indulge these children in their complaints and
release them from labor and responsibility. This is the very worst thing that they can
do for them. They are thus removing almost the only barrier that prevents Satan from
having free access to their weakened minds. Useful labor would in some measure be a
safeguard from his decided control of them. --2T 481 (1870).
The Youth Will Use Energies.--Youthful talent, well organized and well trained, is
needed in our churches. The youth will do something with their overflowing energies.
Unless these energies are directed into right channels, they will be used by the youth
in a way that will hurt their own spirituality and prove an injury to those with whom
they associate.--GW 211 (1915).
Youth Need Activity.--The young naturally desire activity, and if they find no
legitimate scope for their pent-up energies after the confinement of the schoolroom,
they become restless and impatient of control and thus are led to engage in the rude,
unmanly sports that disgrace so many schools and colleges and even to plunge into
scenes of actual dissipation. Many of the youth who left their homes innocent are
corrupted by their associations at school.--ST, June 29, 1882, (FE 72.)
Sometimes Fail to See God as a Loving Father.-- The young generally conduct
themselves as though the precious hours of probation, while mercy lingers, were one
grand holiday and they were placed in this world merely for their own amusement, to
be gratified with a continued round of excitement. Satan has been making special
efforts to lead them to find happiness in worldly amusements and to justify
themselves by endeavoring to show that these amusements are harmless, innocent,
and even important for health. The impression has been given by some physicians that
spirituality and devotion to God are detrimental to health. This suits the adversary of
souls.--1T 501 (1867).
Through disease transmitted to them from their parents and an erroneous education in
youth, they have contracted wrong habits which injure the constitution and the brain,
causing the moral organs to become diseased and making it impossible for them to
think and act rationally upon all points. They have not well-balanced minds.
Godliness and righteousness are not destructive to health, but are health to the body
and strength to the soul.--1T 501, 502 (1867).
Need for Restraint.--Always act from principle, never from impulse. Temper the
natural impetuosity of your nature with meekness and gentleness. Indulge in no
lightness or trifling. Let no low witticism escape your lips. Even the thoughts are not
to be allowed to run riot. They must be restrained, brought into captivity to the
obedience of Christ. Let them be placed upon holy things. Then, through the grace of
Christ, they will be pure and true.--MH 491 (1905).
Keeping Sentimentalism Out of the Life.--You are now in your student's life; let your
mind dwell upon spiritual subjects. Keep all sentimentalism apart from your life. Give
to yourself vigilant self-instruction and bring yourself under self-control. You are now
in the formative period of character; nothing with you is to be considered trivial or
unimportant which will detract from your highest, holiest interest, your efficiency in
the preparation to do the work God has assigned you.
Preserve ever simplicity of action but make your standard high for the harmonious
manifestation and improvement of your mental faculties. Be determined to correct
every fault. Hereditary tendencies may be overcome--the quick, violent outbursts of
temper so changed that these manifestations will be, through the grace of Christ,
entirely overcome. We are, individually, to consider that we are in God's workshop.--
Lt 23, 1893.
Facing the Need for Counsel.--The young should not be left to think and act
independently of the judgment of their parents and teachers. Children should be
taught to respect experienced judgment and to be guided by their parents and teachers.
They should be so educated that their minds will be united with the minds of their
parents and teachers, and so instructed that they can see the propriety of heeding their
counsel. Then when they go forth from the guiding hand of their parents and teachers,
their characters will not be like the reed trembling in the wind.--3T 133 (1872).
The Highest Training Expected.--The Lord desires us to obtain all the education
possible, with the object in view of imparting our knowledge to others. None can
know where or how they may be called to labor or to speak for God. Our heavenly
Father alone sees what He can make of men. There are before us possibilities which
our feeble faith does not discern. Our minds should be so trained that if necessary we
can present the truths of His word before the highest earthly authorities in such a way
as to glorify His name. We should not let slip even one opportunity of qualifying
ourselves intellectually to work for God.--COL 333, 334 (1900).
The Mind Ever Active.--The mind will never cease to be active. It is open to
influences, good or bad. As the human countenance is stamped by the sunbeam on the
polished plate of the artist, so are thoughts and impressions stamped on the mind of
the child; and whether these impressions are of the earth earthy or moral and
religious, they are well-nigh ineffaceable.
When reason is awakening, the mind is most susceptible, and so the very first lessons
are of great importance. These lessons have a powerful influence in the formation of
character. If they are of the right stamp, and if, as the child advances in years, they are
followed up with patient perseverance, the earthly and the eternal destiny will be
shaped for good. This is the word of the Lord: Train up a child in the way he should
go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it (Proverbs 22:6). --SpTEd 71, c1897.
(CT 143.)
Youth the Time of Opportunity.--The hearts of youth are now like impressible wax,
and you may lead them to admire the Christian character; but in a few years the wax
may become granite.--RH, Feb 21, 1878. (FE 51.)
It is in youth that the affections are most ardent, the memory most retentive, and the
heart most susceptible to divine impressions; and it is during youth that the mental
and physical powers should be set to the task in order that great improvements may be
made in view of the world that now is and that which is to come.--YI, Oct 25, 1894.
(SD 78.)
Pure Affection More Heavenly Than Earthly.-- Not one word should be spoken, not
one action performed, that you would not be willing the holy angels should look upon
and register in the books above. You should have an eye single to the glory of God.
The heart should have only pure, sanctioned affection, worthy of the followers of
Jesus Christ, exalting in its nature, and more heavenly than earthly. Anything different
from this is debasing, degrading in courtship; and marriage cannot be holy and
honorable in the sight of a pure and holy God unless it is after the exalted Scriptural
principle.--MS 4a, 1885. (MM 141.)
Danger of Late Hours.--The habit of sitting up late at night is customary; but it is not
pleasing to God, even if you are both Christians. These untimely hours injure health,
unfit the mind for the next day's duties, and have an appearance of evil. My brother, I
hope you will have self-respect enough to shun this form of courtship. If you have an
eye single to the glory of God you will move with deliberate caution. You will not
suffer love-sick sentimentalism to so blind your vision that you cannot discern the
high claims that God has upon you as a Christian. --3T 44, 45 (1872).
They married wives, they were given in marriage, until the day that Noah entered into
the ark, and the flood came, and destroyed them all (verse 27). We see the same
manifestation now in regard to marriage. Youth, and even men and women who ought
to be wise and discerning, act as if bewitched upon this question. A satanic power
seems to take possession of them. The most indiscreet marriages are formed. God is
not consulted. Human feelings, desires, and passions bear down everything before
them, until the die is cast. Untold misery is the result of this state of things, and God is
dishonored. The marriage vow covers every kind of lustful abomination. Shall there
not be a decided change in reference to this matter?--Lt 74, 1896. (SpTMWI 41.)
Blind Love Affects Every Faculty.--Every faculty of those who become affected by
this contagious disease-- blind love--is brought in subjection to it. They seem to be
devoid of good sense, and their course of action is disgusting to all who behold it. My
brother, you have made yourself a subject of talk and have lowered yourself in the
estimation of those whose approval you should prize.
With many the crisis of the disease is reached in an immature marriage, and when the
novelty is past and the bewitching power of lovemaking is over, one or both parties
awake to their true situation. They then find themselves ill-mated, but united for life.
Bound to each other by the most solemn vows, they look with sinking hearts upon the
miserable life they must lead. They ought then to make the best of their situation; but
many will not do this. They will either prove false to their marriage vows or make the
yoke which they persisted in placing upon their own necks so very galling that not a
few cowardly put an end to their existence.--5T 110, 111 (1882).
Early Teenage Love.--Satan controls the minds of the youth in general. Your
daughters are not taught self-denial and self-control. They are petted, and their pride
is fostered. They are allowed to have their own way until they become headstrong and
self-willed, and you are put to your wit's end to know what course to pursue to save
them from ruin. Satan is leading them on to be a proverb in the mouth of unbelievers
because of their boldness, their lack of reserve and womanly modesty.
The young boys are likewise left to have their own way. They have scarcely entered
their teens before they are by the side of little girls of their own age, accompanying
them home and making love to them. And the parents are so completely in bondage
through their own indulgence and mistaken love for their children that they dare not
pursue a decided course to make a change and restrain their too-fast children in this
fast age.--2T 460 (1870).
Clandestine Courtships.--The young have many lessons to learn, and the most
important one is to learn to know themselves. They should have correct ideas of their
obligations and duties to their parents and should be constantly learning in the school
of Christ to be meek and lowly of heart. While they are to love and honor their
parents, they are also to respect the judgment of men of experience with whom they
are connected in the church.
A young man who enjoys the society and wins the friendship of a young lady,
unbeknown to her parents, does not act a noble Christian part toward her or toward
her parents. Through secret communications and meetings he may gain an influence
over her mind; but in so doing he fails to manifest that nobility and integrity of soul
which every child of God will possess. In order to accomplish their ends they act a
part that is not frank and open and according to the Bible standard, and prove
themselves untrue to those who love them and try to be faithful guardians over them.
Marriages contracted under such influences are not according to the Word of God. He
[a young man] who would lead a daughter away from duty, who would confuse her
ideas of God's plain and positive commands to obey and honor her parents, is not one
who would be true to the marriage obligations.-- RH, Jan 26, 1886. (FE 101, 102.)
Not to Trifle With Hearts.--To trifle with hearts is a crime of no small magnitude in
the sight of a holy God. And yet some will show preference for young ladies and call
out their affections, and then go their way and forget all about the words they have
spoken and their effect. A new face attracts them, and they repeat the same words,
devote to another the same attentions.--RH, Nov 4, 1884. (AH 57.)
Talk of Subjects Upon Which Minds Run.--With many young ladies the boys are the
theme of conversation; with the young men, it is the girls. Out of the abundance of the
heart the mouth speaketh (Matthew 12:34). They talk of those subjects upon which
their minds mostly run. The recording angel is writing the words of these professed
Christian boys and girls. How will they be confused and ashamed when they meet
them again in the day of God! Many children are pious hypocrites. The youth who
have not made a profession of religion stumble over these hypocritical ones and are
hardened against any effort that may be made by those interested in their salvation.--
2T 460 (1870).
Why Youth Prefer Company of Youth.--Why the young feel more liberty when the
older ones are absent is: they are with those of their kind. Each thinks he is as good as
the other. All fail of the mark but measure themselves by themselves, and compare
themselves among themselves, and neglect the only perfect and true standard. Jesus is
the True Pattern. His self-sacrificing life is our example.--1T 154, 155 (1857).
A Young Lady Counseled to Guard the Affections.-- You are altogether too free with
your affections and would, if left to your own course of action, make a lifelong
mistake. Do not sell yourself at a cheap market. Do not be free with any gentleman
student. Consider that you are preparing to do a work for the Master, that in order to
act well your part, and render back the talents to Him who has given them to you, and
to hear the precious commendation from His lips, Well done, good and faithful
servant (Matthew 25:23), you must take heed and not be careless of your associations.
In order to act your part in the service of God you must go forth with the advantages
of as thorough an intellectual training as possible. You need a vigorous, symmetrical
development of the mental capabilities, a graceful, Christian, many-sided
development of culture, to be a true worker for God. You need your taste and your
imagination chastened and refined and all your aspirations made pure by habitual self-
control. You need to move from high, elevated motives. Gather all the efficiency you
can, making the most of your opportunities for the education and training of the
character to fill any position which the Lord may assign you. You need so much a
balance wheel in judicious counsel. Do not despise advice.--Lt 23, 1893.
Discipline Yourself.--You will be inclined to accept the attention of those who are
your inferiors in everything. You must be made wiser through the grace of Christ.
You must consider every step in the light [of the fact] that you are not your own; you
are bought with a price. May the Lord be your Counselor. Do nothing to impair or
cripple your efficiency. Deal faithfully with yourself; with painstaking effort
discipline yourself. The grace of Jesus Christ will help you at every step if you will be
teachable and considerate.
I write you this now, and will write again erelong, for as the mistake of your past life
has been set before me, I dare not withhold most earnest entreaties that you hold
yourself strictly to discipline. . . .
Be not led astray into any false paths and do not show a preference for the society of
young men, for you will not only injure your own reputation and future prospects, but
you will raise hopes and expectations in the minds of those to whom you show
preference, and they will become as if bewitched with love-sick sentimentalism and
spoil their student life. You and they are at the school for the purpose of obtaining an
education to qualify you in intellect and character for greater usefulness in this life
and for the future immortal life. Make no mistake in receiving attentions or giving
encouragement to any young man. The Lord has designated that He has a work for
you to do. Let it be your motive to answer the mind and will of God, and not to follow
your own inclination and be bound up in future destiny with cords like bands of
steel.--Lt 23, 1893.
School Regulations.--The rules of this college [at College City in northern California]
strictly guard the association of young men and young women during the school term.
It is only when these rules are temporarily suspended, as is sometimes the case, that
gentlemen are permitted to accompany ladies to and from public gatherings.
Our own college at Battle Creek has similar regulations, though not so stringent. Such
rules are indispensable to guard the youth from the danger of premature courtship and
unwise marriage. Young people are sent to school by their parents to obtain an
education, not to flirt with the opposite sex. The good of society, as well as the
highest interest of the students, demands that they shall not attempt to select a life
partner while their own character is yet undeveloped, their judgment immature, and
while they are at the same time deprived of parental care and guidance.--ST, Mar 2,
1882. (FE 62.)
Factors of Age, Conditions, and Turn of Mind.--In all our dealings with students, age
and character must be taken into account. We cannot treat the young and the old just
alike. There are circumstances under which men and women of sound experience and
good standing may be granted some privileges not given to the younger students. The
age, the conditions, and the turn of mind must be taken into consideration. We must
be wisely considerate in all our work. But we must not lessen our firmness and
vigilance in dealing with students of all ages or our strictness in forbidding the
unprofitable and unwise association of young and immature students.-- CT 101
(1913).
Perils of Infatuation.--Some of those who attend the college do not properly improve
their time. Full of the buoyancy of youth, they spurn the restraint that is brought to
bear upon them. Especially do they rebel against the rules that will not allow young
gentlemen to pay their attentions to young ladies. Full well is known the evil of such a
course in this degenerate age.
In a college where so many youth are associated, imitating the customs of the world in
this respect would turn the thoughts in a channel that would hinder them in their
pursuit of knowledge and in their interest in religious things. The infatuation on the
part of both young men and women in thus placing the affections upon each other
during school days shows a lack of good judgment. As in your own case, blind
impulse controls reason and judgment. Under this bewitching delusion the
momentous responsibility felt by every sincere Christian is laid aside, spirituality dies,
and the judgment and eternity lose their awful significance.--5T 110 (1882).
When Human Loves Come First.--With many, the love for the human eclipses the
love for the divine. They take the first step in backsliding by venturing to disregard
the Lord's express command; and complete apostasy is too often the result. It has ever
proved a dangerous thing for men to carry out their own will in opposition to the
requirements of God. Yet it is a hard lesson for men to learn that God means what He
says. As a rule, those who choose for their friends and companions, persons who
reject Christ and trample upon God's law eventually become of the same mind and
spirit.--ST, May 19, 1881. (SD 165.)
Mixed Marriages.--If you, my brother, are allured to unite your life interest with a
young, inexperienced girl, who is really deficient in education in the common,
practical, daily duties of life, you make a mistake; but this deficiency is small
compared with her ignorance in regard to her duty to God. She has not been destitute
of light; she has had religious privileges, and yet she has not felt her wretched
sinfulness without Christ. If, in your infatuation, you can repeatedly turn from the
prayer meeting--where God meets with His people--in order to enjoy the society of
one who has no love for God and who sees no attractions in the religious life, how can
you expect God to prosper such a union?--3T 44 (1872).
Men and women who are otherwise sensible and conscientious close their ears to
counsel; they are deaf to the appeals and entreaties of friends and kindred and of the
servants of God. The expression of a caution or warning is regarded as impertinent
meddling, and the friend who is faithful enough to utter a remonstrance is treated as
an enemy. All this is as Satan would have it. He weaves his spell about the soul, and it
becomes bewitched, infatuated. Reason lets fall the reins of self-control upon the neck
of lust; unsanctified passion bears sway, until, too late, the victim awakens to a life of
misery and bondage. This is not a picture drawn by the imagination but a recital of
facts. God's sanction is not given to unions which He has expressly forbidden.--5T
365, 366 (1885).
Satan is working stealthily, untiringly, to effect your downfall through his specious
temptations. He is determined to become your teacher, and you need now to place
yourself where you can get strength to resist him. He hopes to lead you into the mazes
of spiritualism. He hopes to wean your affections from your wife and to fix them upon
another woman. He desires that you will allow your mind to dwell upon this woman
until through unholy affection she becomes your god.
The enemy of souls has gained much when he can lead the imagination of one of
Jehovah's chosen watchmen to dwell upon the possibilities of association, in the world
to come, with some woman whom he loves, and of there raising up a family. We need
no such pleasing pictures. All such views originate in the mind of the tempter. . . .
It is presented to me that spiritual fables are taking many captive. Their minds are
sensual, and unless a change comes, this will prove their ruin. To all who are
indulging these unholy fancies, I would say, Stop; for Christ's sake, stop right where
you are. You are on forbidden ground. Repent, I entreat of you, and be converted.--Lt
231, 1903. (MM 100, 101.)
Free Love.--I have seen the results of these fanciful [spiritualistic and pantheistic]
views of God, in apostasy, spiritualism, and free-lovism. The free-love tendency of
these teachings was so concealed that at first it was difficult to make plain its real
character. Until the Lord presented it to me, I knew not what to call it, but I was
instructed to call it unholy spiritual love.--8T 292 (1904).
Love Is Not Sentimentalism.--The love and sympathy which Jesus would have us give
to others does not savor of sentimentalism, which is a snare to the soul; it is a love
that is of heavenly extraction, which Jesus exemplifies by both precept and example.
But instead of manifesting this love, how often we are alienated and estranged one
from another. . . . The result is estrangement from God, a dwarfed experience, a
blighting of Christian growth.--YI, Oct 20, 1892. (SD 147.)
This base counterfeit has misled many souls. It would blot out the distinction between
right and wrong, by agreeing with the transgressor instead of faithfully showing him
his errors. Such a course never springs from real friendship. The spirit by which it is
prompted dwells only in the carnal heart. While the Christian will be ever kind,
compassionate, and forgiving, he can feel no harmony with sin. He will abhor evil and
cling to that which is good, at the sacrifice of association or friendship with the
ungodly. The spirit of Christ will lead us to hate sin, while we are willing to make any
sacrifice to save the sinner.--5T 171 (1882).
Quit Yourselves Like Men, Be Strong.--Young men should have broad ideas, wise
plans, that they may make the most of their opportunities, catch the inspiration and
courage that animated the apostles. John says, I have written unto you, young men,
because ye are strong, and the word of God abideth in you, and ye have overcome the
wicked one (1 John 2:14). An elevated standard is presented before the youth, and
God is inviting them to come into real service for Him. True-hearted young men who
delight to be learners in the school of Christ can do a great work for the Master if they
will only give heed to the command of the Captain as it sounds down along the lines
to our time: Quit you like men, be strong (1 Corinthians 16:13).--RH, June 16, 1891.
(MYP 24.)
Peril of Neglecting Training and Special Preparation.-- Young men who desire to
enter the field as ministers, colporteurs, or canvassers should first receive a suitable
degree of mental training, as well as special preparation for their calling. Those who
are uneducated, untrained, and unrefined are not prepared to enter a field in which the
powerful influences of talent and education combat the truths of God's Word. Neither
can they successfully meet the strange forms of error, religious and philosophical
combined, to expose which requires a knowledge of scientific as well as Scriptural
truth.--5T 390 (1885).
Brilliance No Assurance of Success.--It is not true that brilliant young men always
make the greatest success. How often men of talent and education have been placed in
positions of trust and have proved failures. Their glitter had the appearance of gold,
but when it was tried, it proved to be but tinsel and dross. They made a failure of their
work through unfaithfulness.
They were not industrious and persevering and did not go to the bottom of things.
They were not willing to begin at the bottom of the ladder, and with patient toil,
ascend round after round till they reached the top. They walked in the sparks of their
own kindling. They did not depend on the wisdom which God alone can give. Their
failure was not because they did not have a chance, but because they were not sober-
minded. They did not feel that their educational advantages were of value to them,
and so did not advance as they might have advanced in the knowledge of religion and
science. Their mind and character were not balanced by high principles of right.-- RH,
Dec 8, 1891. (FE 193.)
Choosing the Side of Unbelief.--The word of God will judge every one of us at the
last great day. Young men talk about science and are wise above that which is written;
they seek to explain the ways and work of God to meet their finite comprehension, but
it is all a miserable failure.
True science and inspiration are in perfect harmony. False science is a something
independent of God. It is pretentious ignorance. This deceptive power has captivated
and enslaved the minds of many, and they have chosen darkness rather than light.
They have taken their position on the side of unbelief, as though it were a virtue and
the sign of a great mind to doubt, when it is the sign of a mind too weak and narrow to
perceive God in His created works. They could not fathom the mystery of His
providence should they study with all their power for a lifetime. And because the
works of God cannot be explained by finite minds, Satan brings his sophistry to bear
upon them and entangles them in the meshes of unbelief. If these doubting ones will
come into close connection with God, He will make His purposes clear to their
understanding.--4T 584, 585 (1881).
The position of some is unexplainable, even to themselves. They are drifting without
an anchor, beating about in the fog of uncertainty. Satan soon seizes the helm and
carries their frail bark wherever he pleases. They become subject to his will. Had
these minds not listened to Satan, they would not have been deceived by his sophistry;
had they been balanced on the side of God they would not have become confused and
bewildered.-- 4T 583, 584 (1881).
Failure to Put Acquired Knowledge to Practical Use.--But, young men, if you gain
ever so much knowledge and yet fail to put that knowledge to a practical use, you fail
of your object. If, in obtaining an education, you become so absorbed in your studies
that you neglect prayer and religious privileges and become careless and indifferent to
the welfare of your souls, if you cease to learn in the school of Christ, you are selling
your birthright for a mess of pottage. The object for which you are obtaining an
education should not be lost sight of for a moment. It should be to so develop and
direct your faculties that you may be more useful and bless others to the extent of
your ability.
If by obtaining knowledge you increase your love of yourselves and your inclination
to excuse yourselves from bearing responsibilities, you are better without an
education. If you love and idolize books, and allow them to get between you and your
duties, so that you feel a reluctance to leave your studies and your reading to do
essential labor that someone must do, you should restrain your desire to study and
cultivate a love for doing those things in which you now take no interest. He that is
faithful in that which is least will also be faithful in greater things.--3T 223, 224
(1872).
The Evils of Physical Inaction and Excessive Mental Activity.--The whole body is
designed for action; and unless the physical powers are kept in health by active
exercise, the mental powers cannot long be used to their highest capacity. The
physical inaction which seems almost inevitable in the schoolroom--together with
other unhealthful conditions--makes it a trying place for children, especially for those
of feeble constitution. . . .No wonder that in the schoolroom the foundation of lifelong
illness is so often laid. The brain, the most delicate of all the physical organs, and that
from which the nervous energy of the whole system is derived, suffers the greatest
injury. By being forced into premature or excessive activity, and this under
unhealthful conditions, it is enfeebled, and often the evil results are permanent.-- Ed
207, 208 (1903).
Shunning Burdens and Toil (experience of two young men).--These young men have
duties at home which they overlook. They have not learned to take up the duties and
bear the home responsibilities which it is their duty to bear. They have a faithful,
practical mother, who has borne many burdens which her children should not have
suffered her to bear. In this they have failed to honor their mother. They have not
shared the burdens of their father as was their duty, and have neglected to honor him
as they should. They follow inclination rather than duty.
They have pursued a selfish course in their lives, in shunning burdens and toil, and
have failed to obtain a valuable experience which they cannot afford to be deprived of
if they would make life a success. They have not felt the importance of being faithful
in little things, nor have they felt under obligation to their parents to be true, thorough,
and faithful in the humble, lowly duties of life which lie directly in their pathway.
They look above the common branches of knowledge, so very necessary for practical
life.--3T 221, 222 (1872).
Senseless Mirth.--Our recreations should not be scenes of senseless mirth, taking the
form of the nonsensical. We can conduct them in such a manner as will benefit and
elevate those with whom we associate and better qualify us and them to more
successfully attend to the duties devolving upon us as Christians.--HR, July, 1871.
(AH 493).
The Fashionable Modern Dance.--David's dancing in reverent joy before God has
been cited by pleasure lovers in justification of the fashionable modern dance, but
there is no ground for such an argument. In our day, dancing is associated with folly
and midnight reveling. Health and morals are sacrificed to pleasure. By the
frequenters of the ballroom, God is not an object of thought and reverence; prayer or
the song of praise would be felt to be out of place in their assemblies.
This test should be decisive. Amusements that have a tendency to weaken the love for
sacred things and lessen our joy in the service of God are not to be sought by
Christians. The music and dancing in joyful praise to God at the removal of the ark
had not the faintest resemblance to the dissipation of modern dancing. The one tended
to the remembrance of God, and exalted His holy name. The other is a device of Satan
to cause men to forget God and to dishonor Him.--PP 707 (1890).
Seeking Satisfaction in Amusements and Pleasures. --The enemy seeks in many ways
to draw our minds from the study of the Word. Many he leads to seek for satisfaction
in amusements and pleasures that seem desirable to the carnal heart. But the true
children of God are not seeking their happiness in this world; they seek for the lasting
joys of a home in the eternal city where Christ dwells, and where the redeemed shall
receive the rewards of obedience to the requirements of God. These do not desire the
transitory, cheap amusements of this life, but the enduring bliss of heaven.--MS 51,
1912. (HC 284.)
Foolish Thoughts and Trifling Conversation.--Why not keep your minds fixed on the
unsearchable riches of Christ that you may present to others the gems of truth? . . . It
is impossible to do this while we indulge an idle, restless spirit, seeking constantly for
something that will merely gratify the senses, something to amuse, and cause a foolish
laugh. . . . We should not set our minds upon such things as these, when there are
unsearchable riches for us. It will take us all eternity to comprehend the riches of the
glory of God and of Jesus Christ.
But minds that are occupied with frivolous reading, with exciting stories, or with
seeking after amusement do not dwell upon Christ and cannot rejoice in the fullness
of His love. The mind that finds pleasure in foolish thoughts and trifling conversation
is as destitute of the joy of Christ as were the hills of Gilboa of dew or rain.-- RH,
Mar 15, 1892.
The Whirl of Excitement.--The cities of today are fast becoming like Sodom and
Gomorrah. Holidays are numerous; the whirl of excitement and pleasure attracts
thousands from the sober duties of life. The exciting sports--theatergoing, horse
racing, gambling, liquor drinking, and reveling--stimulate every passion to activity.
The youth are swept away by the popular current. Those who learn to love amusement
for its own sake open the door to a flood of temptations. They give themselves up to
social gaiety and thoughtless mirth. They are led on from one form of dissipation to
another, until they lose both the desire and the capacity for a life of usefulness. Their
religious aspirations are chilled; their spiritual life is darkened. All the nobler faculties
of the soul, all that link man with the spiritual world, are debased.--9T 89, 90 (1909).
Parties of Pleasure.--Many allow the youth to attend parties of pleasure, thinking that
amusement is essential for health and happiness; but what dangers are in this path!
The more the desire for pleasure is gratified, the more it is cultivated and the stronger
it becomes. The life experience is largely made up of self-gratification in amusement.
God bids us beware. Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall (1
Corinthians 10:12).--CT 347 (1913).
Frivolity a Danger.--One pattern only is given to the young, but how do their lives
compare with the life of Christ? I feel alarmed as I witness everywhere the frivolity of
young men and young women who profess to believe the truth. God does not seem to
be in their thoughts. Their minds are filled with nonsense. Their conversation is only
empty, vain talk. They have a keen ear for music, and Satan knows what organs to
excite to animate, engross, and charm the mind so that Christ is not desired. The
spiritual longings of the soul for divine knowledge, for a growth in grace, are
wanting.--1T 496, 497 (1867).
Indulgence Robs Brain of Its Power.--The same Witness that recorded the profanity of
Belshazzar is present with us wherever we go. Young man, young woman, you may
not realize that God is looking upon you; you may feel that you are at liberty to act
out the impulses of the natural heart, that you may indulge in lightness and trifling,
but for all these things you must give an account. As you sow, you will reap, and if
you are taking the foundation from your house, robbing your brain of its nutriment
and your nerves of their power by dissipation and indulgence of appetite and passion,
you will have an account to render to Him who says, I know thy works.--RH, Mar 29,
1892.
Indulgence of Appetite Impairs Health of Body and Soul.--Do you consider, young
man, in choosing your principles of action and subjecting your mind to influences,
you are forming your character for eternity? You can hide nothing from God. You
may practice evil habits in secret, but it is not hid from God and angels. They view
these things and you must meet them again. God is not pleased with you; you are
required to be far in advance of what you are now in spiritual knowledge.
With all the privileges and opportunities that God has granted you, you do not have
corresponding works. You owe a duty to others, and a duty imperfectly understood
will be imperfectly performed. There will be mistakes and errors that not only will be
injurious to yourself but will help to fasten wrong practices upon others. You have
habits of appetite that you indulge to the detriment of the health of the body as well as
the soul. Your habits have been intemperate, after the habits and customs of the
world, and your health has been injured by your indulgence of appetite. The brain has
been beclouded, and you will never have clear, pure thoughts until your habits and
practices are in accordance with the laws of God in nature.--Lt 36, 1887.
Jesus, your precious Saviour, now calls you to take your position firmly upon the
platform of eternal truth. If you suffer with Him, He will crown you with glory in His
everlasting kingdom. If you are willing to sacrifice all for Him, then He will be your
Saviour. But if you choose your own way, you will follow on in darkness until it is
too late to secure the eternal reward.--3T 45, 46 (1872).
Cherish Righteous Ambition.--Love the right because it is right, and analyze your
feelings, your impressions, in the light of the Word of God. Misdirected ambition will
lead you into sorrow as surely as you yield to it. I am trying to catch the very words
and expressions that were made in reference to this matter, and as my pen hesitates a
moment, the appropriate words come to my mind. I want you to understand me.
Cherish an ambition that will bring glory to God because it is sanctified by the Holy
Spirit. Let the holy oil, which comes from the two olive branches, burn with a holy
radiance upon the altar of your soul. The work of these olive branches represents the
richest impartation of the Holy Spirit.--Lt 123, 1904.
Chap. 34 - Conscience
Exalt the Conscience to Its Rightful Place of Authority.--God has given men more
than a mere animal life. He so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son,
that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life. He
expects those for whom He has made so great a sacrifice to show their appreciation of
His love by following the example that Christ has set them, living lives that are in
harmony with His will. He expects them to respond to the love He has expressed for
them by denying self for the good of others. He expects them to use the powers of
mind and body in His service. He has given them affections, and He expects them to
use this precious gift to His glory. He has given them a conscience, and He forbids
that this gift be in any way misused; it is, rather, to be exalted to the place of authority
to which He has assigned it.--SW, Mar 1, 1904.
Rejecting Conscience Is a Fearful Danger.--Day by day men and women are deciding
their eternal destiny. I have been shown that many are in great danger. When a man
will do or say anything to gain his end, nothing but the power of God can save him.
His character needs to be transformed before he can have a good conscience, void of
offense toward God and man. Self must die, and Christ must take possession of the
soul temple. When, by rejecting the light that God has given, men abuse and trample
upon the conscience, they are in fearful danger. Their future eternal welfare is
imperiled.--Lt 162, 1903.
Satan Attempts to Drown Conscience.--Satan uses his influence to drown the voice of
God and the voice of conscience, and the world acts as if under his control. Men have
chosen him as their leader. They stand under his banner. They will not come to Christ
that they might have life. Infatuated with schemes for pleasure and amusement, they
are striving for that which will perish with the using.--MS 161, 1897.
One Wrong Step Changes a Life.--The removal of one safeguard from the conscience,
the failure to do the very thing that the Lord has marked out, one step in the path of
wrong principle, often leads to an entire change of the life and action. . . . We are safe
only in following where Christ leads the way. The path will grow clearer, brighter and
brighter, unto the perfect day.--Lt 71 1898.
Violated Conscience Becomes Unreliable.--He who after hearing the truth turns from
it because to accept it would retard his success in business lines turns from God and
the light. He sells his soul in a cheap market. His conscience will ever be unreliable.
He has made a bargain with Satan, violating his conscience, which if kept pure and
upright, would have been of more value to him than the whole world. He who refuses
light partakes of the fruit of disobedience, as did Adam and Eve in Eden.--MS 27,
1900.
Loss of Conscious Integrity Paralyzes Energies.-- When you lose your conscious
integrity, your soul becomes a battlefield for Satan; you have doubts and fears enough
to paralyze your energies and drive you to discouragement. When the favor of God
was gone, you know that some of you have tried to supply the place and seek
compensation for the loss of the Holy Spirit's witness that you are a child of God in
worldly excitement, in the society of worldlings.--Lt 14, 1885.
Diet Affects Conscience.--Gross and stimulating food fevers the blood, excites the
nervous system, and too often dulls the moral perceptions so that reason and
conscience are overborne by the sensual impulses.--CTBH 134, 1890. (CD 243.)
Conscience Effective Agent in Restoring Health. --If you are burdened and weary,
you need not curl up like leaves upon a withered branch. Cheerfulness and a clear
conscience are better than drugs and will be an effective agent in your restoration to
health.--HR, June, 1871. (ML 177.)
Human Perceptions an Unstable Guide.--The light of the body is the eye: if therefore
thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be full of light. But if thine eye be evil, thy
whole body shall be full of darkness. If therefore the light that is in thee be darkness,
how great is that darkness! (Matthew 6:22).
These words have a first and second sense, a literal and a figurative meaning. They
are full of truth in regard to the bodily eye, with which we see external objects. And
they are true also in regard to the spiritual eye, the conscience, with which we
estimate good and evil. If the eye of the soul, the conscience, is perfectly healthy, the
soul will be taught aright.
But when the conscience is guided by human perceptions, which are not subdued and
softened by the grace of Christ, the mind is in a diseased condition. Things are not
seen in their true bearings. The imagination is wrought upon, and the eye of the mind
sees things in a false, distorted light.
You need clear, sympathetic eyesight. Your conscience has been abused, and has
become hardened, but if you will follow the right course, renewed sensitiveness will
come to it.--Lt 45, 1904.
When We Can Trust the Conscience.--But one says, My conscience does not
condemn me in not keeping the commandments of God. But in the Word of God we
read that there are good and bad consciences, and the fact that your conscience does
not condemn you in not keeping the law of God does not prove that you are
uncondemned in His sight.
Take your conscience to the Word of God and see if your life and character are in
accordance with the standard of righteousness which God has there revealed. You can
then determine whether or not you have an intelligent faith and what manner of
conscience is yours. The conscience of man cannot be trusted unless it is under the
influence of divine grace. Satan takes advantage of an unenlightened conscience, and
thereby leads men into all manner of delusions, because they have not made the Word
of God their counselor. Many have invented a gospel of their own in the same manner
as they have substituted a law of their own for God's law.--RH, Sept 3, 1901.
God's Word the Standard.--It is not enough for a man to think himself safe in
following the dictates of his conscience. . . . The question to be settled is, Is the
conscience in harmony with the Word of God? If not, it cannot safely be followed, for
it will deceive. The conscience must be enlightened by God. Time must be given to a
study of the Scriptures and to prayer. Thus the mind will be stablished, strengthened,
and settled.--Lt 21, 1901. (HC 143.)
Is Conscience Changing your Life?--You may have a conscience and that conscience
may bring conviction to you, but the question is, Is that conviction a working agent?
Does that conviction reach your heart and the doings of the inner man? Is there a
purification of the soul temple of its defilement? That is what we want, because it is a
time such as it was in the days of the children of Israel; and if there are any sins upon
you, do not stop till they are corrected and put away.--MS 13, 1894.
Influence of Truth on the Conscience and on the Heart.--The psalmist says, The
entrance of Thy words giveth light; it giveth understanding unto the simple (Psalm
119:130). When truth is working only upon the conscience, it creates much
uneasiness; but when truth is invited into the heart, the whole being is brought into
captivity to Jesus Christ. Even the thoughts are captured, for the mind of Christ works
where the will is submitted to the will of God. Let this mind be in you, which was also
in Christ Jesus (Philippians 2:5). He whom the Lord makes free is free indeed, and he
cannot be brought into servile bondage to sin.--MS 67, 1894.
Truth Held Only by Conscience Will Agitate the Mind.--By his conscience every
honest Jew was convinced that Jesus Christ was the Son of God, but the heart in its
pride and ambition would not surrender. An opposition was maintained against the
light of truth, which they had decided to resist and deny. When the truth is held as
truth only by the conscience, when the heart is not stimulated and made receptive, the
truth only agitates the mind. But when the truth is received as truth by the heart, it has
passed through the conscience and captivated the soul by its pure principles. It is
placed in the heart by the Holy Spirit, who molds its beauty to the mind that its
transforming power may be seen in the character.--MS 130, 1897.
God Does Not Force the Conscience.--God never forces the will or the conscience,
but Satan's constant resort--to gain control of those whom he cannot otherwise
seduce--is compulsion by cruelty. Through fear or force he endeavors to rule the
conscience and to secure homage to himself.--GC 591 (1888).
When Conscience Is a Sure Guide.--He whose conscience is a sure guide will not stop
to reason when light shines upon him out of God's Word. He will not be guided by
human counsel. He will not allow worldly business to stand in the way of obedience.
He will lay every selfish interest at the door of investigation and will approach the
Word of God as one whose eternal interest is hanging in the balance.--MS 27, 1900.
Emotions and Desires Subjected to Reason and Conscience.--If we would not commit
sin, we must shun its very beginnings. Every emotion and desire must be held in
subjection to reason and conscience. Every unholy thought must be instantly repelled.
To your closet, followers of Christ. Pray in faith and with all the heart. Satan is
watching to ensnare your feet. You must have help from above if you would escape
his devices.-- 5T 177 (1882).
But it is for you to hold every emotion and passion under control, in calm subjection
to reason and conscience. Then Satan loses his power to control the mind. --RH, June
14, 1892. (HC 87.)
Scars Ever Remain.--What did that dishonest man gain by his worldly policy? How
high a price did he pay for his success? He has sacrificed his noble manhood and has
started on the road that leads to perdition. He may be converted; he may see the
wickedness of his injustice to his fellowmen--and, as far as possible, make restitution;
but the scars of a wounded conscience will ever remain.--ST, Feb. 7, 1884. (3BC
1158.)
Christ's Grace Sufficient for Guilty Conscience.-- When sin struggles for the mastery
in the heart, when guilt oppresses the soul and burdens the conscience, when unbelief
clouds the mind, remember that Christ's grace is sufficient to subdue sin and banish
the darkness. Entering into communion with the Saviour, we enter the region of
peace.--MH 250 (1905).
You Can Make Yourself What You Choose.--Again I warn you as one who must meet
these lines in that day when the case of everyone shall be decided. Yield yourself to
Christ without delay; He alone, by the power of His grace, can redeem you from ruin.
He alone can bring your moral and mental powers into a state of health. Your heart
may be warm with the love of God; your understanding, clear and mature; your
conscience, illuminated, quick, and pure; your will, upright and sanctified, subject to
the control of the Spirit of God. You can make yourself what you choose. If you will
now face right about, cease to do evil and learn to do well, then you will be happy
indeed; you will be successful in the battles of life and rise to glory and honor in the
better life than this. Choose you this day whom ye will serve (Joshua 24:15).--2T 564,
565 (1870).
No Criterion for Others.--God does not wish you to make your conscience a criterion
for others. You have a duty to perform, which is to make yourself cheerful and to
cultivate unselfishness in your feelings until it will be your greatest pleasure to make
all around you happy.--4T 62 (1876).
Conscience to Be Cleansed.--Every room in the soul temple has become more or less
defiled, and needs cleansing. The cobwebbed closet of conscience is to be entered.
The windows of the soul are to be closed earthward and thrown wide open
heavenward that the bright beams of the Sun of righteousness may have free access.
The memory is to be refreshed by Bible principles. The mind is to be kept clear and
pure that it may distinguish between good and evil. As you repeat the prayer Christ
taught His disciples, and then strive to answer it in the daily life, the Holy Spirit will
renew the mind and heart and will give you strength to carry out high and holy
purposes. --MS 24, 1901.
Changed for the Better.--Looking unto Jesus we obtain brighter and more distinct
views of God, and by beholding we become changed. Goodness, love for our
fellowmen, becomes our natural instinct. We develop a character which is the
counterpart of the divine character. Growing into His likeness, we enlarge our
capacity for knowing God. More and more we enter into fellowship with the heavenly
world, and we have continually increasing power to receive the riches of the
knowledge and wisdom of eternity.--COL 355 (1900).
Changed for the Worse.--It is by beholding that we become changed. And as those
sacred precepts in which God has opened to men the perfection and holiness of His
character are neglected and the minds of the people are attracted to human teachings
and theories, what marvel that there has followed a decline of living piety in the
church. Saith the Lord, They have forsaken Me the fountain of living waters, and
hewed them out cisterns, broken cisterns, that can hold no water (Jeremiah 2:13).--GC
478 (1911).
Life Is Changed by Seeing.--The Word of God is a lamp to our feet and a light to our
path. Thy Word have I hid in mine heart, that I might not sin against Thee (Psalm
119:11). The heart preoccupied with the Word of God is fortified against Satan. Those
who make Christ their daily companion and familiar friend will feel that the powers of
an unseen world are all around them, and by looking unto Jesus they will become
assimilated to His image. By beholding they become changed to the divine pattern;
their character is softened, refined, and ennobled for the heavenly kingdom.--4T 616
(1881).
Selective Perception.--God does not wish us to hear all that is to be heard or to see all
that is to be seen. It is a great blessing to close the ears that we hear not, and the eyes
that we see not. The greatest anxiety should be to have clear eyesight to discern our
own shortcomings and a quick ear to catch all needed reproof and instruction, lest by
our inattention and carelessness we let them slip and become forgetful hearers and not
doers of the work.--1T 707, 708 (1868).
Keeping Powers of Perception Alert.--If you are called upon to attend a council
meeting, ask yourself whether your perceptive faculties are in a proper condition to
weigh evidence. If you are not in a proper condition, if your brain is confused, you
have no right to take part in the meeting. Are you fractious? Is your temper sweet and
fragrant, or is it so disturbed and disagreeable that you will be led to make hasty
decisions? Do you feel as though you would like to fight someone? Then do not go to
the meeting; for if you go you will surely dishonor God.
Take an ax and chop wood or engage in some physical exercise until your spirit is
mild and easy to be entreated. Just as surely as your stomach is creating a disturbance
in your brain, your words will create a disturbance in the assembly. More trouble is
caused by disturbed digestive organs than many realize.--MS 62, 1900. (MM 295.)
Perception Influenced by Physical Habits Controlled by Conscience.--Those who
would have clear minds to discern Satan's devices must have their physical appetites
under the control of reason and conscience. The moral and vigorous action of the
higher powers of the mind are essential to the perfection of Christian character. And
the strength or the weakness of the mind has very much to do with our usefulness in
this world and with our final salvation.--RH, Sept 8, 1874. (MYP 236, 237.)
Grief Dimmed Mary's Perception.--Then she turned away, even from the angels,
thinking that she must find someone who could tell her what had been done with the
body of Jesus. Another voice addressed her, Woman, why weepest thou? Whom
seekest thou? Through her tear-dimmed eyes Mary saw the form of a man, and
thinking that it was the gardener, she said, Sir, if thou have borne Him hence, tell me
where thou hast laid Him, and I will take Him away.--DA 790 (1898).
Perceived Jesus by His Voice.--But now in His own familiar voice Jesus said to her,
Mary. Now she knew that it was not a stranger who was addressing her, and turning
she saw before her the living Christ. In her joy she forgot that He had been crucified.
Springing toward Him, as if to embrace His feet, she said, Rabboni.--DA 790 (1898).
Sins Dim Perception.--It is sin that darkens our minds and dims our perceptions. As
sin is purged from our hearts, the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the
face of Jesus Christ, illuminating His Word and reflected from the face of nature,
more and more fully will declare Him merciful and gracious, long-suffering, and
abundant in goodness and truth (Exodus 34:6).
In His light shall we see light, until mind and heart and soul are transformed into the
image of His holiness.-- MH 464, 465 (1905).
By referring to His mysterious and divine character, He sought to lead their minds
into a train of thought which would be favorable to the transforming power of truth.
Again, He used the things of nature with which they were familiar to illustrate divine
truth. The soil of the heart was thus prepared to receive the good seed. He made His
hearers feel that His interests were identified with theirs, that His heart beat in
sympathy with them in their joys and griefs. At the same time they saw in Him the
manifestation of power and excellence far above that possessed by their most-honored
rabbis.
The teachings of Christ were marked with a simplicity, dignity, and power heretofore
unknown to them, and their involuntary exclamation was, Never man spake like this
man. The people listened to Him gladly. --5T 746, 747 (1889).
The Mind Can Be Educated to Accept Sin.--A long preparatory process, unknown to
the world, goes on in the heart before the Christian commits open sin. The mind does
not come down at once from purity and holiness to depravity, corruption, and crime.
It takes time to degrade those formed in the image of God to the brutal or the satanic.
By beholding we become changed. By the indulgence of impure thoughts man can so
educate his mind that sin which he once loathed will become pleasant to him.--PP 459
(1890).
Counsel to One Who Imagined Injury When It Did Not Exist.--Sister D has been
deceived in some things. She has thought that God instructed her in a special sense,
and you both have believed and acted accordingly. The discernment which she has
thought she possessed in a special sense is a deception of the enemy. She is naturally
quick to see, quick to understand, quick to anticipate, and is of an extremely sensitive
nature. Satan has taken advantage of these traits of character and has led you both
astray.
Brother D, you have been a bondman for quite a length of time. Much of that which
Sister D has thought was discernment has been jealousy. She has been disposed to
regard everything with a jealous eye, to be suspicious, surmising evil, distrustful of
almost everything. This causes unhappiness of mind, despondency, and doubt, where
faith and confidence should exist. These unhappy traits of character turn her thoughts
into a gloomy channel, where she indulges a foreboding of evil, while a highly
sensitive temperament leads her to imagine neglect, slight, and injury, when it does
not exist....
These unhappy traits of character, with a strong, set will, must be corrected and
reformed, or they will eventually cause you both to make shipwreck of your faith.--
1T 708, 709 (1868).
Environment Influences.--The more the patient can be kept out of doors, the less care
will he require. The more cheerful his surroundings, the more hopeful will he be. Shut
up in the house, be it ever so elegantly furnished, he will grow fretful and gloomy.
Surround him with the beautiful things of nature; place him where he can see the
flowers growing and hear the birds singing, and his heart will break into song in
harmony with the songs of the birds. Relief will come to body and mind. The intellect
will be awakened, the imagination quickened, and the mind prepared to appreciate the
beauty of God's Word.--MH 265 (1905).
Surroundings Affect Experience.--I was then shown a young girl . . . who had
departed from God and was enshrouded in darkness. Said the angel: She did run well
for a season; what did hinder her? I was pointed back and saw that it was a change of
surroundings. She was associating with youth like herself, who were filled with
hilarity and glee, pride, and love of the world. Had she regarded the words of Christ,
she need not have yielded to the enemy. Watch . . . and pray, lest ye enter into
temptation. Temptation may be all around us, but this does not make it necessary that
we should enter into temptation. The truth is worth everything. Its influence tends not
to degrade but to elevate, refine, purify, and exalt to immortality and the throne of
God. Said the angel, Will you have Christ, or the world?
Satan presents the world with its most alluring, flattering charms to poor mortals, and
they gaze upon it, and its glitter and tinsel eclipse the glory of heaven and that life
which is as enduring as the throne of God. A life of peace, happiness, joy
unspeakable, which shall know nothing of sorrow, sadness, pain, or death, is
sacrificed for a short lifetime of sin.--2T 100, 101 (1868).
Seeing Molds Personality.--The sight of her eyes and the hearing of her ears have
perverted her heart.-- 4T 108 (1876).
Their minds have so long run in a low, selfish channel that they cannot appreciate
eternal things. They do not value salvation. It seems impossible to elevate their minds
to rightly estimate the plan of salvation or the value of the atonement. Selfish interests
have engrossed the entire being; like a lodestone they hold the mind and affections,
binding them down to a low level. Some of these persons will never attain to
perfection of Christian character because they do not see the value and necessity of
such a character. Their minds cannot be elevated so that they will be charmed with
holiness. Self-love and selfish interests have so warped the character that they cannot
be made to distinguish the sacred and eternal from the common.--2T 519, 520 (1870).
That Which Quickens the Perceptions.--When hearts are purified from selfishness and
egotism, they are in harmony with the message God sends them. The perceptions are
quickened, the sensibilities refined. Like appreciates like. He that is of God heareth
God's words (John 8:47).--5T 696 (1889).
Students to Have a Real Aim.--Teach the students to use for the highest, holiest
purpose the talents God has given them that they may accomplish the greatest good in
this world. Students need to learn what it means to have a real aim in life, and to
obtain an exalted understanding of what true education means.--SpT Series B, No. 11,
p 16, Nov 14, 1905.
Christ Encourages Lofty Aims.--He would give encouragement to our loftiest aims,
security to our choicest treasure.--COL 374 (1900).
Failing to Realize One's Potential.--Many do not become what they might because
they do not put forth the power that is in them. They do not, as they might, lay hold on
divine strength. Many are diverted from the line in which they might reach the truest
success. Seeking greater honor or a more pleasing task, they attempt something for
which they are not fitted.
Many a man whose talents are adapted for some other calling is ambitious to enter a
profession; and he who might have been successful as a farmer, an artisan, or a nurse
fills inadequately the position of a minister, a lawyer, or a physician. There are others,
again, who might have filled a responsible calling, but who, for want of energy,
application, or perseverance, content themselves with an easier place.--Ed 267 (1903).
Often the youth cherish objects, pursuits, and pleasures that may not appear to be evil
but that fall short of the highest good. They divert the life from its noblest aim.
Arbitrary measures or direct denunciation may not avail in leading these youth to
relinquish that which they hold dear. Let them be directed to something better than
display, ambition, or self-indulgence. Bring them in contact with truer beauty, with
loftier principles, and with nobler lives. Lead them to behold the One altogether
lovely.
When once the gaze is fixed upon Him, the life finds its center. The enthusiasm, the
generous devotion, the passionate ardor, of the youth find here their true object. Duty
becomes a delight and sacrifice a pleasure. To honor Christ, to become like Him, to
work for Him, is the life's highest ambition and its greatest joy.--Ed 296, 297 (1903).
The Foolish Rich Man's Selfish Aimlessness.--This man's aims were no higher than
those of the beasts that perish. He lived as if there were no God, no heaven, no future
life; as if everything he possessed were his own and he owed nothing to God or man.
The psalmist described this rich man when he wrote. The fool hath said in his heart,
There is no God.--COL 257, 258 (1900).
An Aimless Life a Living Death.--An aimless life is a living death. The mind should
dwell upon themes relating to our eternal interests. This will be conducive to health of
body and mind.--RH, July 29, 1884. (CH 51.)
A large share of the periodicals and books that, like the frogs of Egypt, are
overspreading the land are not merely commonplace, idle, and enervating, but unclean
and degrading. Their effect is not merely to intoxicate and ruin the mind but to corrupt
and destroy the soul.
The mind, the heart, that is indolent, aimless, falls an easy prey to evil. It is on
diseased, lifeless organisms that fungus roots. It is the idle mind that is Satan's
workshop. Let the mind be directed to high and holy ideals, let the life have a noble
aim, an absorbing purpose, and evil finds little foothold.--Ed 189, 190 (1903).
Few Evils More to Be Dreaded.--Few evils are more to be dreaded than indolence and
aimlessness. Yet the tendency of most athletic sports is a subject of anxious thought to
those who have at heart the well-being of the youth. . . . They stimulate the love of
pleasure and excitement, thus fostering a distaste for useful labor, a disposition to
shun practical duties and responsibilities. They tend to destroy a relish for life's sober
realities and its tranquil enjoyments. Thus the door is opened to dissipation and
lawlessness, with their terrible results. --Ed 210, 211 (1903).
Right Motives to Be Cultivated.--The true motives of service are to be kept before old
and young. The students are to be taught in such a way that they will develop into
useful men and women. Every means that will elevate and ennoble them is to be
employed. They are to be taught to put their powers to the best use. Physical and
mental powers are to be equally taxed. Habits of order and discipline are to be
cultivated. The power that is exerted by a pure, true life is to be kept before the
students. This will aid them in the preparation for useful service. Daily they will grow
purer and stronger, better prepared through His grace and a study of His Word to put
forth aggressive efforts against evil. --RH, Aug 22, 1912. (FE 543.)
Actions Reveal Motives.--Actions reveal principles and motives. The fruit borne by
many who claim to be plants in the Lord's 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.--5T 103 (1882).
Motives, Not Appearance, Judged.--It is an important duty for all to become familiar
with the tenor of their conduct from day to day and the motives which prompt their
actions. They need to become acquainted with the particular motives which prompt
particular actions. Every action of their lives is judged, not by the external
appearance, but from the motive which dictated the action.--3T 507 (1875).
Followers of Christ Find New Motives.--No other science is equal to that which
develops in the life of the student the character of God. Those who become followers
of Christ find that new motives of action are supplied, new thoughts arise, and new
actions must result. But they can make advancement only through conflict; for there is
an enemy who ever contends against them, presenting temptations to cause the soul to
doubt and sin. There are hereditary and cultivated tendencies to evil that must be
overcome. Appetite and passion must be brought under the control of the Holy Spirit.
There is no end to the warfare this side of eternity. But while there are constant battles
to fight, there are also precious victories to gain; and the triumph over self and sin is
of more value than the mind can estimate.--CT 20 (1913).
Every Action Has Twofold Character.--Every course of action has a twofold character
and importance. It is virtuous or vicious, right or wrong, according to the motive
which prompts it. A wrong action, by frequent repetition, leaves a permanent
impression upon the mind of the actor and also on the minds of those who are
connected with him in any relation, either spiritual or temporal. The parents or
teachers who give no attention to the small actions that are not right establish those
habits in the youth.--RH, May 17, 1898. (CG 201.)
Action Derives Quality From Motive.--Every action derives its quality from the
motive which prompts it, and if the motives are not high and pure and unselfish, the
mind and character will never become well balanced. --YI, Apr 7, 1898. (SD 171.)
Motives Give Character to Acts.--It is the motive that gives character to our acts,
stamping them with ignominy or with high moral worth. Not the great things which
every eye sees and every tongue praises does God account most precious. The little
duties cheerfully done, the little gifts which make no show, and which to human eyes
may appear worthless, often stand highest in His sight. A heart of faith and love is
dearer to God than the most costly gift. The poor widow gave her living to do the little
that she did. She deprived herself of food in order to give those two mites to the cause
she loved. And she did it in faith, believing that her heavenly Father would not
overlook her great need. It was this unselfish spirit and childlike faith that won the
Saviour's commendation.--DA 615 (1898).
God Reveals the Motives.--God leads His people on, step by step. He brings them into
positions which are calculated to reveal the motives of the heart. Some endure at one
point but fall off at the next. At every advance step the heart is tested and tried a little
closer. If any find their hearts opposed to the straight work of God, it should convince
them that they have a work to do in overcoming, or they will be finally rejected of the
Lord. --RH, Apr 8, 1880. (HC 162.)
Our Secret Motives Decide Destiny.--Our acts, our words, even our most secret
motives, all have their weight in deciding our destiny for weal or woe. Though they
may be forgotten by us, they will bear their testimony to justify or to condemn.--GC
486, 487 (1911).
God Judges by the Motives.--There is much in the conduct of a minister that he can
improve. Many see and feel their lack, yet they seem to be ignorant of the influence
they exert. They are conscious of their actions as they perform them, but suffer them
to pass from their memory, and therefore do not reform.
If ministers would make the actions of each day a subject of careful thought and
deliberate review, with the object to become acquainted with their own habits of life,
they would better know themselves. By a close scrutiny of their daily life under all
circumstances they would know their own motives, the principles which actuate them.
This daily review of our acts, to see whether conscience approves or condemns, is
necessary for all who wish to arrive at the perfection of Christian character.
Many acts which pass for good works, even deeds of benevolence, will, when closely
investigated, be found to be prompted by wrong motives. Many receive applause for
virtues which they do not possess. The Searcher of hearts inspects motives, and often
the deeds which are highly applauded by men are recorded by Him as springing from
selfish motives and base hypocrisy. Every act of our lives, whether excellent and
praiseworthy or deserving of censure, is judged by the Searcher of hearts according to
the motives which prompted it.--2T 511, 512 (1870).
The Great Motive Powers of the Soul.--The great motive powers of the soul are faith,
hope, and love; and it is to these that Bible study, rightly pursued, appeals. The
outward beauty of the Bible, the beauty of imagery and expression, is but the setting,
as it were, for its real treasure--the beauty of holiness. In its record of the men who
walked with God, we may catch glimpses of His glory. In the One altogether lovely
we behold Him, of whom all beauty of earth and heaven is but a dim reflection. I, if I
be lifted up, He said, will draw all men unto Me (John 12:32).--Ed 192 (1903).
God will accept the youth with their talent and their wealth of affection if they will
consecrate themselves to Him. They may reach to the highest point of intellectual
greatness; and if balanced by religious principle, they can carry forward the work
which Christ came from heaven to accomplish, and in thus doing be co-workers with
the Master.--RH, June 21, 1877. (FE 47, 48.)
Not Satisfied With Second-rate Work.--The true teacher is not satisfied with second-
rate work. He is not satisfied with directing his students to a standard lower than the
highest which it is possible for them to attain. He cannot be content with imparting to
them only technical knowledge, with making them merely clever accountants, skillful
artisans, successful tradesmen. It is his ambition to inspire them with principles of
truth, obedience, honor, integrity, and purity--principles that will make them a
positive force for the stability and uplifting of society. He desires them, above all else,
to learn life's great lesson of unselfish service.--Ed 29, 30 (1903).
Mind to Be Carried Higher.--I am instructed that we are to carry the minds of our
students higher than it is now thought by many to be possible. Heart and mind are to
be trained to preserve their purity by receiving daily supplies from the fountain of
eternal truth. The Divine Mind and Hand has preserved through the ages the record of
creation in its purity. It is the Word of God alone that gives to us an authentic account
of the creation of our world. This Word is to be the chief study in our schools. Here
we may hold converse with patriarchs and prophets; here we may learn what our
redemption has cost the One who was equal with the Father from the beginning, and
who sacrificed His life that a people might stand before Him redeemed from every
common, earthly thing and renewed in the image of God.--Lt 64, 1909.
True Education Combines Intellectual and Moral.-- The Lord has been waiting long
for our teachers to walk in the light He has sent them. There is need of a humbling of
self that Christ may restore the moral image of God in man. The character of the
education given must be greatly changed before it can give the right mold to our
institutions. It is only when intellectual and moral powers are combined for the
attainment of education that the standard of the Word of God is reached.-- RH, Sept 3.
1908. (FE 527.)
True Piety Elevates and Refines.--Our people everywhere allow their minds to take
too low a range, too narrow a view. They allow the plans of human agencies to guide
them and a worldly spirit to mold them, rather than Christ's plans and Christ's Spirit. I
am instructed to say to our people, Look above the earthly to the heavenly. Numbers
are no evidence of success; if they were, Satan might claim much. It is the degree of
moral power that pervades our institutions, our schools, and our churches. It should be
the joy of all, from the highest to the least, to represent Christ in Christlike virtues.
Let all our teachers learn that true piety, love shown in obedience to God, will elevate
and refine.--Lt 316, 1908.
Thoroughness Necessary.--Thoroughness is necessary to success in character
building. There must be an earnest desire to carry out the plans of the Master Builder.
The timbers used must be solid; no careless, unreliable work can be accepted; it
would ruin the building. The whole being is to be put into this work. It demands
strength and energy; there is no reserve to be wasted in unimportant matters. There
must be determined human force put into the work, in cooperation with the Divine
Worker. There must be earnest, persevering effort to break away from the customs
and maxims and associations of the world. Deep thought, earnest purpose, steadfast
integrity, are essential. There must be no idleness. Life is a sacred trust; and every
moment should be wisely improved.--YI, Feb 19, 1903. (HC 84.)
Trivial Matters Enfeeble the Mind.--The student who, in the place of the broad
principles of the Word of God, will accept common ideas and will allow the time and
attention to be absorbed in commonplace, trivial matters, will find his mind will
become dwarfed and enfeebled; he will lose the power of growth. The mind must be
trained to comprehend the important truths that concern eternal life.--Lt 64, 1909.
The Quality of Men Called to Teach. [SEE CHAPTER 22, THE SCHOOL AND THE
TEACHER.]--The cause of God needs teachers who have high moral qualities and
can be trusted with the education of others, men who are sound in the faith and have
tact and patience, who walk with God and abstain from the very appearance of evil,
who stand so closely connected with God that they can be channels of light--in short,
Christian gentlemen. The good impressions made by such will never be effaced, and
the training thus given will endure throughout eternity. What is neglected in this
training process is likely to remain undone. Who will undertake this work?
We would that there were strong young men, rooted and grounded in the faith, who
had such a living connection with God that they could, if so counseled by our leading
brethren, enter the higher colleges in our land, where they would have a wider field
for study and observation. Association with different classes of minds, an
acquaintance with the workings and results of popular methods of education, and a
knowledge of theology as taught in the leading institutions of learning would be of
great value to such workers, preparing them to labor for the educated classes and to
meet the prevailing errors of our time. Such was the method pursued by the ancient
Waldenses; and, if true to God, our youth, like theirs, might do a good work, even
while gaining their education, in sowing the seeds of truth in other minds.--5T 583,
584 (1885).
Characters Not Formed in One Mold.--Teachers are to consider that they are not
dealing with angels, but human beings with like passions as they themselves have.
Characters are not formed in one mold. There is every phase of character received by
children as an inheritance. The defects and the virtues in traits of character are thus
revealed. Let every instructor take this into consideration. Hereditary and cultivated
deformity of human character, as also beauty of character, will have to be met, and
much grace cultivated in the instructor to know how to deal with the erring for their
present and eternal good. Impulse, impatience, pride, selfishness, and self-esteem, if
cherished, will do a great amount of evil which may thrust the soul upon Satan's
battleground without wisdom to navigate his bark, but he will be in danger of being
tossed about at the sport of Satan's temptations until shipwrecked. Every teacher has
his own peculiar traits of character to watch lest Satan should use him as his agent to
destroy souls, by his own unconsecrated traits of character.--Lt 50, 1893. (FE 277,
278.)
Continual Censure Bewilders the Child.--Heavens sees in the child the undeveloped
man or woman, with capabilities and powers that, if correctly guided and developed
with heavenly wisdom, will become the human agencies through whom the divine
influences can cooperate to be laborers together with God. Sharp words and continual
censure bewilder the child but never reform him. Keep back that pettish word; keep
your own spirit under discipline to Jesus Christ; then will you learn how to pity and
sympathize with those brought under your influence. Do not exhibit impatience and
harshness, for if these children did not need educating, they would not need the
advantages of the school. They are to be patiently, kindly, and in love brought up the
ladder of progress, climbing step by step in obtaining knowledge.--CEd 147 (1893).
(FE 263.)
But he is suspended for his foolish course of action. What will he do? Courage is at
the lowest ebb, courage and even manliness is not cherished. He is an expense, and
precious time is lost. Who is tender and kind and feels the burden of these souls?
What wonder that Satan takes advantage of the circumstances. They are thrust on
Satan's battleground and the very worst feelings of the human heart are called into
exercise, and strengthen and become confirmed.--Lt 50, 1893.
Mind Must Have Pure Food.--The mind, like the body, must have pure food in order
to have health and strength. Give your children something to think of that is out of
and above themselves. The mind that lives in a pure, holy atmosphere will not become
trifling, frivolous, vain, and selfish.--Lt 27, 1890
We are living in a time when everything that is false and superficial is exalted above
the real, the natural, and the enduring. The mind must be kept free from everything
that would lead it in a wrong direction. It should not be encumbered with trashy
stories, which do not add strength to the mental powers. The thoughts will be of the
same character as the food we provide for the mind.--5T 544. (CG 188.)
Infidel Books. [SEE CHAPTER 13, FOOD FOR THE MIND.]--The study of books
written by infidels does great harm. Thus tares are sown in the minds and hearts of
students. Yet this is the food often given to the brain, while many have little
knowledge of subjects which pertain to eternal interests, which they ought to
understand.
The talent of time is precious. Every day it is given to us in trust, and we shall be
called upon to give an account of it to God. It is to be used to God's glory, and if we
would prolong our lives, if we would gain the life that measures with the life of God,
we must give the mind pure food. No time should be wasted that might have been
used to good account.--MS 15, 1898.
Students to Learn to Obey God.--I see that a great sentiment must be worked to, and
out, under the divine direction in our schools. But the one great lesson the students
must learn is to seek with all their heart, mind, and strength to know God and obey
Him implicitly. The science of the salvation of the human soul is the first lesson of
life. No line of literature or education in book knowledge is to become supreme. But
to know God and Jesus Christ, whom He hath sent, is life eternal.
Let the students take the love and fear of God with them into their school life. This is
wisdom more precious than words can express. Connected with God, it can be said of
them, as of Daniel, God gave him wisdom and knowledge in all mysteries.
Learning is good. The wisdom of Solomon is desirable; but the wisdom of a greater
than Solomon is far more desirable and essential. Through the learning in our schools
we cannot reach Christ, but we can through Christ reach the highest end of the ladder
in science; for the word of inspiration says, Ye are complete in Him (Colossians
2:10). Our first business is to see and acknowledge God, and then He will direct our
path.--Lt 120, 1896.
True Education Is Broad.--True education means more than taking a certain course of
study. It is broad. It includes the harmonious development of all the physical powers
and the mental faculties. It teaches the love and fear of God and is a preparation for
the faithful discharge of life's duties.--CT 64 (1913).
All-round Development for Every Duty.--And those who would be workers together
with God must strive for perfection of every organ of the body and quality of the
mind. True education is the preparation of the physical, mental, and moral powers for
the performance of every duty; it is the training of body, mind, and soul for divine
service. This is the education that will endure unto eternal life.--COL 330 (1900).
All Powers to Reach Their Highest Potential.--God designs that the college at Battle
Creek shall reach a higher standard of intellectual and moral culture than any other
institution of the kind in our land. The youth should be taught the importance of
cultivating their physical, mental, and moral powers that they may not only reach the
highest attainments in science, but through a knowledge of God may be educated to
glorify Him; that they may develop symmetrical characters, and thus be fully prepared
for usefulness in this world and obtain a moral fitness for the immortal life.--4T 425
(1880).
Instead of confining their study to that which men have said or written, let students be
directed to the sources of truth, to the vast fields opened for research in nature and
revelation. Let them contemplate the great facts of duty and destiny, and the mind will
expand and strengthen. Instead of educated weaklings, institutions of learning may
send forth men strong to think and to act, men who are masters and not slaves of
circumstances, men who possess breadth of mind, clearness of thought, and the
courage of their convictions.--Ed 17, 18 (1903).
The builders of character must not forget to lay the foundation which will make
education of the greatest value. This will require self-sacrifice, but it must be done.
The physical training will, if properly conducted, prepare for mental taxation. But the
one alone always makes a deficient man.
The physical taxation combined with mental effort keeps the mind and morals in a
more healthful condition, and far better work is done. Under this training students will
come forth from our schools educated for practical life, able to put their intellectual
capabilities to the best use. Physical and mental exercise must be combined if we
would do justice to our students. We have been working on this plan here [Australia]
with complete satisfaction, notwithstanding the inconvenience under which students
have to labor.--SpT Series A, No. 4, p 16, Aug 27, 1895. (TM 241.)
Education Is Not of Brain Alone.--Students who have gained book knowledge without
gaining a knowledge of practical work cannot lay claim to a symmetrical education.
The energies that should have been devoted to business of various lines have been
neglected. Education does not consist in using the brain alone. Physical employment
is a part of the training essential for every youth. An important phase of education is
lacking if the student is not taught how to engage in useful labor.--CT 307, 308
(1913).
Physical and Mental to Be Equally Taxed.--Much has been said and written in regard
to the importance of training the mind for its highest service. This has sometimes led
to the opinion that if the intellect is educated to put forth its highest powers, it will
strengthen the physical and moral nature for the development of the whole man. Time
and experience have proved this to be an error. We have seen men and women go
forth as graduates from college who were in no way qualified to make a proper use of
the wonderful physical organism with which God had provided them. The whole body
is designed for action, not for inaction.
If the physical powers are not taxed equally with the mental, too much strain is
brought upon the latter. Unless every part of the human machinery performs its
allotted tasks, the mental powers cannot be used to their highest capability for any
length of time. Natural powers must be governed by natural laws, and the faculties
must be educated to work harmoniously and in accord with these laws. The teachers
in our schools can disregard none of these particulars without shirking responsibility.
Pride may lead them to seek for a high worldly standard of intellectual attainment that
students may make a brilliant show; but when it comes to solid acquirements-- those
which are essential to fit men and women for any and every emergency in practical
life--such students are only partially prepared to make life a success. Their defective
education often leads to failure in whatever branch of business they undertake.--5T
522 (1889).
Not to Escape Life's Burdens.--Let the youth be impressed with the thought that
education is not to teach them how to escape life's disagreeable tasks and heavy
burdens; that its purpose is to lighten the work by teaching better methods and higher
aims. Teach them that life's true aim is not to secure the greatest possible gain for
themselves but to honor their Maker in doing their part of the world's work and
lending a helpful hand to those weaker or more ignorant.--Ed 221, 222 (1903).
Harmonious Development Needed.--The right use of one's self is the most valuable
lesson that can be learned. We are not to do brain work and stop there, or make
physical exertion and stop there; we are to make the best use of the various parts that
compose the human machinery-- brain, bone, muscle, head, and heart.--YI, Apr 7,
1898. (SD 171).
Ignorance Does Not Increase Spirituality.--Young men should not enter upon the
work of explaining the Scriptures and lecturing upon the prophecies when they do not
have a knowledge of the important Bible truths they try to explain to others. They
may be deficient in the common branches of education and therefore fail to do the
amount of good they could do if they had had the advantages of a good school.
Ignorance will not increase the humility or spirituality of any professed follower of
Christ. The truths of the Divine Word can be best appreciated by an intellectual
Christian. Christ can be best glorified by those who serve Him intelligently. The great
object of education is to enable us to use the powers which God has given us in such a
manner as will best represent the religion of the Bible and promote the glory of God.--
3T 160 (1872).
Formation of Right Habits Important.--It should be the fixed purpose of every youth
to aim high in all his plans for lifework. Adopt for your government in all things the
standard that God's Word presents. This is the Christian's positive duty, and it should
be also his positive pleasure. Cultivate respect for yourself because you are Christ's
purchased possession.
Success in the formation of right habits, advancement in that that is noble and just,
will give you an influence that all will value. Live for something besides self.
If your motives are pure and unselfish, if you are ever looking for work which
somebody must do, if you are always on the alert to show kindly attentions and do
courteous deeds, you are unconsciously building your own monument. This is the
work that God calls upon all children and youth to do.--SpT Series B, No. 1, p 32,
July, 1900.
Need for Schools to Teach Agriculture.--Our schools could aid effectively in the
disposition of the unemployed masses. Thousands of helpless and starving beings,
whose numbers are daily swelling the ranks of the criminal classes, might achieve
self-support in a happy, healthy, independent life if they could be directed in skillful,
diligent labor in the tilling of the soil.--Ed 220 (1903).
Education Continues Through Life.--In the school of Christ, students are never
graduated. Among the pupils are both old and young. Those who give heed to the
instructions of the Divine Teacher constantly advance in wisdom, refinement, and
nobility of soul, and thus they are prepared to enter that higher school where
advancement will continue throughout eternity.--CT 51 (1913).
True Ambition.--Dear youth, what is the aim and purpose of your life? Are you
ambitious for education that you may have a name and position in the world? Have
you thoughts that you dare not express, that you may one day stand upon the summit
of intellectual greatness; that you may sit in deliberative and legislative councils and
help to enact laws for the nation? There is nothing wrong in these aspirations. You
may every one of you make your mark. You should be content with no mean
attainments. Aim high and spare no pains to reach the standard.-- RH, Aug 19, 1884.
(FE 82.)
The Most Essential Knowledge.--Let the youth advance as fast and as far as they can
in the acquisition of knowledge. ... And as they learn, let them impart their
knowledge. It is thus that their minds will acquire discipline and power. It is the use
they make of knowledge that determines the value of their education. To spend a long
time in study, with no effort to impart what is gained, often proves a hindrance rather
than a help to real development. In both the home and the school it should be the
student's effort to learn how to study and how to impart the knowledge gained.
Whatever his calling, he is to be both a learner and a teacher as long as life shall last.--
MH 402 (1905).
The most essential education for our youth today to gain, and that which will fit them
for the higher grades of the school above, is an education that will teach them how to
reveal the will of God to the world.--RH, Oct 24, 1907. (FE 512.)
The essential knowledge is a knowledge of God and of Him whom He has sent.
Every child and every youth should have a knowledge of himself. He should
understand the physical habitation that God has given him and the laws by which it is
kept in health. All should be thoroughly grounded in the common branches of
education. And they should have industrial training that will make them men and
women of practical ability, fitted for the duties of everyday life. To this should be
added training and practical experience in various lines of missionary effort.--MH 402
(1905).
What 'University Course' Can Equal This?--The great day of the Lord is near... and a
world is to be warned.... Thousands of the youth ... should be giving themselves to
this work.... Let every Christian educator ... encourage and assist the youth under his
care in gaining a preparation to join the ranks. There is no line of work in which it is
possible for the youth to receive greater benefit.... They are co-workers with the
angels; rather, they are the human agencies through whom the angels accomplish their
mission. Angels speak through their voices, and work by their hands. And the human
workers, cooperating with heavenly agencies, have the benefit of their education and
experience. As a means of education, what university course can equal this?--Ed 270,
271 (1903).
To Impart Knowledge Is Essential.--It is necessary to their complete education that
students be given time to do missionary work--time to become acquainted with the
spiritual needs of the families in the community around them. They should not be so
loaded down with studies that they have no time to use the knowledge they have
acquired. They should be encouraged to make earnest missionary effort for those in
error, becoming acquainted with them and taking to them the truth. By working in
humility, seeking wisdom from Christ, praying and watching unto prayer, they may
give to others the knowledge that has enriched their lives.--CT 545, 546 (1913).