1891 - 1899
April
5, 1901
Remarks
by Mrs. E. G. White EGW.
That is the right principle.
Mrs. E. G. White: Amen!
It is the Lord’s money.
Mrs. E. G. White: I am thankful that there
is to be a time when the mists will be cleared away. I hope that this time has
begun here. We want the mists here to be cleared away. I want to say that from
the light given to me by God, there should have been years ago organizations
such as are now proposed. When we first met in Conference, it was thought that
the General Conference should extend over the whole world. But this is not in
God’s order. Conferences must be organized in different localities, and it will
be for the health of the different Conferences to have it thus. This does not
mean that we are to cut ourselves apart from one another, and be as separate
atoms. Every Conference is to touch every other Conference, and be in harmony
with every other Conference. God wants us to talk for this, and he wants us to
act for this. We are the people of God, who are to be separate from the world.
We are to stand as representatives of sacred truth.
While on my journey to Battle Creek, as I
have visited different places, I at Los Angeles, asked, Why do you not do this?
and, Why do you not do that? And the response has been, “That is what we want
to do, but we must first get the consent of the Board, the members of which are
in Oakland.” But, I asked, have you not men here with common sense. If you have
not, then by all means transport them. You show great deficiency by having your
Board hundreds of miles away. That is not the wisdom of God. There are men
right where you are who have minds, who have judgment, who need to exercise
their brains, who need to be learning how to do things, how to take up
aggressive work, how to annex new territory. They are not to be dependent on a
Conference at Battle Creek or a Board at Oakland.
At the Health Retreat at St. Helena there
was something which greatly needed to be done, and I called the leading men
together, and urged upon them the importance of doing this thing. But they
said, “We have no authority to act. We must first communicate with the Board.”
“What do you mean,” I asked, “by acting in such a childish manner? Have you no
men here who can be put in a position of responsibility, to decide such
questions? If you have not, then do your best at once to find those who can
fill such places here. We must have some one right at hand to whom we can
speak. The Board must not be at San Francisco or Oakland, but here. They must
be where we can counsel with them at once, in cases of necessity. Here is
something that must be done immediately, and even if you have no official
authority, take off your coats, and go to work to do that which must be done
for the health of the institution.” I relate this to show you how foolish it is
to have a Board miles and miles away, instead of close at hand.
In regard to the work in the South, the
arrangements which are being made for that field are in accordance with the
light which has been given me. God desires the Southern field to have a
conference of its own. The work there must be done on different lines from the
work in any other field. The laborers there will have to work on peculiar
lines, nevertheless the work will be done.
The Southern field must be organized into a
Conference. The lack of interest that has been manifested in that field has
made it doubly sure that it must be thus. The Lord is going to enter the South;
he is going to work there. His salvation is to be revealed, and the very places
in which it has been most difficult to make advancement, are to be the places
where the angels of the Lord will go before us. The Lord told the children of
Israel that they should have gone up and possessed the land, and he would have
given them possession. So he says to us. We are to enter every place in which
we can find standing-room. There we are to plant the standard of truth. There we
are to leave a monument which every week will proclaim. “The seventh day is the
Sabbath of the Lord thy God.” The Lord declares that when we diligently observe
his Sabbath, it is a sign between him and us, that we may know that he is the
Lord that doth sanctify us. This knowledge is of more value to us than gold or
silver or precious stones.
The workers in the South are not to depend
upon the Conference at Battle Creek. They are to hang their helpless souls on
Jesus Christ. God can work for men today as he worked for Daniel. He gave
Daniel and his companions wisdom and understanding, and he will give wisdom and
understanding to the workers who, with clean hands and willing minds, with
self-denial and self-sacrifice, go into the Southern field to clear the King’s
highway, to take up the stumbling blocks, and prepare the way for the Lord’s work
to be done. If they will seek for the wisdom of God, if they will cling in
humility to the mighty One, they will receive heaven’s blessing. I said to my
son, “If you will only work in and through the Holy Spirit, you will have a
Comforter with you all the time. It does not matter what this one or that one
may say. You are not amenable to any man. You are amenable to God. He has given
you your work, and he is making a way for you so that you can work in his
name.”
When I was in Vicksburg, I was so pleased
to see in the congregation which assembled on the Sabbath, men of intelligence
and real moral worth. I wanted to leave the room; for I felt that I should have
to weep. I seldom shed a tear, not even when my dead are before me. Their work
is done, and they are at rest. But when I see something that makes my heart
glad, the tears will come.
I want to tell you that I feel hopeful in
God regarding this proposition concerning the Southern work. There is to be a
great work done in the South. For several years I have been waiting and watching
for this work. It has been delayed, but now it has been started, and I believe
that it has been started right. And to those who do not believe this, I would
say, Do not talk unbelief. Put on your armor; put on the gospel shoes; and go
to the South and see the work that is being done.
My heart is greatly encouraged in God. I
have rolled off the burden that was upon my soul. I feel, brethren and sisters,
that we are going to take hold together in the name of the Lord, and seek with
all our power to restore, to heal the wounds which have been inflicted on the
cause, by a deficient knowledge of what God is to us, and of our relation to
him.
We want to understand that there are no
gods in our Conference. There are to be no kings here, and no kings in any
Conference that is formed. “All ye are brethren.” Let us work on the platform
of humility, seeking the Lord earnestly that his light may shine into our
hearts, and that the arrangements we make may be after God’s order. I thank God
that we are today in the presence of the whole heavenly universe. While we are
making these arrangements, all heaven is witnessing to them. If the veil could
be removed, if our ears could be opened, we would see the holy angels and hear
a song of triumph ascending to God, because advance is to be made in the
Southern field. This field, because it is a hard one, has stood with little
help and with little sympathy. Those who work there must put on the
righteousness of Christ. He says, My righteousness shall go before you, and the
glory of God shall be your rearward.
New Conferences must be formed. It was in
the order of God that the Union Conference was organized in Australasia. The
Lord God of Israel will link us all together. The organizing of new Conferences
is not to separate us. It is to bind us together. The Conferences that are
formed are to cling mightily to the Lord, so that through them he can reveal
his power, making them excellent representations of fruit-bearing. “By their
fruits ye shall know them.”
O, if ever there was a people who needed to
be imbued with the Spirit of the living God, we need to be. At this time we
must see something done which we have not seen for a long time. There must be a
scattering from Battle Creek. Those who are here should learn all they can, so
that when they go to other places, they can work for the Lord. He has wisdom
for you, even as he had for Daniel.
The Lord wants to bind those at this
Conference heart to heart. No man is to say, “I am a god, and you must do as I
say.” From the beginning to the end this is wrong. There is to be an individual
work. God says, “Let him take hold of my strength that he may make peace with
me, and he shall make peace with me.”
Remember that God can give wisdom to those
who handle his work. It is not necessary to send thousands of miles to Battle
Creek for advice, and then have to wait weeks before an answer can be received.
Those who are right on the ground are to decide what shall be done. You know
what you have to wrestle with, but those who are thousands of miles away do not
know.
It is best for us to put our trust in the
God of Israel. We are to feel that it is time for us to possess new territory,
time for us to feel that we must break the bonds which have kept us from going
forward. Young men, young women, there is a work for you to do. Just as surely
as you do this work will you see the salvation of God. Close the windows of the
soul earthward, and open them heavenward, and you will receive the rich
blessings of heaven, and will at last gain a crown of immortality.
Mrs. E. G. White: I want to say a word. As
it has been presented before me, the Southern field has been so long neglected
that the cries of distress have gone up to heaven, and there never can be a
clearance of our people until that field shall have fourfold more than any
other field should have. They must have it, because they have nothing with
which to carry forward their work. From the light that God has given me, our
people will never stand as they should stand before Him, until they redeem the
past.