The Lord Jesus came to our world to save men and women
of a nationalities. He died just as much for the colored
people as for the white race. Jesus came to shed light over
the whole world. At the beginning of His ministry He declared
His mission: "The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because
he hath anointed me to preach the gospel to the poor; he
hath sent me to heal the brokenhearted, to preach deliverance
to the captives, and recovering of sight to the blind, to
set at liberty them that are bruised, to preach the acceptable
year of the Lord."
The Redeemer of the world was of humble parentage. He,
the Majesty of heaven, the King of glory, humbled Himself
to accept humanity, and then He chose a life of poverty
and toiL "For your sakes he became poor, that ye through
his poverty might be rich." When one came saying, "I
will follow thee whithersoever thou goest," Jesus answered
him, "The foxes have holes, and the birds of the air
have nests; but the Son of man hath not where to lay his
head." He, the Majesty of heaven, depended upon the
generosity of His followers.
Jesus did not seek the admiration or applause of the world.
He commanded no army, He ruled no earthly kingdom. He passed
by the wealthy and honored of the world. He did not associate
with the leaders of the nation. He dwelt among the lowly
of the earth. To all appearances he was merely a humble
man, with few friends. Thus He sought to correct the worlds
false standard of judging the value of men. He showed that
they are not to be estimated by their outward appearance.
Their moral worth is not determined by their worldly possessions,
their real estate or bank stock. It is the humble, contrite
heart that God values. With Him there is no respect of persons.
The attributes that He prizes most are purity and love,
and these are possessed only by the Christian.
Jesus did not choose His disciples from the learned lawyers,
the rulers, the scribes, and Pharisees. He passed them by
because they felt whole, as many feel in this age, and prided
themselves on their learning and position. They were fixed
in their traditions and superstitions, teaching for doctrines
the commandments of men. He who could read all hearts chose
poor fishermen who were willing to be taught. He gave them
no promise of large salary or worldly honor, but told them
they should be partakers with Him in His sufferings. Jesus
while in this world ate with publicans and sinners, and
mingled with the common people, not to become low and earthly
with them, but in order by precept and example to present
to them right principles, to lift them up from their low
habits and manners. In all this He set us an example, that
we should follow in His steps.
Those who have a religious experience that opens their
hearts to Jesus, will not cherish pride, but will feel that
they are under obligation to God to be missionaries as was
Jesus. They will seek to save that which was lost. They
will not~ in Pharisaical pride and haughtiness, withdraw
themselves from any class of humanity, but will feel with
the apostle Paul, "I am debtor both to the Greek, and
to the barbarians; both to the wise, and to the unwise."
A Delicate Matter
After my severe illness one year ago, many things which
the Lord had presented to me seemed lost to my mind, but
they have since been repeated. I know that that which I
now speak will bring me into conflict. This I do not covet,
for the conflict has seemed to be continuous of late years;
but I do not mean to live a coward or die a coward, leaving
my work undone. I must follow in my Masters footsteps. It
has become fashionable to look down upon the poor, and upon
the colored race in particular. But Jesus, the Master, was
poor, and He sympathizes with the poor, the discarded, the
oppressed, and declares that every insult shown to them
is as if shown to Himself. I am more and more surprised
as I see those who claim to be children of God possessing
so little of the sympathy, tenderness, and love which actuated
Christ. Would that every church, North and South, were imbued
with the spirit of our Lords teaching.
While at St. Louis a year ago, as I knelt in prayer, these
words were presented to me as if written with a pen of fire:
"All ye are brethren." The Spirit of God rested
upon me in a wonderful manner, and matters were opened to
me in regard to the church at St. Louis and in other places.
The spirit and words of some in regard to members of the
church were an offense to God. They were closing the door
of their hearts to Jesus. Among those in Sr. Louis who believe
the truth there are colored people who are true and faithful,
precious in the sight of the God of heaven, and they should
have just as much respect as any of Gods children. Those
who have spoken harshly to them or have despised them have
despised the purchase of the blood of Christ, and they need
the transforming grace of Christ in their own hearts, that
they may have the pitying tenderness of Jesus toward those
who love God with all the fervor of which they themselves
are capable. The color of the skin does not determine character
in the heavenly courts.
"If ye call on the Father, who without respect of
persons judgeth according to every mans work, pass the time
of your sojourning here in fear: forasmuch as ye know that
ye were not redeemed with corruptible things, as silver
and gold, from your vain conversation received by tradition
from your fathers; but with the precious blood of Christ,
as of a lamb without blemish and without spot. .
Seeing ye have purified your souls in obeying the truth
through the Spirit unto unfeigned love of the brethren,
see that ye love one another with a pure heart fervently."
"Ye have put off the old man with his deeds; and have
put on the new man, which is renewed in knowledge after
the image of him that created him: wherefore there is neither
Greek nor Jew, circumcision nor uncircumcision, Barbarian,
Scythian, bond nor free: but Christ is all, and in all.
Put on therefore, as the elect of God, holy and beloved,
bowels of mercies, kindness, humbleness of mind, meekness,
longsuffering."
"Who," says Paul, "maketh thee to differ?"
The God of the white man is the God of the black man, and
the Lord declares that His love for the least of His children
exceeds that of a mother for her beloved child. Look at
that mother: the sick child, the one afflicted, the one
born a cripple, or with some other physical infirmity--how
the mother labors to give him every advantage! The best
food, the softest pillow, and the tenderest nursing are
for him. The love bestowed upon him is strong and deep--a
love such as is not given to beauty, talent, or any other
natural gift. As soon as a mother sees reason for others
to regard her child with aversion or contempt, does she
not increase her tenderness as if to shield him from the
worlds rude touch? "Can a mother forget her sucking
child . . . ? yea, they may forget, yet I will not forget
thee." 0 what impartial love the Lord Jesus gives to
those who love Him! The Lords eye is upon all His creatures;
He loves them all, and makes no difference between white
and black, except that He has a special, tender pity for
those who are called to bear a greater burden than others.
Those who love God and believe on Christ as their Redeemer,
while they must meet the trials and the difficulties that
lie in their path, should yet with a cheerful spirit accept
their life as it is, considering that God above regards
these things, and for all that the world neglects to bestow,
He will Himself make up to them in the best of favors.
The parable of Dives, the rich man, and Lazarus, the poor
beggar who feared God, is presented before the world as
a lesson to all, both rich and poor, as long as time shall
last. Dives is represented as lifting up his eyes in hell,
being in torments, and seeing Abraham afar off, and Lazarus
in his bosom,--"he cried and said, Father Abraham,
have mercy on me, and send Lazarus, that he may dip the
tip of his finger in water, and cool my tongue; for I am
tormented in this flame. But Abraham said, Son, remember
that thou in thy lifetime receivedsr thy good things, and
likewise Lazarus evil things; but now he is comforted, and
thou art tormented."
Christ Paid One Price for All
When the sinner is converted he receives the Holy Spirit,
that makes him a child of God, and fits him for the society
of the redeemed and the angelic host. He is made a joint
heir with Christ. Whoever of the human family give themselves
to Christ, whoever hear the truth and obey it, become children
of one family. The ignorant and the wise, the rich and the
poor, the heathen and the slave, white or black--Jesus paid
the purchase money for their souls. If they believe on Him,
His cleansing blood is applied to them. The black mans name
is written in the book of life beside the white mans. All
are one in Christ. Birth, station, nationality, or color
cannot elevate or degrade men. The character makes the man.
If a red man, a Chinaman, or an African gives his heart
to God, in obedience and faith, Jesus loves him none the
less for his color. He calls him his well-beloved brother.
The day is coming when the kings and the lordly men of the
earth would be glad to exchange places with the humblest
African who has laid hold on the hope of the gospel. To
all who are overcomers through the blood of the Lamb, the
invitation will be given, "Come, ye blessed of my Father,
inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation
of the world." Arranged on the right and left of the
throne of God are the long columns of the heavenly host,
who touch the golden harps, and the songs of welcome and
of praise to God and the Lamb ring through the heavenly
courts. "He that hath an ear, let him hear what the
Spirit saith unto the churches; To him that overcometh will
I give to eat of the tree of life, which is in the midst
of the paradise of God."
Among what are called the higher classes, there is a demand
for a form of Christianity suited to their fine tastes;
but this dass will not grow up to the full stature of men
and women in Christ until they know God and Jesus Christ
whom He has sent. The heavenly intelligences rejoice to-do
the will of God in preaching the gospel to the poor. In
the announcement which the Saviour made in the synagogue
at Nazareth, He put a stern rebuke upon those who attach
so much importance to color or caste, and refuse to be satisfied
with such a type of Christianity as Christ accepts. The
same price was paid for the salvation of the colored man
as for that of the white man, and the slights put upon the
colored people by many who claim to be redeemed by the blood
of the Lamb, and who therefore acknowledge themselves debtors
to Christ, misrepresent Jesus, and reveal that selfishness,
tradition, and prejudice pollute the soul. They are not
sanctified through the truth. Those who slight a brother
because of his color are slighting Christ.
I call upon every church in our land to look well to your
own souls. "Examine yourselves, whether ye be in the
faith; prove your own selves. Know ye not your own selves,
how that Jesus Christ is in you, except ye be reprobates?"
God makes no distinction between the North and the South.
Whatever may be your prejudices, your wonderful prudence,
do not lose sight of this fact, that unless you put on Christ,
and His Spirit dwells in you, you are slaves of sin and
of Satan. Many who claim to be children of God are children
of the wicked one, and have all his passions, his prejudices,
his evil spirit, his unlovely traits of character. But the
soul that is indeed transformed will not despise any one
whom Christ has purchased with His own blood.
Men may have both hereditary and cultivated prejudices,
but when the love of Jesus fills the heart, and they become
one with Christ, they will have the same spirit that He
had. If a colored brother sits by their side, they will
not be offended or despise him. They are journeying to the
same heaven, and will be seated at the same table to eat
bread in the kingdom of God. If Jesus is abiding in our
hearts we cannot despise the colored man who has the same
Saviour abiding in his heart. '~"hen these unchristian
prejudices are broken down, more earnest effort will be
put forth to do missionary work among the colored race.
When the Hebrew people were suffering cruel oppression
under the hand of their taskmasters, the Lord looked upon
them, and He called Israel His son. He bade Moses go to
Pharaoh with the message, "Israel is my son, even my
firstborn. And I say unto thee, Let my son go, that he may
serve me." The Lord did not wait until His people went
forth and stood in triumph on the shores of the Red Sea
before He called Israel His son, but while they were under
oppression, degraded, downtrodden, suffering all that the
power and the invention of the Egyptians could impose to
make their lives bitter and to destroy them, then God undertakes
their cause and declares to Pharaoh, "Israel is my
son, even my firstborn."
What thoughts and feelings did the message arouse in Pharaoh?
"This people, my slaves, those whom the lowest of my
people despise, the God of such a people I care not for,
neither will I let Israel go." But the word of the
Lord will not return unto Him void; it will accomplish the
thing whereunto it is sent. The Lord speaks in no uncertain
manner. He says, "Let my son go, that he may serve
me: and if thou refuse to let him go, behold, I will slay
thy son, even thy firstborn."
God cares no less for the souls of the African race that
might be won to serve Him than He cared for Israel. He requires
far more of His people than they have given Him in missionary
work among the people of the South of all classes, and especially
among the colored race. Are we not under even greater obligation
to labor for the colored people than for those who have
been more highly favored? Who is it that held these people
in servitude? Who kept them in ignorance, and pursued a
course to debase and brutalize them, forcing them to disregard
the law of marriage, breaking up the family relation, tearing
wife from husband, and husband from wife? If the race is
degraded, if they are repulsive in habits and manners, who
made them so? Is there not much due to them from the white
people? After so great a wrong has been done them, should
not an earnest effort be made to lift them up? The truth
must be carried to them. They have souls to save as well
as we.
At the General Conference of 1889, resolutions were presented
in regard to the color line. Such action is not called for.
Let not men take the place of God, but stand aside in awe,
and let God work upon human hearts, both white and black,
in His own way. He will adjust all these perplexing questions.
We need not prescribe a definite plan of working. Leave
an opportunity for God to do something. We should be careful
not to strengthen prejudices that ought to have died just
as soon as Christ redeemed the soul from the bondage of
sin.
Sin rests upon us as a church because we have not made
greater effort for the salvation of souls among the colored
people. It will always be a difficult matter to deal with
the prejudices of the white people in the South and do missionary
work for the colored race. But the way this matter has been
treated by some is an offense to God. We need not expect
that all will be accomplished in the South that God would
do until in our missionary efforts we place this question
on the ground of principle, and let those who accept the
truth be educated to be Bible Christians, working according
to Christs order. You have no license from God to exclude
the colored people from your places of worship. Treat them
as Christs property, which they are, just as much as yourselves.
They should hold membership in the church with the white
brethren. Every effort should be made to wipe out the terrible
wrong which has been done them. At the same time we must
not carry things to extremes and run into fanaticism on
this question. Some would think it right to throw down every
partition wall and intermarry with the colored people, but
this is not the right thing to teach or to practice. ...
God has children among the colored people all over the
land. They need to be enlightened. There are unpromising
ones, it is true, but you will find similar degradation
among the white people; but even among the lower classes
there are souls who will embrace the truth. Some will not
be steadfast. Feelings and habits that have been confirmed
by lifelong practices will be hard to correct; it will not
be easy to implant ideas of purity and holiness, refinement
and elevation. But God regards the capacity of every man,
He marks the surroundings, and sees how these have formed
the character, and He pities these souls.
Is it not time for us to live so fully in the light of
Gods countenance that we who receive so many favors and
blessings from Him may know how to treat those less favored,
not working from the worlds standpoint, but from the Bible
standpoint? Is it not right in this line that Christian
effort is most needed? Is it not here that our influence
should be brought to bear against the customs and practices
of the world? Should it not be the work of the white people
to elevate the standard of character among the colored race,
to teach them how Christians should live, by exemplifying
the Spirit of Christ, showing that we are one brotherhood?
Those who have been favored with opportunities of education
and culture, who have had every advantage of religious influence,
will be expected of God to possess pure and holy characters
in accordance with the gifts bestowed. But have they rightly
improved their advantages? We know they have not. Let these
privileged ones make the most of their blessings, and realize
that they are thus placed under greater obligation to labor
for the good of others.
God will accept many more workers from the humble walks
of life if they will fully consecrate, themselves to His
service. Men and women should be coming up to carry the
truth into all the highways and byways of life. Not all
can go through a long course of education, but if they are
consecrated to God and learn of Him, many can without this
do much to bless others. Thousands would be accepted if
they would give themselves to God. Not all who labor in
this line should depend upon the conferences for support.
Let those who can do so give their time and what ability
they have, let them be messengers of Gods grace, their hearts
throbbing in unison with Christs great heart of love, their
ears open to hear the Macedonian cry.
The whole church needs to be imbued with the missionary
spirit, then there will be many to work unselfishly in various
ways as they can, without being salaried. There is altogether
too much dependence on machinery, on mechanical working.
Machinery is good in its place, but do not allow it to become
too complicated. I tell you that in many cases it has retarded
the work, and kept out laborers who in their line could
have accomplished far more than has been done by the minister
who depends on sermonizing more than on ministry. Young
men need to catch the missionary spirit, to be thoroughly
imbued with the spirit of the message. "Put ye on the
Lord Jesus Christ, and make no provision for the flesh to
fulfil the lusts thereof." Work in any capacity, work
where God leads you, in the line best suited to your talents
and best adapted to reach classes that have hitherto been
sadly neglected. This kind of labor will develop intellectual
and moral power and adaptability to the work.
You must have the grace and love of God in order to succeed.
The strength and spirituality of the people of God are manifest
by the distinctness of the line of demarcation which separates
them from the world. The people of the world are characterized
by love for earthly things; they act selfishly, regardless
of the principles which Christ has set forth in His life.
Christians will manifest the self-sacrificing spirit of
Christ in their work, in connection with every branch of
the cause. They will do this heartily, not by halves. They
will not study their own aggrandizement nor manifest respect
of persons. They will not, cannot, live in luxury and self-indulgence
while there are suffering ones around them. They cannot
by their practice sanction any phase of oppression or injustice
to the least child of humanity. They are to be like Christ,
to relinquish all selfish delights, all unholy passions,
all that love of applause which is the food of the world.
They will be willing to be humble and unknown, and to sacrifice
even life itself for Christs sake. By a well-ordered life
and godly conversation they will condemn the folly, the
impenitence, the idolatry, the iniquitous practices of the
world.
The converting power of God must work a transformation
of character in many who claim to believe the present truth,
or they cannot fulfill the purpose of God. They are hearers
but not doers of the word. Pure, unworldly benevolence will
be developed in all who make Christ their personal Saviour.
There needs to be far less of self and more of Jesus. The
church of Christ is ordained of God that its members shall
be representatives of Christs character. He says, 'You have
given yourselves to Me, and I give you to the world. I am
the light of the world; I present you to the world as My
representatives." As Christ in the fullest sense represents
the Father, so we are to represent Christ. Let none of those
who name the name of Christ be cowards in His cause. For
Christs sake stand as if looking within the open portals
of the city of God.--E. G. White, Battle Creek, Mich., March
20, 1891.