Chapter 53—Student Opportunities


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  1. Chapter 53—Student Opportunities
  2. Students, co-operate with your teachers. As you do this, you
  3. give them hope and courage. You are helping them, and at the
  4. same time you are helping yourselves to advance. Remember that
  5. it rests largely with you whether your teachers stand on vantage
  6. ground, their work an acknowledged success. In the highest sense
  7. you are to be learners, seeing God behind the teacher, and the teacher
  8. co-operating with Him.
  9. Your opportunities for work are fast passing. You have no time
  10. to spend in self-pleasing. Only as you strive earnestly to succeed
  11. will you gain true happiness. Precious are the opportunities offered
  12. you during the time you spend in school. Make your student life
  13. as perfect as possible. You will pass over the way but once. And it
  14. rests with you yourself whether your work shall be a success or a
  15. failure. As you succeed in gaining a knowledge of the Bible, you
  16. are storing up treasures to impart.
  17. Helping Others
  18. If you have a fellow student who is backward, explain to him
  19. the lesson that he does not understand. This will aid your own
  20. understanding. Use simple words; state your ideas in language that
  21. is clear and easy to be understood.
  22. By helping your fellow student, you help your teachers. And
  23. often one whose mind is apparently stolid will catch ideas more
  24. quickly from a fellow student than from a teacher. This is the cooperation
  25. that Christ commends. The great Teacher stands beside [184]
  26. you, helping you to help the one who is backward.
  27. In your school life you may have opportunity to tell the poor
  28. and ignorant of the wonderful truths of God’s word. Improve every
  29. such opportunity. The Lord will bless every moment spent in this
  30. way—Testimonies for the Church 7:275, 276.
  31. 167
  32. 168 Messages to Young People
  33. Thorough Mastery of Fundamentals
  34. Never rest satisfied with a low standard. In attending school,
  35. be sure that you have in view a noble, holy object. Go because
  36. you desire to fit yourselves for service in some part of the Lord’s
  37. vineyard. Do all that you can to attain this object. You can do more
  38. for yourselves than any one can do for you. And if you do all that
  39. you can for yourselves, what a burden you will lift from the principal
  40. and the teachers!
  41. Before attempting to study the higher branches of literary knowledge,
  42. be sure that you thoroughly understand the simple rules of
  43. English grammar, and have learned to read and write and spell correctly....
  44. Do not spend time in learning that which will be of little use to
  45. you in your after life. Instead of reaching out for a knowledge of the
  46. classics, learn first to speak the English language correctly. Learn
  47. how to keep accounts. Gain a knowledge of those lines of study that
  48. will help you to be useful wherever you are.—Counsels to Parents,
  49. [185] Teachers, and Students, 218-219.
  50. Chapter 54—Training for Service
  51. Considering the light that God has given, it is marvelous that
  52. there are not scores of young men and women inquiring, “Lord,
  53. what wilt Thou have me to do?” It is a perilous mistake to imagine
  54. that unless a young man has decided to give himself to the ministry,
  55. no special effort is required to fit him for the work of God. Whatever
  56. may be your calling, it is essential that you improve your abilities
  57. by diligent study.
  58. Young men and women should be urged to appreciate the heavensent
  59. blessings of opportunities to become well-disciplined and intelligent.
  60. They should take advantage of the schools that have been
  61. established for the purpose of imparting the best of knowledge. It
  62. is sinful to be indolent and negligent in regard to obtaining an education.
  63. Time is short, and therefore, because the Lord is soon to
  64. come to close the scenes of earth’s history, there is all the greater
  65. necessity of improving present opportunities and privileges.
  66. Consecrate Ability to God
  67. Young men and young women should place themselves in our
  68. schools, in the channel where knowledge and discipline may be
  69. obtained. They should consecrate their ability to God, become
  70. diligent Bible students, that they may be fortified against erroneous
  71. doctrine, and not be led away by the error of the wicked; for it is by
  72. diligent searching of the Bible that we obtain a knowledge of what
  73. is truth. By the practice of the truth we already know, increased light [186]
  74. will shine upon us from the holy Scriptures....
  75. Those who are truly consecrated to God will not enter the work
  76. prompted by the same motive which leads men to engage in worldly
  77. business, merely for the sake of a livelihood, but they will enter the
  78. work allowing no worldly consideration to control them, realizing
  79. that the cause of God is sacred.
  80. 169
  81. 170 Messages to Young People
  82. Preparation for Future Contingencies
  83. The world is to be warned, and no soul should rest satisfied with a
  84. superficial knowledge of truth. You know not to what responsibility
  85. you may be called. You know not where you may be called upon to
  86. give your witness of truth. Many will have to stand in the legislative
  87. courts; some will have to stand before kings and before the learned
  88. of the earth, to answer for their faith.
  89. Those who have only a superficial understanding of truth will not
  90. be able clearly to expound the Scriptures, and give definite reasons
  91. for their faith. They will become confused, and will not be workmen
  92. that need not to be ashamed. Let no one imagine that he has no need
  93. to study because he is not to preach in the sacred desk. You know
  94. not what God may require of you.
  95. It is a lamentable fact that the advancement of the cause is hindered
  96. by the dearth of educated laborers who have fitted themselves
  97. for positions of trust. The Lord will accept of thousands to labor
  98. in His great harvest field, but many have failed to fit themselves
  99. [187] for the work. But every one who has espoused the cause of Christ,
  100. who has offered himself as a soldier in the Lord’s army, should
  101. place himself where he may have faithful drill. Religion has meant
  102. altogether too little to the professed followers of Christ; for it is not
  103. the will of God that any one should remain ignorant when wisdom
  104. and knowledge have been placed within reach.—Fundamentals of
  105. Christian Education, 216, 217.
  106. Balanced by Right Principles
  107. It is not true that brilliant young men always make the greatest
  108. success. How often men of talent and education have been placed
  109. in positions of trust, and have proved failures. Their glitter had the
  110. appearance of gold, but when it was tried it proved to be but tinsel
  111. and dross. They made a failure of their work through unfaithfulness.
  112. They were not industrious and persevering, and did not go to the
  113. bottom of things. They were not willing to begin at the bottom of
  114. the ladder, and with patient toil ascend round after round till they
  115. reached the top. They walked in the sparks (their bright flashes of
  116. thought) of their own kindling. They did not depend on the wisdom
  117. Training for Service 171
  118. which God alone can give. Their failure was not because they did not
  119. have a chance, but because they were not sober-minded. They did
  120. not feel that their educational advantages were of value to them, and
  121. so did not advance as they might have advanced in the knowledge
  122. of religion and science. Their mind and character were not balanced
  123. by high principles of right.—Fundamentals of Christian Education,
  124. 193.

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