Chapter 69—Acceptable Service


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  1. Chapter 69—Acceptable Service
  2. In His infinite mercy and love God has given us light from His
  3. word, and Christ says to us, “Freely ye have received, freely give.”
  4. Let the light God has given you shine forth to those in darkness. As
  5. you do this, heavenly angels will be beside you, helping you win
  6. souls for Christ....
  7. Dear young friends, remember that it is not necessary to be an
  8. ordained minister in order to serve the Lord. There are many ways
  9. of working for Christ. Human hands may never have been laid on
  10. you in ordination, but God can give you fitness for His service. He
  11. can work through you to the saving of souls. If, having learned in
  12. the school of Christ, you are meek and lowly in heart, He will give
  13. you words to speak for Him....
  14. Our Relation to Mistakes
  15. Do all in your power to gain perfection; but do not think that
  16. because you make mistakes you are excluded from God’s service.
  17. The Lord knows our frame; He remembers that we are dust. As you
  18. use faithfully the talents God has given you, you will gain knowledge
  19. that will make you dissatisfied with self. You will see the need of
  20. sifting away harmful habits, lest by a wrong example you injure
  21. others.
  22. Work diligently, giving to others the truth so precious to you.
  23. Then when there are vacancies to be filled, you will hear the words,
  24. “Come up higher.” You may be reluctant to respond; but move [227]
  25. forward in faith, bringing into God’s work a fresh, honest zeal.
  26. The secret of winning souls can be learned only from the great
  27. Teacher. As the dew and the still showers fall gently on the withering
  28. plant, so our words are to fall gently and lovingly on the souls we
  29. are seeking to win. We are not to wait till opportunities come to us;
  30. we are to seek for them, keeping the heart uplifted in prayer that
  31. God may help us to speak the right word at the right time. When an
  32. 205
  33. 206 Messages to Young People
  34. opportunity presents itself, let no excuse lead you to neglect it; for
  35. its improvement may mean the salvation of a soul from death.—The
  36. Youth’s Instructor, February 6, 1902.
  37. The Highest Work
  38. The work above all work,—the business above all others which
  39. should draw and engage the energies of the soul,—is the work of
  40. saving souls for whom Christ has died. Make this the main, the
  41. important work of your life. Make it your special life work. Cooperate
  42. with Christ in this grand and noble work, and become home
  43. and foreign missionaries. Be ready and efficient to work at home or
  44. in far-off climes for the saving of souls. Work the works of God and
  45. demonstrate your faith in your Saviour by toiling for others. O that
  46. young and old were thoroughly converted to God, and would take
  47. up the duty that lies next them, and work as they have opportunity,
  48. becoming laborers together with God!—The Youth’s Instructor, May
  49. [228] 4, 1893.
  50. Chapter 70—Faithfulness in Service
  51. Those who are unfaithful in the least of temporal affairs will be
  52. unfaithful in responsibilities of greater importance. They will rob
  53. God, and fail of meeting the claims of the divine law. They will
  54. not realize that their talents belong to God and should be devoted to
  55. His service. Those who do nothing for their employers except that
  56. which is commanded them, when they know that the prosperity of
  57. the work depends on some extra exertion on their part, will fail to
  58. be accounted faithful servants. There are many things not specified
  59. that wait to be done, that come directly under the notice of the one
  60. employed.
  61. Leaks and losses occur that might be prevented if painstaking
  62. diligence and unselfish effort were manifested, if the principles of
  63. love enjoined upon us by Jesus were carried out in the life of those
  64. who profess His name. But many are working in the cause of God
  65. who are registered as “eye-servants.”
  66. Unfaithfulness Recorded
  67. It is the most abhorrent form of selfishness that leads the worker
  68. to neglect the improvement of time, the care of property, because
  69. he is not directly under the eye of the master. But do such workers
  70. imagine that their neglects are not noticed, their unfaithfulness
  71. not recorded? Could their eyes be opened, they would see that a
  72. Watcher looks on, and all their carelessness is recorded in the books
  73. of heaven. [229]
  74. Those who are unfaithful to the work of God are lacking in principle;
  75. their motives are not of a character to lead them to choose
  76. the right under all circumstances. The servants of God are to feel
  77. at all times that they are under the eye of their employer. He who
  78. watched the sacrilegious feast of Belshazzar is present in all our
  79. institutions, in the counting-room of the merchant, in the private
  80. workshop; and the bloodless hand is as surely recording your ne-
  81. 207
  82. 208 Messages to Young People
  83. glect as it recorded the awful judgment of the blasphemous king.
  84. Belshazzar’s condemnation was written in words of fire, “Thou art
  85. weighed in the balances, and art found wanting”; and if you fail to
  86. fulfill your God-given obligations your condemnation will be the
  87. same.
  88. True Motives in Service
  89. There are many who profess to be Christians who are not united
  90. with Christ. Their daily life, their spirit, testifies that Christ is not
  91. formed within, the hope of glory. They cannot be depended upon,
  92. they cannot be trusted. They are anxious to reduce their service to
  93. the minimum of effort, and at the same time exact the highest of
  94. wages. The name “servant” applies to every man; for we are all
  95. servants, and it will be well for us to see what mold we are taking
  96. on. Is it the mold of unfaithfulness, or of fidelity?
  97. Is it the disposition generally among servants to do as much
  98. as possible? Is it not rather the prevalent fashion to slide through
  99. the work as quickly, as easily, as possible, and obtain the wages at
  100. [230] as little cost to themselves as they can? The object is not to be as
  101. thorough as possible but to get the remuneration. Those who profess
  102. to be the servants of Christ should not forget the injunction of the
  103. apostle Paul, “Servants, obey in all things your masters according
  104. to the flesh; not with eyeservice, as menpleasers; but in singleness
  105. of heart, fearing God: and whatsoever ye do, do it heartily, as to the
  106. Lord, and not unto men; knowing that of the Lord ye shall receive
  107. the reward of the inheritance: for ye serve the Lord Christ.”
  108. Those who enter the work as “eye-servants,” will find that their
  109. work cannot bear the inspection of men or of angels. The thing essential
  110. for successful work is a knowledge of Christ; for this knowledge
  111. will give sound principles of right, impart a noble, unselfish spirit,
  112. like that of our Saviour whom we profess to serve. Faithfulness,
  113. economy, care-taking, thoroughness, should characterize all our
  114. work, wherever we may be, whether in the kitchen, in the workshop,
  115. in the office of publication, in the sanitarium, in the college, or
  116. wherever we are stationed in the vineyard of the Lord. “He that is
  117. faithful in that which is least is faithful also in much: and he that is
  118. Faithfulness in Service 209
  119. unjust in the least is unjust also in much.”—The Review and Herald,
  120. September 22, 1891.

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