l light the words and works of those in whom you


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  1. Chapter 38—Accountability for Light
  2. Young men and women, you are accountable to God for the light
  3. that He has given you. This light and these warnings, if not heeded
  4. will rise up in the judgment against you. Your dangers have been
  5. plainly stated; you have been cautioned and guarded on every side,
  6. hedged in with warnings. In the house of God you have listened to
  7. the most solemn, heart-searching truths presented by the servants of
  8. God in demonstration of the Spirit. What weight do these solemn
  9. appeals have upon your hearts? What influence do they have upon
  10. your characters? You will be held responsible for every one of these
  11. appeals and warnings. They will rise up in the judgment to condemn
  12. those who pursue a life of vanity, levity, and pride.
  13. Dear young friends, that which you sow you will also reap. Now
  14. is the sowing time for you. What will the harvest be? What are
  15. you sowing? Every word you utter, every act you perform, is a seed
  16. which will bear good or evil fruit, and will result in joy or sorrow
  17. to the sower. As is the seed sown, so will be the crop. God has
  18. given you great light and many privileges. After this light has been
  19. given, after your dangers have been plainly presented before you,
  20. the responsibility becomes yours. The manner in which you treat
  21. the light that God gives you will turn the scale for happiness or woe.
  22. You are shaping your destinies for yourselves.—Testimonies for the
  23. Church 3:363. [147]
  24. 133
  25. Chapter 39—Earnestness of Purpose
  26. When the four Hebrew youth were receiving an education for the
  27. king’s court in Babylon, they did not feel that the blessing of the Lord
  28. was a substitute for the taxing effort required of them. They were
  29. diligent in study; for they discerned that through the grace of God
  30. their destiny depended upon their own will and action. They were to
  31. bring all their ability to the work; and by close, severe taxation of
  32. their powers they were to make the most of their opportunities for
  33. study and labor.
  34. Co-operation with God
  35. While these youth were working out their own salvation, God
  36. was working in them to will and to do of His good pleasure. Here
  37. are revealed the conditions of success. To make God’s grace our
  38. own, we must act our part. The Lord does not propose to perform
  39. for us either the willing or the doing. His grace is given to work
  40. in us to will and to do, but never as a substitute for our effort. Our
  41. souls are to be aroused to co-operate. The Holy Spirit works in us,
  42. that we may work out our own salvation. This is the practical lesson
  43. the Holy Spirit is striving to teach us. “It is God which worketh in
  44. you both to will and to do of His good pleasure.”
  45. The Lord will co-operate with all who earnestly strive to be
  46. faithful in His service, as He co-operated with Daniel and his three
  47. [148] companions. Fine mental qualities and a high tone of moral character
  48. are not the result of accident. God gives opportunities; success
  49. depends upon the use made of them. The openings of Providence
  50. must be quickly discerned and eagerly entered. There are many who
  51. might become mighty men, if, like Daniel, they would depend upon
  52. God for grace to be overcomers, and for strength and efficiency to
  53. do their work.
  54. 134
  55. Earnestness of Purpose 135
  56. Whole-hearted Service
  57. I address you, young men: Be faithful. Put heart into your work.
  58. Imitate none who are slothful, and who give divided service. Actions,
  59. often repeated, form habits, habits form character. Patiently perform
  60. the little duties of life. So long as you undervalue the importance
  61. of faithfulness in the little duties, your character-building will be
  62. unsatisfactory. In the sight of Omnipotence, every duty is important.
  63. The Lord has said, “He that is faithful in that which is least is
  64. faithful also in much.” In the life of a true Christian there are no
  65. non-essentials.
  66. Many who claim to be Christians are working at cross-purposes
  67. with God. Many are waiting for some great work to be brought to
  68. them. Daily they lose opportunities for showing their faithfulness to
  69. God; daily they fail of discharging with whole-heartedness the little
  70. duties of life, which seem to them uninteresting. While waiting for
  71. some great work in which they may exercise their supposedly great
  72. talents, and thus satisfy their ambitious longings, their life passes
  73. away.
  74. My dear young friends, do the work that lies nearest at hand.
  75. Turn your attention to some humble line of effort within your reach. [149]
  76. Put mind and heart into the doing of this work. Force your thoughts
  77. to act intelligently on the things that you can do at home. Thus you
  78. will be fitting yourself for greater usefulness. Remember that of
  79. King Hezekiah it is written: “In every work that he began, ... he did
  80. it with all his heart, and prospered.”
  81. The Value of Concentration
  82. The ability to fix the thoughts on the work in hand is a great
  83. blessing. God-fearing youth should strive to discharge their duties
  84. with thoughtful consideration, keeping the thoughts in the right
  85. channel, and doing their best. They should recognize their present
  86. duties, and fulfill them without allowing the mind to wander. This
  87. kind of mental discipline will be helpful and beneficial throughout
  88. life. Those who learn to put thought into everything they undertake,
  89. however small the work may appear, will be of use in the world.
  90. 136 Messages to Young People
  91. Dear youth, be earnest, be persevering. “Gird up the loins of
  92. your mind.” Stand like Daniel, the faithful Hebrew, who purposed
  93. in his heart to be true to God. Do not disappoint your parents and
  94. friends. And there is Another to be remembered. Do not disappoint
  95. Him who so loved you that He gave His life to make it possible for
  96. you to be co-laborers with God.
  97. The Highest Motive
  98. The desire to honor God should be to us the most powerful of
  99. all motives. It should lead us to make every exertion to improve the
  100. [150] privileges and opportunities provided for us, that we may understand
  101. how to use wisely the Lord’s goods. It should lead us to keep
  102. brain, bone, muscle, and nerve in the most healthful condition, that
  103. our physical strength and mental clearness may make us faithful
  104. stewards. Selfish interest, if given room to act, dwarfs the mind and
  105. hardens the heart; if allowed to control, it destroys moral power.
  106. Then disappointment comes....
  107. True success is given to men and women by the God who gave
  108. success to Daniel. He who read the heart of Daniel looked with
  109. pleasure upon His servant’s purity of motive, his determination to
  110. honor the Lord. Those who in their life fulfill God’s purpose must put
  111. forth painstaking effort, applying themselves closely and earnestly to
  112. the accomplishment of whatever He gives them to do.—The Youth’s
  113. Instructor, August 20, 1903.
  114. Abiding Joy
  115. And all the way up the steep road leading to eternal life are wellsprings
  116. of joy to refresh the weary. Those who walk in wisdom’s
  117. ways are, even in tribulation, exceeding joyful; for He whom their
  118. soul loveth walks, invisible, beside them. At each upward step they
  119. discern more distinctly the touch of His hand; at every step brighter
  120. gleamings of glory from the Unseen fall upon their path; and their
  121. songs of praise, reaching ever a higher note, ascend to join the songs
  122. of angels before the throne.—Thoughts from the Mount of Blessing,
  123. [151] 140.
  124. Chapter 40—Exercise of the Will
  125. Pure religion has to do with the will. The will is the governing
  126. power in the nature of man, bringing all the other faculties under its
  127. sway. The will is not the taste or the inclination, but it is the deciding
  128. power, which works in the children of men unto obedience to God,
  129. or unto disobedience.
  130. Instability and Doubt
  131. You are a young man of intelligence; you desire to make your
  132. life such as will fit you for heaven at last. You are often discouraged
  133. at finding yourself weak in moral power, in slavery to doubt, and
  134. controlled by the habits and customs of your old life in sin. You find
  135. your emotional nature untrue to yourself, to your best resolutions,
  136. and to your most solemn pledges. Nothing seems real. Your own
  137. instability leads you to doubt the sincerity of those who would do you
  138. good. The more you struggle in doubt, the more unreal everything
  139. looks to you, until it seems that there is no solid ground for you
  140. anywhere. Your promises are like ropes of sand, and you regard in
  141. the same unreal light the words and works of those in whom you
  142. should trust.
  143. Strength Through Yielding the Will
  144. You will be in constant peril until you understand the true force of
  145. the will. You may believe and promise all things, but your promises
  146. or your faith are of no value until you put your will on the side of faith [152]
  147. and action. If you fight the fight of faith with all your will-power,
  148. you will conquer. Your feelings, your impressions, your emotions,
  149. are not to be trusted, for they are not reliable, especially with your
  150. perverted ideas; and the knowledge of your broken promises and
  151. your forfeited pledges weakens your confidence in yourself, and the
  152. faith of others in you.

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