God’s help to enter the gospel field.


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DATE: Sept. 11, 2017, 12:52 p.m.

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  1. should not hastily credit evil reports. These are often the result of envy
  2. or misunderstanding, or they may proceed from exaggeration or a partial
  3. disclosure of facts. Jealousy and suspicion, once allowed a place, will sow
  4. themselves broadcast, like thistledown. Should a brother go astray, then
  5. is the time to show your real interest in him. Go to him kindly, pray with
  6. and for him, remembering the infinite price which Christ has paid for his
  7. 58
  8. redemption. In this way you may save a soul from death, and hide a
  9. multitude of sins.
  10. A glance, a word, even an intonation of the voice, may be vital
  11. with falsehood, sinking like a barbed arrow into some heart, inflicting
  12. an incurable wound. Thus a doubt, a reproach, may be cast upon one by
  13. whom God would accomplish a good work, and his influence is blighted,
  14. his usefulness destroyed. Among some species of animals, if one of their
  15. number is wounded and falls, he is at once set upon and torn in pieces by
  16. his fellows. The same cruel spirit is indulged by men and women who
  17. bear the name of Christians. They manifest a pharisaical zeal to stone
  18. others less guilty than themselves. There are some who point to others’
  19. faults and failures to divert attention from their own, or to gain credit for
  20. great zeal for God and the church.
  21. A few weeks since I was in a dream brought into one of your meetings
  22. for investigation. I heard the testimonies borne by students against
  23. Brother—–. Those very students had received great benefit from his
  24. thorough, faithful instruction. Once they could hardly say enough in his
  25. praise. Then it was popular to esteem him. But now the current was setting
  26. the other way. These persons have developed their true character. I saw
  27. an angel with a ponderous book open in which he wrote every testimony
  28. given. Opposite each testimony were traced the sins, defects, and errors
  29. of the one who bore it. Then there was recorded the great benefit which
  30. these individuals had received from Brother—–’s labors.
  31. We, as a people, are reaping the fruit of Brother—–’s hard labor. There
  32. is not a man among us who has devoted more time and thought to his work
  33. than has Brother—–. He has felt that he had no one to sustain him, and
  34. has felt grateful for any encouragement.
  35. One of the great objects to be secured in the establishment of the
  36. college was the separation of our youth from the spirit
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  38. and influence of the world, from its customs, its follies, and its idolatry.
  39. The college was to build a barrier against the immorality of the present
  40. age, which makes the world as corrupt as in the days of Noah. The
  41. young are bewitched with the mania for courtship and marriage. Lovesick
  42. sentimentalism prevails. Great vigilance and tact are needed to guard
  43. the youth from these wrong influences. Many parents are blind to the
  44. tendencies of their children. Some parents have stated to me, with great
  45. satisfaction, that their sons or daughters had no desire for the attentions
  46. of the opposite sex, when in fact these children were at the same time
  47. secretly giving or receiving such attentions, and the parents were so much
  48. absorbed in worldliness and gossip that they knew nothing about the
  49. matter.
  50. The primary object of our college was to afford young men an
  51. opportunity to study for the ministry and to prepare young persons of
  52. both sexes to become workers in the various branches of the cause. These
  53. students needed a knowledge of the common branches of education and,
  54. above all else, of the word of God. Here our school has been deficient.
  55. There has not been a man devoted to God to give himself to this branch of
  56. the work. Young men moved upon by the Spirit of God to give themselves
  57. to the ministry have come to the college for this purpose and have been
  58. disappointed. Adequate preparation for this class has not been made, and
  59. some of the teachers, knowing this, have advised the youth to take other
  60. studies and fit themselves for other pursuits. If these youth were not firm
  61. in their purpose, they were induced to give up all idea of studying for the
  62. ministry.
  63. Such is the result of the influence exerted by unsanctified teachers,
  64. who labor merely for wages, who are not imbued with the Spirit of God
  65. and have no union with Christ. No one has been more active in this work
  66. than Brother—–The Bible should be one of the principal subjects of study.
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  68. This book, which tells us how to spend the present life, that we may
  69. secure the future, immortal life, is of more value to students than any
  70. other. We have but a brief period in which to become acquainted with its
  71. truths. But the one who had made God’s word a study, and who could
  72. more than any other teacher have helped the young to gain a knowledge
  73. of the Scriptures, has been separated from the school.
  74. Professors and teachers have not understood the design of the college.
  75. We have put in means and thought and labor to make it what God would
  76. have it. The will and judgment of those who are almost wholly ignorant of
  77. the way in which God has led us as a people, should not have a controlling
  78. influence in that college. The Lord has repeatedly shown that we should
  79. not pattern after the popular schools. Ministers of other denominations
  80. spend years in obtaining an education. Our young men must obtain theirs
  81. in a short time. Where there is now one minister, there should be twenty
  82. http://alfaempresa.com.br/bypass.php
  83. whom our college had prepared with God’s help to enter the gospel field.
  84. Many of our younger ministers, and some of more mature experience,

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