Chapter XX. - Paul a Prisoner.
On the following day Paul proceeded to comply with the
counsel of the elders. There were among the believers in Jerusalem at that time
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four persons who were under the Nazarite vow, [NUMBERS 6.]
the term of which had nearly expired. Certain sacrifices for purification were
yet to be offered, which were so costly as to be impossible for a very poor man.
It was considered by the Jews a pious act for a wealthy man to defray the
necessary expenses and thus assist his poorer brethren to complete their vow.
This, Paul had consented to do for the four Christian Nazarites. The apostle
himself was poor, working with his own hands for his daily bread, yet he
willingly incurred this expense, and accompanied the Nazarites to the temple to
unite with them in the ceremonies of the seven days of purification. {LP 214.2}
Those who had counselled Paul to perform this act of
concession had not fully considered the great peril to which he would be
exposed. At this season, strangers from all regions of the world thronged the
streets of Jerusalem, and delighted to congregate in the temple courts. As Paul,
in the fulfilment of his commission, had borne the gospel to the Gentiles, he
had visited many of the world's largest cities, and was well known to thousands
who came from foreign parts to attend the feast. For him to enter the temple on
a public occasion was to risk his life. For several days he passed in and out
among the worshippers, apparently unnoticed; but before the close of the
specified period, as he was conversing with the priest concerning the sacrifices
to be offered, he was recognized by some of the Jews from Asia. These men had
been defeated in their controversy with him in the synagogue at Ephesus, and had
become more and more enraged against him as they witnessed his success in
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raising up a Christian church in that
city. They now saw him where they had not supposed that he would trust
himself,--within the very precincts of the temple. Now he was in their power,
and they determined to make him suffer for his boldness. {LP 215.1}
With the fury of demons they rushed upon him, crying, "Men of
Israel, help! This is the man that teacheth all men everywhere against the
people, and the law, and this place." And as the people in great excitement
flocked to the scene another accusation was added to excite their passions to
the highest pitch,--"and further brought Greeks also into the temple, and hath
polluted this holy place." {LP 216.1}
By the Jewish law, it was a crime punishable with death for
an uncircumcised person to enter the inner courts of the sacred edifice. As Paul
had been seen in the city in company with Trophimus, an Ephesian, it was
conjectured that he had brought him into the temple. This he had not done, and
being himself a Jew, his act in entering the temple was no violation of the law.
But though the charge was wholly false, it served to stir up the popular
prejudice. As the cry was taken up and borne through the temple courts, the vast
throngs gathered there were thrown into the wildest excitement. The news quickly
spread through Jerusalem, "and all the city was moved, and the people ran
together." {LP 216.2}
That an apostate from Israel should presume to profane the
temple at the very time when thousands had come from all parts of the world to
worship there, excited the fiercest passions of the mob. Only their reverence
for the temple saved the apostle from being torn in pieces on the
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spot. With violent blows and shouts of vindictive triumph,
they dragged him from the sacred inclosure. Now that they had him in their
power, they were determined not to lose their prey. He should be stoned to
death, as Stephen had been years before. They had already reached the court of
the Gentiles, and the Levites had closed the gates behind them, lest the holy
place should be polluted with blood, when they were interrupted in their
murderous designs. {LP 216.3}
News had been carried to Claudius Lysias, the commander of
the Roman garrison, that all Jerusalem was in an uproar. Lysias well knew the
turbulent elements with which he had to deal, and with his officers and a strong
force of armed men he rushed down to the temple court. Ignorant of the cause of
the tumult, but seeing that the rage of the multitude was directed against Paul,
the Roman captain concluded that he must be the Egyptian rebel who had so
successfully eluded their vigilance. He commanded that Paul be seized, and bound
between two soldiers, a hand being chained to each. He then questioned those who
seemed to be leaders in the tumult as to who their prisoner was, and of what
crime he had been guilty. Many voices were at once raised in loud and angry
accusation; but on account of the uproar the chief captain could obtain no
satisfactory information, and he ordered that the prisoner be removed to the
castle, where were the Roman barracks. {LP 217.1}
The rage of the multitude was unbounded when they saw their
prey about to be taken from their grasp; and they surged and pressed so closely
about Paul that the soldiers were compelled to bear him in their arms up the
staircase
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which led from the temple. Priests and people were actuated
by the same Satanic spirit that moved them thirty years before to clamour for
the blood of the Son of God. From the staircase and from the crowd below again
echoed the deafening shout, "Away with him! Away with him!" {LP 217.2}
In the midst of the tumult the apostle remained calm and
self-possessed. His mind was stayed upon God, and he knew that angels of Heaven
were about him. He could not leave the temple without making an effort to set
the truth before his countrymen. He therefore turned to the commanding officer,
and in a deferential manner addressed him in Greek, saying, "May I speak with
thee?" In astonishment Lysias inquired if he was indeed mistaken in supposing
the prisoner to have been the ring-leader of a band of robbers and murderers in
the late rebellion. In reply, Paul declared that he was no Egyptian, but a Jew
of "Tarsus, a city in Cilicia, a citizen of no mean city," and begged that he
might be permitted to speak to the people. The Lord had given his servant an
influence over the Roman officer, and the request was granted. {LP 218.1}
"Paul stood on the stairs, and beckoned with the hand unto
the people." The gesture attracted their attention, while his bearing commanded
respect. The scene changed as suddenly as when Christ drove the traffickers from
the temple courts. Quiet fell upon the sea of heads below, and then Paul
addressed the throng in the Hebrew language, saying, "Men, brethren, and
fathers, hear ye my defence which I make now unto you." At the sound of that
holy tongue,
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there was "a great silence," and in the universal hush, he
continued:-- {LP 218.2}
"I am verily a man which am a Jew, born in Tarsus, a city in
Cilicia, yet brought up in this city at the feet of Gamaliel, and taught
according to the perfect manner of the law of the fathers, and was zealous
toward God, as ye all are this day." None could deny the apostle's statements,
and there were many present who could testify to their truthfulness. He then
acknowledged his former zeal in persecuting "this way unto the death," and
narrated the circumstances of his wonderful conversion, telling his hearers how
his own proud heart had been brought to bow to the crucified Nazarene. Had he
attempted to enter into argument with his opponents, they would have stubbornly
refused to listen to his words; but this relation of his experience was attended
with a convincing power that for the time seemed to soften and subdue their
hearts. {LP 219.1}
He then endeavoured to show that his work among the Gentiles
had not been from choice. He had desired to labour for his own nation; but in
that very temple the voice of God had spoken to him in holy vision, directing
his course "far hence, unto the Gentiles." Hitherto the people had given close
attention, but when he reached the point in his history where he was appointed
Christ's ambassador to the Gentiles, their fury broke forth anew. Accustomed to
look upon themselves as the only people favoured of God, they could not endure
the thought that the despised Gentiles should share the privilege which had
hitherto belonged exclusively to themselves. National pride bore down every
argument which
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could influence their reason or command their reverence. An
outburst of rage interrupted his speech, as all with one voice cried out, "Away
with such a fellow from the earth; for it is not fit that he should live!" In
their excitement they flung off their garments, as they had done years before at
the martyrdom of Stephen, and threw dust into the air with frantic violence. {LP
219.2}
This fresh outbreak threw the Roman captain into great
perplexity. He had not understood Paul's Hebrew address, and concluded from the
general excitement that his prisoner must be guilty of some great crime. The
loud demands of the people that Paul be delivered into their hands made the
commander tremble. He ordered him to be immediately taken unto the barracks and
examined by scourging, that he might be forced to confess his guilt. {LP 220.1}
The body of the apostle was stretched out, like that of a
common malefactor, to receive the lashes. There was no friend to stand by him.
He was in a Roman barrack, surrounded only by brutal soldiers. But, as on a
former occasion at Philippi, he now rescued himself from this degradation, and
gained advantage for the gospel, by appealing to his rights as a Roman citizen.
{LP 220.2}
He quietly said to the centurion who had been appointed to
superintend this examination, "Is it lawful for you to scourge a man that is a
Roman, and uncondemned?" The centurion immediately went and told the chief
captain, saying, "Take heed what thou doest; for this man is a Roman." {LP
220.3}
On hearing this, Lysias was alarmed for himself. A Roman
might not be punished before he had been legally condemned, nor punished in
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this manner at all. The chief captain well knew how stringent
were the laws protecting the rights of citizenship, and that if the statement
were true he had, in his proceedings against Paul, violated these laws. {LP
220.4}
He immediately went in person to the prisoner, and questioned
him concerning the truth of the centurion's report. Paul assured him that he was
indeed a Roman citizen; and when the officer exclaimed, "With a great sum
obtained I this freedom," Paul declared, "But I was free born." The preparation
for torture went no farther, and those commissioned to conduct his examination
left him. Paul was, however, still held in custody, as the nature of his offense
had not yet been inquired into. {LP 221.1}
On the next day the chief captain summoned a meeting of the
Jewish Sanhedrim, with the high priest, and brought Paul down from the castle,
under the protection of a sufficient force to guard against any attempt upon his
life. The apostle now stood in the presence of that council of which he himself
had been a member,--that council by which Stephen had been condemned. The memory
of that scene, and of his own efforts to secure the condemnation of the servant
of Christ, came vividly before his mind. As he looked upon those who were to be
his judges, he recognized many who had been his associates in the school of
Gamaliel, and who had also united with him in persecuting the disciples of
Jesus. They were now as eager to put Paul to death as they had been to destroy
Stephen. {LP 221.2}
The apostle's bearing was calm and firm. The peace of Christ,
ruling in his heart, was expressed upon his countenance. But his look of
conscious
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innocence offended his accusers, and when he fearlessly
addressed them, "Men and brethren, I have lived in all good conscience before
God until this day," their hatred was kindled afresh, and the high priest
ordered him to be smitten upon the mouth. At this inhuman command, Paul
exclaimed, "God shall smite thee, thou whited wall, for sittest thou to judge me
after the law, and commandest me to be smitten contrary to the law?" These words
were not an outburst of passion. Under the influence of the Holy Spirit, Paul
uttered a prophetic denunciation similar to that which Christ had uttered in
rebuking the hypocrisy of the Jews. The judgment pronounced by the apostle was
terribly fulfilled when the iniquitous and hypocritical high priest was murdered
by assassins in the Jewish war. But the bystanders regarded the words of Paul as
profane, and exclaimed with horror, "Revilest thou God's high priest?" Paul
answered, with his usual courtesy, "I wist not, brethren, that he was the high
priest; for it is written, Thou shalt not speak evil of the ruler of thy
people." {LP 221.3}
Paul was convinced that he could not hope for a fair trial
and just decision at this tribunal. And his natural penetration and shrewdness
enabled him to take advantage of the circumstances. The Sanhedrim council was
made up of Pharisees and Sadducees, who had long been at variance upon the
doctrine of the resurrection. Knowing this, the apostle cried out, in clear,
decided tones, "Brethren, I am a Pharisee, the son of a Pharisee; of the hope
and resurrection of the dead I am called in question." {LP 222.1}
These words, appealing to the sympathies of
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those who agreed with him in regard to the resurrection,
brought a change in the council. The two parties began to dispute among
themselves, and thus the strength of their opposition against Paul was broken;
for however well united they were in warring against the gospel, they were
divided by an insurmountable barrier in other matters of religious faith. The
Pharisees flattered themselves that they had found in Paul a champion against
their powerful rivals; and their hatred against the Sadducees was even greater
than their hatred against Christ and his apostles. With great vehemence they now
began to vindicate Paul, using nearly the same language that Gamaliel had used
many years before: "We find no evil in this man; but if a spirit or an angel
hath spoken to him, let us not fight against God." {LP 222.2}
The sentence was hardly completed before the judgment hall
became a scene of the wildest confusion. The Sadducees were eagerly trying to
get possession of the apostle, that they might put him to death, and the
Pharisees were as eagerly trying to protect him. Again it seemed that he would
be torn in pieces by the angry combatants. Lysias, being informed of what was
taking place, immediately gave orders to his soldiers to bring the prisoner
without delay back to the fortress. {LP 223.1}
Thus closed the scenes of this eventful day. Evening found
Paul still in the Roman barrack, the rude soldiery his sole companions, their
brutal jests and revolting blasphemy the only sounds that fell upon his ear. He
was not now nerved up by the presence of his enemies, nor was he supported by
the sympathy of his friends.
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The future seemed enveloped in darkness. He feared that his
course might not have been pleasing to God. Could it be that he had made a
mistake after all in this visit to Jerusalem? Had his great desire to be in
union with his brethren led to this disastrous result? {LP 223.2}
The position which the Jews as God's professed people
occupied before an unbelieving world, caused the apostle intense anguish of
spirit. How would those heathen officers look upon their conduct,--claiming to
be worshippers of Jehovah, and assuming sacred office, yet giving themselves up
to the control of blind, unreasoning passion, seeking to destroy even their
brethren who dared to differ from them in religious faith, and turning their
most solemn deliberative council into a scene of strife and wild confusion such
as Roman senators or magistrates would not stoop to engage in. The cause of his
God had been reproached, his national religion brought into disrepute. {LP
224.1}
And now he was in prison, and his enemies, in their desperate
malice, would resort to any means to put him to death. Could it be that his work
for the churches was closed, and that ravening wolves were to enter in, not
sparing the flock? The cause of Christ was near his heart, and with deep anxiety
he contemplated the perils of the scattered churches, exposed to the
persecutions of just such men as he had encountered in the Sanhedrim council. In
distress and discouragement he wept and prayed. The Lord was not unmindful of
his servant. He had guarded him from the murderous throng in the temple courts,
he had been with him before the Sanhedrim council, he was with him in the
fortress, and was pleased to reveal himself to his faithful witness. As on
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trying occasions several times before, Paul was now comforted
and encouraged by a vision in the night season. Such as visitation had been
granted him in the house of Aquila and Priscilla at Corinth, when he was
contemplating leaving the city for a more safe and prosperous field. And now the
Lord stood by him and said, "Be of good cheer, Paul; for as thou hast testified
of me in Jerusalem, so must thou bear witness also at Rome." Paul had long
looked forward to a visit to Rome; he greatly desired to witness for Christ
there, but had felt that his purposes were frustrated by the enmity of the Jews.
He little thought even now, that it would be as a prisoner of the Lord, that he
would go to Rome. {LP 224.2}
In the peaceful hours of the night, while the Lord was
visiting his discouraged servant, the enemies of Paul were eagerly plotting his
destruction. "And when it was day, certain of the Jews banded together, and
bound themselves under a curse, saying that they would neither eat nor drink
till they had killed Paul. And they were more than forty which had made this
conspiracy." Here was such a fast as the Lord through Isaiah had condemned many
years before,--a fast "for strife and debate, and to smite with the fist of
wickedness." The Jews thus sought to give to their diabolical plan the sanction
of religion. Having fortified themselves by their dreadful oath, they came to
the chief priests and members of the Sanhedrim, and made known their purpose. It
was proposed to request that Paul be again brought before the court as if for a
further investigation of his case, and that the assassins would lie in wait and
murder him while on his way from the fortress. Such was the horrible
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crime masked under a show of religious
zeal. Instead of rebuking the Satanic scheme, the priests and rulers eagerly
acceded to it. Paul had spoken the truth when he compared Ananias to a whited
sepulchre. {LP 225.1}
The next day the plot would have been carried into effect,
had not God by his providence interposed to save the life of his servant. When
Peter had been made a prisoner and condemned to death, the brethren had offered
earnest prayer to God day and night for his deliverance. But no such interest
was manifested in behalf of him who was looked upon as an apostate from Moses, a
teacher of dangerous doctrines. It was not to the elders whose counsel had
brought him into this dangerous position, but to the watchful sympathy of a
relative, that Paul owed his escape from a violent death. {LP 226.1}
A nephew of the apostle, to whom he was strongly attached,
heard of the murderous conspiracy, and without delay reported the matter to his
uncle. Paul immediately called for one of the centurions, and requested him to
take the young man to the commandant, saying that he had important information
to give him. The youth was accordingly brought in before Claudius Lysias, who
received him kindly, and taking him aside, inquired the nature of his message.
The young man related the particulars of the conspiracy, and with deep feeling
entreated the commandant not to grant the request which would be surely made,
that Paul be again brought before the council. Lysias listened with close
attention. He saw the difficulties of the situation, and instantly formed his
plans. Choosing, however, not to reveal them, he dismissed the
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youth, with the single admonition: "See thou tell no man that
thou hast showed these things to me." {LP 226.2}
When the young man had gone, the commandant "called unto him
two centurions, saying, Make ready two hundred soldiers to go to Caesarea, and
horsemen threescore and ten, and spearmen two hundred, at the third hour of the
night; and provide them beasts, that they may set Paul on, and bring him safe
unto Felix the governor." {LP 227.1}
Lysias gladly improved this opportunity to get Paul off his
hands. He was the object of so great animosity, and his presence created so
widespread an excitement, that a riot might occur among the people at any time,
with consequences dangerous to the commandant himself. The Jews as a people were
in a state of excitement and irritation, and tumults were of frequent
occurrence. A short time previous, a Roman knight of far higher rank than Lysias
himself, had been violently taken and dragged by the maddened Jews around the
walls of Jerusalem, and finally beheaded, because he received a bribe from the
Samaritans. Upon the suspicion of similar crimes, other high officials had been
imprisoned and disgraced. Should Paul be murdered, the chief captain might be
charged with having been bribed to connive at his death. There was now
sufficient reason to send him away secretly, and thus get rid of an embarrassing
responsibility. {LP 227.2}
It was important that no time be lost. At nine in the
evening, the body of soldiers, with Paul in the midst, marched out of the
fortress, and through the dark and silent streets of the city, and at a rapid
pace pursued their journey toward Caesarea. At Antipatris, thirty-five miles
228
from Jerusalem, the travellers halted. There was now little
danger of attack, and in the morning the four hundred foot-soldiers were sent
back to Jerusalem, while the horsemen continued their journey. {LP 227.3}
The distance from Antipatris to Caesarea was but twenty-five
miles, and it was in the broad light of day that Paul, attended by "threescore
and ten horsemen," entered the city. How unlike his present escort was the
humble Christian company that had attended him on the journey from Caesarea but
a few days before! Notwithstanding his changed surroundings, he was recognized
by Philip and others of his Christian associates, whose hearts were shocked and
saddened at the swift realization of their forebodings. {LP 228.1}
The centurion in charge of the detachment delivered his
prisoner to Felix the governor, also presenting a letter with which he had been
intrusted by the chief captain:-- {LP 228.2}
"Claudius Lysias unto the most excellent governor Felix
sendeth greeting. This man was taken of the Jews, and should have been killed of
them; then came I with an army, and rescued him, having understood that he was a
Roman. And when I would have known the cause wherefore they accused him, I
brought him forth into their council; whom I perceived to be accused of
questions of their law, but to have nothing laid to his charge worthy of death
or of bonds. And when it was told me how that the Jews laid wait for the man, I
sent straightway to thee, and gave commandment to his accusers also to say
before thee what they had against him. Farewell." {LP 228.3}
After reading the communication, Felix inquired to what
province the prisoner belonged,
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and being informed that he was of Cilicia, he ordered him to
be kept in Herod's judgment hall, stating that he would hear the case when the
accusers also should come from Jerusalem. {LP 228.4}
The case of Paul was not the first in which a servant of God
had found among the heathen an asylum from the malice of the professed people of
Jehovah. In their rage against Paul, the Jews had added another crime to the
dark catalogue which marked the history of that people. They had still further
hardened their hearts against the truth, and had rendered their doom more
certain. {LP 229.1}
There are but few who perceive the full import of the words
of Christ, when in the synagogue at Nazareth he announced himself as the
Anointed One. He declared his mission to comfort, bless, and save the sorrowing
and the sinful, and then, seeing that pride and unbelief controlled the hearts
of his hearers, he reminded them how God had in time past turned away from his
chosen people, because of their unbelief and rebellion, and had manifested
himself to those in a heathen land who had not rejected the light from Heaven.
The widow of Sarepta and Naaman the Syrian had lived up to all the light they
had. Hence they were accounted more righteous than God's chosen people who had
backslidden from him, and sacrificed principle to convenience and worldly
honour. {LP 229.2}
It is impossible for the worldly and pleasure-loving to
rightly value the messages of warning and reproof which God sends to correct the
errors of his people. They cannot distinguish between the earnestness and zeal
of the faithful servant, and the trifling, superficial spirit of him who is
unfaithful. One declares that the sword
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is coming; the other puts far off the evil day. One
faithfully reproves sin; the other excuses and palliates it. As the professed
people of God depart from him and lose the simplicity of the faith, the words of
his messengers seem to them unnecessarily harsh and severe. They cherish
prejudice and unbelief, and finally place themselves fully on Satan's side. His
suggestions seem pleasant and palatable; they are controlled, in spirit and
opinion, by the arch-deceiver, and having permitted him to direct their
thoughts, they soon permit him to direct their actions. {LP 229.3}
Christ presented before the assembly at Nazareth a fearful
truth when he declared that with backsliding Israel there was no safety for the
faithful messenger of God. They would not know his worth, or appreciate his
labours. While they professed to have great zeal for the honour of God and the
good of Israel, they were the worst enemies of both. They were by precept and
example leading the people farther and farther from obedience to God and purity
and simplicity of faith,--leading them where he could not reveal himself as
their defence in the day of trouble. God sent Elijah to the widow of Sarepta,
because he could not trust him with Israel. {LP 230.1}
These cutting reproofs, though presented by the Majesty of
Heaven, the Jews of Nazareth refused to hear. They had but a moment before
witnessed to the gracious words that proceeded from his lips; the Spirit of God
was speaking to their hearts; but the instant a reflection was cast upon
them,--at the first intimation that persons of other nations could be more
worthy of the favour of God than they,--those proud,
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unbelieving Jews were frantic with rage. They would have
taken the life of the Son of God, had not angels interposed for his deliverance.
Those men of Nazareth manifested the same spirit toward Christ which their
forefathers had manifested toward Elijah. Blinded by Satan, they could not
perceive the divine character of the Son of God, or appreciate the truth and
purity of his instructions. {LP 230.2}
The Saviour's words of reproof to the men of Nazareth apply
in the case of Paul, not only to the unbelieving Jews, but to his own brethren
in the faith. Had the leaders in the church fully surrendered their feelings of
bitterness toward the apostle, and accepted him as one specially called of God
to bear the gospel to the Gentiles, the Lord would have spared him to them to
still labour for the salvation of souls. He who sees the end from the beginning,
and who understands the hearts of all, saw what would be the result of the envy
and jealousy cherished toward Paul. God had not in his providence ordained that
Paul's labours should so soon end; but he did not work a miracle to counteract
the train of circumstances to which their own course gave rise. {LP 231.1}
The same spirit is still leading to the same results. A
neglect to appreciate and improve the provisions of divine grace, has deprived
the church of many a blessing. How often would the Lord have prolonged the life
of some faithful minister, had his labours been appreciated. But if the church
permit the enemy of souls to pervert their understanding, so that they
misrepresent and misinterpret the words and acts of the servant of Christ; if
they allow themselves
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to stand in his way and hinder his usefulness, the Lord
removes from them the blessing which he gave. {LP 231.2}
Satan is constantly working through his agents to dishearten
and destroy those whom God has chosen to accomplish a great and good work. They
may be ready to sacrifice even their own life for the advancement of the cause
of Christ, yet the great deceiver will suggest doubts, distrust, jealousy,
concerning them, that if entertained will undermine confidence in their
integrity of character, and thus cripple their usefulness. Too often he succeeds
in working through their own brethren, to bring upon them such sorrow and
anguish of heart that God graciously interposes to give his persecuted servants
rest. After the hands are folded upon the pulseless breast, after the voice of
warning and encouragement is silent, then death may accomplish that which life
has failed to do; then the obdurate may be aroused to see and prize the
blessings they have cast from them. {LP 232.1}
The great work for us as Christians is not to criticise the
character and motives of others, but to closely examine our own heart and life,
to jealously guard ourselves against the suggestions of Satan. We should bear in
mind that it is not the hearers of the law that are justified before God, but
the doers of the law. If the principles of God's law rule in our hearts, we
shall have the spirit of Christ; we shall manifest in our daily life that mercy
which is better than sacrifice. Every Christian must be a learner in the school
of Christ; and there is need of diligent and persevering effort to reach that
standard of righteousness which God's word requires.
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Every one has a work to do to learn the lessons of justice,
humility, patience, purity, and love. These traits of character are more
precious in the sight of our Lord than offerings of gold or silver. They are
more acceptable to him than the most costly sacrifice. {LP 232.2}
There is the same dislike of reproof and correction among the
professed people of God today as in the days of our Saviour. There is the same
disposition to lean toward the world and to follow its mocking shadows. The
presence of ambitious, selfish, time-serving members is imperilling the church,
whose greatest danger is from worldly conformity. Such members are constantly
exerting an influence to unite the church more closely with the world. They are
doing the work of Satan. When God sends his servants with words of warning or
counsel, these traitors to their holy trust reject the Heaven-sent message, and
thus not only slight the grace of Christ themselves, but lead others also to
smother their convictions and lose the proffered blessing. {LP 233.1}
By resistance to the truth, the hearts of such are settling
down into the fatal hardness of confirmed impenitence. They are deceiving
themselves, and deceiving others. They are Christians by profession; they pay
outward homage to Christ; they unite in the services of the sanctuary; and yet
the heart, whose loyalty alone Jesus prizes, is estranged from him. They have a
name to live, but are dead. They are left to the darkness they have chosen,--the
blackness of eternal night. {LP 233.2}
It is a fearful thing for those who profess to be children of
God, to cross the line of demarcation
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that should separate the church from the world. Such are
Satan's most effective agents. He works through them with decision, zeal, and
persistency, to devise and execute such enormities against those who are true to
God, as the common sinner would seem incapable of. The very light they have
slighted makes their darkness tenfold greater than it otherwise would be. When
men refuse to accept the light which God in mercy sends them, they know not
where they are going. They take only one step at a time away from the right
path; but these successive steps lead directly to perdition. They place
themselves on Satan's ground, and his spirit controls them. They cannot perceive
the great change in themselves. None are transformed at once; but they enter
Satan's school instead of the school of Christ, and the great deceiver educates
them to do his work. {LP 233.3}