Unity of Church
by Ellen White
I am filled with sorrow because statements made under the inspiration of the Holy
Spirit, and designed by God to be a great blessing to His people, to guard them against
the seducing sentiments of Satan, are woven in with spiritualistic views, and are thus
made to testify to falsehoods of Satan's own creating. How can I say to our people,
Harmonise with those who advocate these wrong sentiments? How can I hold my peace, and
say, Unify? God gives me the message, Beware of the leaven of those who have been
destroying the faith of Seventh-day Adventists. There are those to whom I fear to write
personally. God says, Beware of the leaven of those who have stepped off the platform of
truth. Those who use my writings, given me by God, to build themselves up in sophistry and
deceptive theories, steal that which was given to establish souls in the sanctification of
the truth, and use it to testify to theories against which I am bidden to warn our people.
Beware of the leaven that some who have lost their connection with God will introduce,
declaring their theories to be in harmony with that which Sister White has written. 10MR
48
Through our relation of friendship and familiarity with human beings like ourselves, we
may exert an uplifting influence. Those who are united in a common hope and faith in
Christ Jesus can be a blessing to one another. Jesus says, "Love one another as I
have loved you." Love is not simply an impulse, a transitory emotion, dependent upon
circumstances; it is a living principle, a permanent power. The soul is fed by the streams
of pure love that flow from the heart of Christ, as a well-spring that never fails. O, how
is the heart quickened, how are its motives ennobled, its affections deepened, by this
communion! Under the education and discipline of the Holy Spirit, the children of God love
one another, truly, sincerely, unaffectedly,-- "without partiality, and without
hypocrisy." And this because the heart is in love with Jesus. Our affection for one
another springs from our common relation to God. We are one family, we love one another as
he loved us. When compared with this true, sanctified, disciplined affection, the shallow
courtesy of the world, the meaningless expressions of effusive friendship, are as chaff to
the wheat. 1888 1509
Now at the present time God designs a new and fresh impetus shall be given to His work.
Satan sees this, and he is determined it shall be hindered. He knows that if he can
deceive the people who claim to believe present truth, [and make them believe] that the
work the Lord designs to do for His people is a removing of the old landmarks, something
which they should, with most determined zeal, resist, then he exults over the deception he
has led them to believe. The work for this time has certainly been a surprising work of
various hindrances, owing to the false setting of matters before the minds of many of our
people. That which is food to the churches is regarded as dangerous, and should not be
given them. And this slight difference of ideas is allowed to unsettle the faith, to cause
apostasy, to break up unity, to sow discord, all because they do not know what they are
striving about themselves. Brethren, is it not best to be sensible? Heaven is looking upon
us all, and what can they think of recent developments? While in this condition of things,
building up barriers, we not only deprive ourselves of great light and precious
advantages, but just now, when we so much need it, we place ourselves where light cannot
be communicated from heaven that we ought to communicate to others. 1888 518
Our church members see that there are differences of opinion among the leading men, and
they themselves enter into controversy regarding the subjects under dispute. Christ calls
for unity. But He does not call for us to unify on wrong practices. The God of heaven
draws a sharp contrast between pure, elevating, ennobling truth and false, misleading
doctrines. He calls sin and impenitence by the right name. He does not gloss over
wrongdoing with a coat of untempered mortar. I urge our brethren to unify upon a true,
scriptural basis.--Manuscript 10, 1905. 1SM 175
You will take passages in the Testimonies that speak of the close of probation, of the
shaking among God's people, and you will talk of a coming out from this people of a purer,
holier people that will arise. Now all this pleases the enemy. We should not needlessly
take a course that will make differences or create dissension. We should not give the
impression that if our particular ideas are not followed, it is because the ministers are
lacking in comprehension and in faith, and are walking in darkness. 1SM 179
Students should be taught that they are not independent atoms but that each one is a
thread which is to unite with other threads in composing a fabric. In no department can
this instruction be more effectually given than in the school home. Here students are
daily surrounded by opportunities which, if improved, will greatly aid in developing the
social traits of their characters. It lies in their own power so to improve their time and
opportunities as to develop a character that will make them happy and useful. 2MCP 621
No advice or sanction is given in the Word of God to those who believe the third
angel's message to lead them to suppose that they can draw apart. This you may settle with
yourselves forever. It is the devising of unsanctified minds that would encourage a state
of disunion. The sophistry of men may appear right in their own eyes, but it is not truth
and righteousness. "For he is our peace, who hath made both one, and hath broken down
the middle wall of partition between us; . . . that he might reconcile both unto God in
one body by the cross" (Eph. 2:14-16). 3SM 21
Dear Brethren: As all the different members of the human system unite to form the
entire body, and each performs its office in obedience to the intelligence that governs
the whole, so the members of the church of Christ should be united in one symmetrical
body, subject to the sanctified intelligence of the whole. 4T 16
An army would be demoralised if they did not learn to obey orders of the captain. Each
soldier must act in concert. Union is strength; without union efforts are meaningless.
Whatever excellent qualities a soldier may possess, he cannot be a safe trustworthy
soldier if he claims a right to act independently of his fellow comrades. This independent
action cannot be maintained in the service of Christ.... 5MR 373
One point will have to be guarded, and that is individual independence. As soldiers in
Christ's army, there should be concert of action in the various departments of the work.
No one has the right to start out on his own responsibility and advance ideas in our
papers on Bible doctrines when it is known that others among us hold different opinions on
the subject and that it will create controversy. The first-day Adventists have done this.
Each has followed his own independent judgement and sought to present original ideas,
until there is no concerted action among them, except, perhaps, in opposing Seventh-day
Adventists. We should not follow their example. Each labourer should act with reference to
the others. Followers of Jesus Christ will not act independently one of another. Our
strength must be in God, and it must be husbanded, to be put forth in noble, concentrated
action. It must not be wasted in meaningless movements. 5T 534
In connection with the proclamation of the message in large cities, there are many
kinds of work to be done by labourers with varied gifts. Some are to labour in one way,
some in another. The Lord desires that the cities shall be worked by the united efforts of
labourers of different capabilities. All are to look to Jesus for direction, not depending
on man for wisdom, lest they be led astray. As labourers together with God they should
seek to be in harmony with one another. There should be frequent councils and earnest,
wholehearted co-operation. Yet all are to look to Jesus for wisdom, not depending upon men
alone for direction. 9T 109
The spasmodic, fitful movements of some who claim to be Christians are well represented
by the work of strong but untrained horses. When one pulls forward, another pulls back,
and at the voice of their master one plunges ahead and the other stands immovable. If men
will not move in concert in the great and grand work for this time, there will be
confusion. It is not a good sign when men refuse to unite with their brethren and prefer
to act alone. Let labourers take into their confidence the brethren who are free to point
out every departure from right principles. If men wear the yoke of Christ, they can not
pull apart; they will draw with Christ.
Some workers pull with all the power that God has given them, but they have not yet
learned that they should not pull alone. Instead of isolating themselves, let them draw in
harmony with their fellow labourers. Unless they do this, their activity will work at the
wrong time and in the wrong way. They will often work counter to that which God would have
done, and thus their work is worse than wasted. 9T 258
The apostles differed widely in habits and disposition. There were the publican,
Levi-Matthew, and the fiery zealot Simon, the uncompromising hater of the authority of
Rome; the generous, impulsive Peter, and the mean-spirited Judas; Thomas, true-hearted,
yet timid and fearful, Philip, slow of heart, and inclined to doubt, and the ambitious,
outspoken sons of Zebedee, with their brethren. These were brought together, with their
different faults, all with inherited and cultivated tendencies to evil but in and through
Christ they were to dwell in the family of God, learning to become one in faith, in
doctrine, in spirit. They would have their tests, their grievances, their differences of
opinion; but while Christ was abiding in the heart, there could be no dissension. His love
would lead to love for one another; the lessons of the Master would lead to the
harmonising of all differences, bringing the disciples into unity, till they would be of
one mind and one judgement. Christ is the great centre, and they would approach one
another just in proportion as they approached the centre. DA 296
For forty years did unbelief, murmuring, and rebellion shut out ancient Israel from the
land of Canaan. The same sins have delayed the entrance of modern Israel into the heavenly
Canaan. In neither case were the promises of God at fault. It is the unbelief, the
worldliness, unconsecration, and strife among the Lord's professed people that have kept
us in this world of sin and sorrow so many years.-- Manuscript 4, 1883. EV 696
The labourers should counsel together. No one is to strike out on his independent
judgement, and work according to his own mind, regardless of the counsel of those
connected with him. If we think ourselves sufficient to manage the work of God, and depend
for success on our own wisdom to plan and execute, we may expect defeats and losses; for
they will surely come. It has been shown me that the planning of the work must not be
trusted to inexperienced men. Those who have not had full breadth of experience are not
the ones to take large responsibilities, although they may think themselves qualified to
do so. Their brethren may see defects where they see only perfection. Too much is at stake
now to allow any great risks to be run in investing means from the Lord's treasury. If any
one wishes to try experiments which his brethren do not sanction, let him sustain himself
from his own funds, so that if losses occur, he alone will be the loser. The workers are
not many; the means are not abundant; and the work must be fashioned accordingly. It is
not God's plan that large draughts should be made upon the treasury to support workers who
labour in such a way that no special results can be seen. GW92 355
Some have a natural independence which leads them to think more highly of their own
judgement than of that of their brethren. In so doing they place themselves where they
fail to obtain much knowledge that God would have them gain. The history of God's work in
the past shows that some have an understanding of one thing, others of another. It is his
plan that there should be a counselling together. In the multitude of counsellors there is
safety. There should be harmony in sentiment and action among the workers. Doctrines and
plans should be compared with the law and the testimony. We should never feel too
independent to learn of one another. While it is not according to God's plan that one
man's mind shall control all other minds, he is not pleased to have individuals strike out
on a new track, and present new theories independent of the body. HS 125
God requires concerted action of his soldiers, and in order to have this in the church
self-restraint is essential; self-restraint must be exercised. But some in Healdsburg, as
well as in other churches, will have to learn this lesson; they will have to learn to
forego their own wishes and preferences for the good of others. We have determined
adversaries; we know not their number or their position. Satan works through agencies
which we do not always see; through some whom we do not suspect. When we think Satan is
routed, he is only preparing to make an attack to discomfit and repulse. When we fancy
ourselves secure, we are in the very greatest danger. Watchfulness and prayer combined
with persevering effort to keep the rank and file unbroken, is more necessary than ever
before. The work of the cause of truth in Healdsburg is a spectacle to the world, to
angels, and to men. Satan has brought elements into the Healdsburg church that will ever
be a source of trial, unless these unconverted members shall see their defects of
character as they have never yet seen them, and will repent of their evil surmisings,
their envy, their fault-finding, their accusing of the brethren, their walking after their
own independent judgement. These have made independent assertions, and are bold and
forward, not knowing their place, and not realising the order that must be observed in the
church of God. PH096 5
Every believer should be whole-hearted in his attachment to the church. Its prosperity
should be his first interest; and unless he feels under sacred obligations to make his
connection with the church a benefit to it rather than to himself, it can do far better
without him.... They should also feel it a solemn duty to illustrate in their characters
the teachings of Christ, being at peace one with another, and moving in perfect harmony as
an undivided whole. They should waive their individual opinion to the judgement of the
church. Many live for themselves alone. They look upon their lives with great complacency,
flattering themselves that they are blameless, when in fact they are doing nothing for
God, and are living in direct opposition to his expressed word. The observance of external
forms will never meet the great want of the human soul. A mere profession of Christ is not
enough to prepare one to stand the test of the Judgement. There should be a perfect trust
in God, a child like dependence upon his promises, and an utter consecration of self to
his will. RH JAN.25,1887
If the world sees a perfect harmony existing in the church of God, it will be a
powerful evidence to them in favour of the Christian religion. Dissensions, unhappy
differences, and petty church-trials dishonour our Redeemer. All these may be avoided, if
self is surrendered to God, and the followers of Jesus obey the voice of the church.
Unbelief suggests that individual independence increases our importance; that it is weak
to yield to the verdict of the church our own ideas of what is right and proper. But to
cherish such feelings and views will only bring anarchy into the church and confusion to
ourselves. Christ saw that unity and Christian fellowship were necessary to the cause of
God; therefore he enjoins it upon his disciples. And the history of Christianity from that
time until now proves conclusively that in union only there is strength. Let individual
judgement submit to the authority of the church. RH JAN.25,1887
The scheme of salvation is not to be worked out under the laws and rules specified by
men. There must be no fixed rules; our work is a progressive work, and there must be room
left for methods to be improved upon. But under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, unity
must and will be preserved. RH JUL.23,1895
The time has come when everything that can be shaken will be shaken. We are in the
shaking time. Be assured that only those who live the prayer of Christ for unity among His
disciples, working it out in practical life, will stand the test. RH JUN.18,1901
Our work is aggressive. We are to be awake and discerning as to the devices of Satan,
and to press the triumphs of the cross of Christ. While Satan is planting his dark banner
among us, perhaps even in our families, we should not be indifferent and inactive. But
though we have an individual work and an individual responsibility before God, we are not
to follow our own independent judgement, regardless of the opinions and feelings of our
brethren; for this course would lead to disorder in the church. It is the duty of
ministers to respect the judgement of their brethren; but their relations to one another,
as well as the doctrines they teach, should be brought to the test of the law and the
testimony; then, if hearts are teachable, there will be no divisions among us. Some are
inclined to be disorderly, and are drifting away from the great landmarks of the faith;
but God is moving upon his ministers to be one in doctrine and in spirit. RH JUN.3,1884
God has a special work for the men of experience to do. They are to guard the cause of
God. They are to see that the work of God is not committed to men who feel it their
privilege to move out on their own independent judgement, to preach whatever they please,
and to be responsible to no one for their instructions or work. Let this spirit of
self-sufficiency once rule in our midst, and there will be no harmony of action, no unity
of spirit, no safety for the work, and no healthful growth in the cause. There will be
false teachers, evil workers who will, by insinuating error, draw away souls from the
truth. Christ prayed that His followers might be one as He and the Father were one. Those
who desire to see this prayer answered, should seek to discourage the slightest tendency
to division, and try to keep the spirit of unity and love among brethren. RH MAY 29,1888
(EV 212)
Those who have proclaimed the Seventh-day Adventist Church as Babylon, have made use of
the Testimonies in giving their position a seeming support; but why is it that they did
not present that which for years has been the burden of my message--the unity of the
church? Why did they not quote the words of the angel, "Press together, press
together, press together"? Why did they not repeat the admonition and state the
principle, that "in union there is strength, in division there is weakness"? It
is such messages as these men have borne that divide the church, and put us to shame
before the enemies of truth; and in such messages is plainly revealed the specious working
of the great deceiver, who would hinder the church from attaining unto perfection in
unity. These teachers follow the sparks of their own kindling, move according to their own
independent judgement, and cumber the truth with false notions and theories. They refuse
the counsel of their brethren, and press on in their own way until they become just what
Satan would desire to have them--unbalanced in mind. RH SEP.12,1893 (TM 56)
Our physicians are to stand where no binding influence will hold them speechless when
they hear wrong sentiments expressed. At times, with burning earnestness and words of
terrible severity, Christ denounced the abominations that He saw in the church and in the
world. He would not allow the people to be deceived by false claims to righteousness and
sanctity.
We are to unify, but not on a platform of error. That which has been said in the
testimonies in regard to "Living Temple," and its misleading sentiments, is not
overdrawn. Some of its theories are misleading, and their influence will be to close the
minds of those who receive them against the truth for this time. Men may explain and
explain in regard to these theories, nevertheless they are contrary to the truth.
Scriptures are misplaced and misapplied, taken out of their connection and given a wrong
application. Thus those are deceived who have not a vital, personal experience in the
truths that have made us as a people what we are.
We are living amidst the perils of the last days. We are to watch unto prayer. We are
to put our entire trust in God, glorifying Him. Daily we are to learn lessons from the
greatest Medical Missionary that ever trod this earth. He is our tabernacle of witness for
heavenly things. He will not accept that which has been done in bringing so much of a
commercial spirit into the medical missionary work, neither will He accept the Laodicean
condition of the Medical Missionary Association. This association is not doing the work
indicated by its name. It is not preparing a people to obtain a sound, healthy experience,
which will stand the test of the judgement. I am so sorry; for God is dishonoured. His
work, which should be a praise in the earth, is belittled. False sentiments have been
entertained, and a strange work has been done. SPTB02 47
All who carry the burden of the Lord's work must make an alliance with Christ. They
must study His nobility, His manliness. The Saviour is our criterion of character.
Connected with Him, we purify ourselves, even as He is pure. We are to grow into closer
and still closer familiarity with Christ's way and with His spirit of nobility, with His
singleness of purpose and His virtues of character. Consider His unselfish retirement from
the field when there was a conflict between His disciples and the disciples of John.
SPTB05 33
Satan will work to bring in criticism and misstatements, and to lead men to want their
own way. There is no safety for any one who retains his selfish habits. God calls upon
every soul to take up the work of self-examination. If all will now take up the work God
has given them, and be converted in the doing of that work they will grow in grace and in
the knowledge of the truth. Satan will make every effort to create disunion, and unless
the love of Christ fills the heart there will be divisions. But divisions always dishonour
God, and a great deal of time is spent in an effort to set things right, when it ought not
to be necessary to spend a moment in this way. God has a great work for His people to do.
He will enable us to do this work if we will give ourselves into His keeping, and be led
and guided by Him. SPTB05 34
Though we have an individual work and an individual responsibility before God, we are
not to follow our own independent judgement, regardless of the opinions and feelings of
our brethren; for this course would lead to disorder in the church. It is the duty of
ministers to respect the judgement of their brethren; but their relations to one another,
as well as the doctrines they teach, should be brought to the test of the law and the
testimony; then, if hearts are teachable, there will be no divisions among us. Some are
inclined to be disorderly, and are drifting away from the great landmarks of the faith;
but God is moving upon His ministers to be one in doctrine and in spirit. TM 30
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