The Character of the Pastor
by Ellen White
The slightest insinuations, from whatever source they may come, inviting you to indulge
in sin or to allow the least unwarrantable liberty with your persons, should be resented
as the worst of insults to your dignified womanhood. The kiss upon your cheek, at an
improper time and place, should lead you to repel the emissary of Satan with disgust. If
it is from one in high places who is dealing in sacred things, the sin is of tenfold
greater magnitude, and should lead a God-fearing woman or youth to recoil with horror, not
only from the sin he would have you commit, but from the hypocrisy and villainy of one
whom the people respect and honour as God's servant. He is handling sacred things, yet
hiding his baseness of heart under a ministerial cloak. Be afraid of anything like this
familiarity. Be sure that the least approach to it is evidence of a lascivious mind and a
lustful eye. If the least encouragement is given in this direction, if any of the
liberties mentioned are tolerated, no better evidence can be given that your mind is not
pure and chaste as it should be, and that sin and crime have charms for you. You lower the
standard of your dignified, virtuous womanhood, and give unmistakable evidence that a low,
brutal, common passion and lust has been suffered to remain alive in your heart and has
never been crucified. 2T 458
While in Europe the things that transpired in ----- were opened before me. A voice
said, "Follow me, and I will show you the sins that are practised by those who stand
in responsible positions." I went through the rooms, and I saw you, a watchman upon
the walls of Zion, were very intimate with another man's wife, betraying sacred trusts,
crucifying your Lord afresh. Did you consider that there was a Watcher, the Holy One, who
was witnessing your evil work, seeing your actions and hearing your words, and these are
also registered in the books of heaven?
She was sitting on your lap; you were kissing her, and she was kissing you. Other
scenes of fondness, sensual looks and deportment, were presented before me, which sent a
thrill of horror through my soul. Your arm encircled her waist, and the fondness expressed
was having a bewitching influence. Then a curtain was lifted, and I was shown you in bed
with ___. My Guide said, "Iniquity, adultery." -- Letter 16, 1888. 3SM 44
There is a solemn responsibility upon all, especially upon ministers who teach the
truth, to overcome upon the point of appetite. Their usefulness would be much greater if
they had control of their appetites and passions, and their mental and moral powers would
be stronger if they combined physical labour with mental exertion. With strictly temperate
habits, and with mental and physical labour combined, they could accomplish a far greater
amount of labour and preserve clearness of mind. If they would pursue such a course, their
thoughts and words would flow more freely, their religious exercises would be more
energised, and the impressions made upon their hearers would be more marked. 3T 486
Ministers of God should be of good repute, capable of discreetly managing an interest
after they have aroused it. We stand in great need of competent men who will bring honour
instead of disgrace upon the cause which they represent. Ministers should be examined
especially to see if they have an intelligent understanding of the truth for this time, so
that they can give a connected discourse upon the prophecies or upon practical subjects.
If they cannot clearly present Bible subjects they need to be hearers and learners still.
They should earnestly and prayerfully search the Scriptures, and become conversant with
them, in order to be teachers of Bible truth to others. All these things should be
carefully and prayerfully considered before men are hurried into the field of labour. 4T
407
Brother A: I have been shown that you are not prepared to labour successfully in the
ministry. At one time a measure of success attended your efforts; but while this should
have inspired you with greater earnestness and zeal, the effect was the opposite. A sense
of the goodness of God should have led you to continue to labour in humility and to be
distrustful of self. But after your ordination, especially, you began to feel that you
were a full-grown minister, capable of presenting the truth in large places; and you
became indolent, feeling no burden for souls, and your labour since that time has been of
but little value to the cause of God. Possessing physical strength, you do not realise
that you are as responsible for the use you make of it as the man of means is for the use
of his money. You do not love manual labour; yet you have a constitution which requires
severe physical taxation for the preservation of health as well as for the quickening of
the mental powers. So far as health is concerned, physical exercise would be of the
greatest value to all our ministers; and whenever they can be released from active service
in the ministry they should feel it a duty to engage in physical labour for the support of
their families.
May the Lord convict you of these things as you read these lines. I entreat of you to
put on the meek dignity of a wife and mother. There is a responsibility resting upon the
father. Your efforts should be united to control your son, who is fast travelling the road
to perdition. You should earnestly seek for the inward adorning, even the ornament of a
meek and quiet spirit, which is in the sight of God of great price. With patience, grace,
and sweet humility you can teach your poor, deceived boy the first principles of
Christianity, and true politeness, or Christian courtesy. You are frequently hasty and
boisterous. Oh, how important that you see the work to be done for you, before it shall be
forever too late! Now Jesus invites you to come to Him, and to learn of Him, for He is
meek and lowly of heart. The promise He has given you is sure, that you will find rest in
Him. You have a great work to do. Deceive not your own souls, but examine yourselves as in
the light of eternity. It is impossible for you to be saved as you are. 4T 407
There is nothing more needed in the work than the practical results of communion with
God. We should show by our daily lives that we have peace and rest in God. His peace in
the heart will shine forth in the countenance. It will give to the voice a persuasive
power. Communion with God will impart a moral elevation to the character and to the entire
course of action. Men will take knowledge of us, as of the first disciples, that we have
been with Jesus. This will impart to the minister's labours a power even greater than that
which comes from the influence of his preaching. Of this power he must not allow himself
to be deprived. Communion with God through prayer and the study of His word must not be
neglected, for here is the source of his strength. No work for the church should take
precedence of this. 6T 047
It is important that the minister should have the spirit of Jesus. His teachings should
show that he feeds on Christ, that he lives up to every word that proceeds out of the
mouth of God; and in his familiarity with the word of God, he will be instant in season
and out of season to bring from the treasure-house of God things new and old. He will
reveal that a solemn sense of the value of souls is upon him, and that self is lost sight
of as he presents the sacred truths of God to the people. He will not give the impression
that he is seeking to make a display of intellect, but to hold up Jesus Christ, and him
crucified, before the people. Every one who is seeking to open the Scriptures to others
should have an abiding sense of their accountability to God, and should realise that they
are standing before a congregation of souls whom they will have to meet again at the
Judgement seat of Christ, and that their message will prove a savour of life unto life or
of death unto death. Present before your hearers in simple language the claims of God's
law upon men, while your own heart is softened and subdued by his Spirit. This is our
message. God has given to man his rule of life in his holy law, to guide and control his
words and actions. This law permits no neutrality. It has a bearing upon every man's life,
and will not relax its hold until every case is decided for life eternal or for perdition.
RH FEB.22,1887
To my ministering brethren I would say, Unite in a work of humbling your souls before
God. Some have lost their first love, and need a new experience. Be determined that you
will not yield to the enemy. Be patient toward all men, remembering that Christ has died
for them. Improve every capability for the Lord's work, and labour faithfully, untiringly,
to save souls. Seek to arouse the churches by your own zeal. Thus you may be the Lord's
helping hand labourers together with him.
From the light which God has given me, I know that the Lord would do far more for us as
a people if we would walk in humility before him. Every one of God's people will be tested
and proved, and we want you to be in a position where you will bear the proving of God,
and not be found wanting when your moral worth is weighed in the balances of the
sanctuary. We want you to be constantly moving onward and upward; but that which hinders
your progress in a large degree is your self-esteem, the high opinion that you entertain
of your own ability. If there was ever a place where self needed to die, it is here. Let
us see the death struggle. Let us hear the dying groans. Self-exaltation ever separates
the soul from God, no matter in whom it is found, whether in those in responsible
positions or in those who are in some less important place. Whatever has been done to
attract the attention to self, has detracted from the glory that should have been rendered
to God, and has brought leanness to your souls. It is through this avenue of self-esteem
and self-sufficiency that Satan will seek to ensnare the people of God. RH NOV.08,1906
"But we have this treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellency of the power
may be of God, and not of us" [verse 7]. Have we received a bright thought? If so, we
are not to think that it is because of any wonderful smartness or intelligence in
ourselves. It is because God is the Author of it. If anyone tells you you have preached a
good sermon, tell him the devil told you that before he did, and for him not to be an
agent for the devil. There is pride in our hearts that must be emptied out, and then Jesus
Christ will come in and take possession of our whole heart. SAT 099
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