The Ministry of Healing
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 13: The Helpless Poor
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When all has been done that can be done in helping the poor to help
themselves, there still remain the widow and the fatherless, the
aged, the helpless, and the sick, that claim sympathy and care.
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Review and Herald Publ. Assoc. |
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When all has been done that can be done in helping the poor
to help themselves, there still remain the widow and the fatherless, the aged,
the helpless, and the sick, that claim sympathy and care. Never should these be
neglected. They are committed by God Himself to the mercy, the love, and the
tender care of all whom He has made His stewards. {MH 201.1}
The Household of Faith
"As we have therefore opportunity, let us do good unto
all men, especially unto them who are of the household of faith."
Galatians 6:10. {MH 201.2}
In a special sense, Christ has laid upon His church the duty
of caring for the needy among its own members. He suffers His poor to be in the
borders of every church. They are always to be among us, and He places upon the
members of the church a personal responsibility to care for them. {MH 201.3}
As the members of a true family care for one another,
ministering to the sick, supporting the weak, teaching the ignorant, training
the inexperienced, so is "the household of faith" to care for its
needy and helpless ones. Upon no consideration are these to be passed by. [202]
{MH 201.4}
Widows and Orphans
The widow and the fatherless are the objects of the Lord's
special care.
"A Father of the fatherless, and a Judge of the widows,
Is God in His holy habitation."
"Thy Maker is thy husband;
Jehovah of hosts is His name:
And the Holy One of Israel is thy Redeemer;
The God of the whole earth shall He be called."
"Leave thy fatherless children, I will preserve them alive;
And let thy widows trust in Me."
Psalm 68:5; Isaiah 54:5, A.R.V.; Jeremiah 49:11. {MH 202.1}
Many a father, when called upon to part from his loved ones,
has died resting in faith upon God's promise to care for them. The Lord
provides for the widow and the fatherless, not by a miracle in sending manna
from heaven, not by sending ravens to bring them food; but by a miracle upon
human hearts, expelling selfishness, and unsealing the fountains of Christlike
love. The afflicted and bereaved ones He commits to His followers as a precious
trust. They have the very strongest claim upon our sympathy. {MH 202.2}
In homes supplied with life's comforts, in bins and
granaries filled with the yield of abundant harvests, in warehouses stocked
with the products of the loom, and vaults stored with gold and silver, God has
supplied means for the sustenance of these needy ones. He calls upon us to be channels
of His bounty. [203] {MH 202.3}
Many a widowed mother with her fatherless children is
bravely striving to bear her double burden, often toiling far beyond her
strength in order to keep her little ones with her and to provide for their
needs. Little time has she for their training and instruction, little
opportunity to surround them with influences that would brighten their lives.
She needs encouragement, sympathy, and tangible help. {MH 203.1}
God calls upon us to supply to these children, so far as we
can, the want of a father's care. Instead of standing aloof, complaining of
their faults, and of the trouble they may cause, help them in every way
possible. Seek to aid the careworn mother. Lighten her burdens. {MH 203.2}
Then there are the multitudes of children who have been
wholly deprived of the guidance of parents and the subduing influence of a
Christian home. Let Christians open their hearts and homes to these helpless
ones. The work that God has committed to them as an individual duty should not
be turned over to some benevolent institution or left to the chances of the
world's charity. If the children have no relatives able to give them care, let
the members of the church provide homes for them. He who made us ordained that
we should be associated in families, and the child nature will develop best in
the loving atmosphere of a Christian home. {MH 203.3}
Many who have no children of their own could do a good work
in caring for the children of others. Instead of giving attention to pets,
lavishing affection upon dumb animals, let them give their attention to little
children, whose characters they may fashion after the divine similitude. Place
your love upon the homeless members of the human family. See how [204]
many of these children you can bring up in the nurture and admonition of the
Lord. Many would thus be greatly benefited themselves. {MH 203.4}
The Aged
The aged also need the helpful influences of the family. In
the home of brethren and sisters in Christ can most nearly be made up to them
the loss of their own home. If encouraged to share in the interests and
occupations of the household, it will help them to feel that their usefulness
is not at an end. Make them feel that their help is valued, that there is
something yet for them to do in ministering to others, and it will cheer their
hearts and give interest to their lives. {MH 204.1}
So far as possible let those whose whitening heads and
failing steps show that they are drawing near to the grave remain among friends
and familiar associations. Let them worship among those whom they have known
and loved. Let them be cared for by loving and tender hands. {MH 204.2}
Whenever they are able to do so, it should be the privilege
of the members of every family to minister to their own kindred. When this
cannot be, the work belongs to the church, and it should be accepted both as a
privilege and as a duty. All who possess Christ's spirit will have a tender
regard for the feeble and the aged. {MH 204.3}
The presence in our homes of one of these helpless ones is a
precious opportunity to co-operate with Christ in His ministry of mercy and to
develop traits of character like His. There is a blessing in the association of
the old and the young. The young may bring sunshine into the hearts and lives
of the aged. Those whose hold on life is weakening need the benefit of contact
with the hopefulness and buoyancy of youth. And the young may be helped by the
wisdom and experience of the old. Above all, they need to learn the lesson of
unselfish [205] ministry. The presence of one in need of
sympathy and forbearance and self-sacrificing love would be to many a household
a priceless blessing. It would sweeten and refine the home life, and call forth
in old and young those Christlike graces that would make them beautiful with a
divine beauty and rich in heaven's imperishable treasure. {MH 204.4}
A Test of Character
"Ye have the poor with you always," Christ said,
"and whensoever ye will ye may do them good." "Pure religion and
undefiled before God and the Father is this, To visit the fatherless and widows
in their affliction, and to keep himself unspotted from the world." Mark
14:7; James 1:27. {MH
205.1}
In placing among them the helpless and the poor, to be
dependent upon their care, Christ tests His professed followers. By our love
and service for His needy children we prove the genuineness of our love for
Him. To neglect them is to declare ourselves false disciples, strangers to
Christ and His love. {MH
205.2}
If all were done that could be done in providing homes in
families for orphan children, there would still remain very many requiring
care. Many of them have received an inheritance of evil. They are unpromising,
unattractive, perverse, but they are the purchase of the blood of Christ, and
in His sight are just as precious as are our own little ones. Unless a helping
hand is held out to them, they will grow up in ignorance and drift into vice
and crime. Many of these children could be rescued through the work of orphan
asylums. {MH 205.3}
Such institutions, to be most effective, should be modeled
as closely as possible after the plan of a Christian home. Instead of large
establishments, bringing great numbers together, let there be small
institutions in different places. Instead of being [206] in or
near some town or large city, they should be in the country where land can be
secured for cultivation and the children can be brought into contact with
nature and can have the benefits of industrial training. {MH 205.4}
Those in charge of such a home should be men and women who
are largehearted, cultured, and self-sacrificing; men and women who undertake
the work from love to Christ and who train the children for Him. Under such
care many homeless and neglected ones may be prepared to become useful members
of society, an honor to Christ themselves, and in their turn helping others. {MH 206.1}
Many despise economy, confounding it with stinginess and
narrowness. But economy is consistent with the broadest liberality. Indeed,
without economy, there can be no true liberality. We are to save, that we may
give. {MH 206.2}
No one can practice real benevolence without self-denial.
Only by a life of simplicity, self-denial, and close economy is it possible for
us to accomplish the work appointed us as Christ's representatives. Pride and
worldly ambition must be put out of our hearts. In all our work the principle
of unselfishness revealed in Christ's life is to be carried out. Upon the walls
of our homes, the pictures, the furnishings, we are to read, "Bring the
poor that are cast out to thy house." On our wardrobes we are to see
written, as with the finger of God, "Clothe the naked." In the dining
room, on the table laden with abundant food, we should see traced, "Is it
not to deal thy bread to the hungry?" Isaiah 58:7. {MH 206.3}
A thousand doors of usefulness are open before us. Often we
lament the scanty resources available, but were Christians thoroughly in
earnest, they could multiply the resources a thousandfold. It is selfishness,
self-indulgence, that bars the way to our usefulness. [207] {MH 206.4}
How much means is expended for things that are mere idols,
things that engross thought and time and strength which should be put to a
higher use! How much money is wasted on expensive houses and furniture, on
selfish pleasures, luxurious and unwholesome food, hurtful indulgences! How
much is squandered on gifts that benefit no one! For things that are needless,
often harmful, professed Christians are today spending more, many times more,
than they spend in seeking to rescue souls from the tempter. {MH 207.1}
Many who profess to be Christians spend so much on dress
that they have nothing to spare for the needs of others. Costly ornaments and
expensive clothing they think they must have, regardless of the needs of those
who can with difficulty provide themselves with even the plainest clothing. {MH 207.2}
My sisters, if you would bring your manner of dressing into
conformity with the rules given in the Bible, you would have an abundance with
which to help your poorer sisters. You would have not only means, but time.
Often this is most needed. There are many whom you might help with your
suggestions, your tact and skill. Show them how to dress simply and yet
tastefully. Many a woman remains away from the house of God because her shabby,
ill-fitting garments are in such striking contrast to the dress of others. Many
a sensitive spirit cherishes a sense of bitter humiliation and injustice
because of this contrast. And because of it many are led to doubt the reality
of religion and to harden their hearts against the gospel. {MH 207.3}
Christ bids us, "Gather up the fragments that remain,
that nothing be lost." While thousands are every day perishing from
famine, bloodshed, fire, and plague, it becomes every lover of his kind to see
that nothing is wasted, that nothing is needlessly expended, whereby he might
benefit a human being. [208] {MH 207.4}
It is wrong to waste our time, wrong to waste our thoughts.
We lose every moment that we devote to self-seeking. If every moment were
valued and rightly employed, we should have time for everything that we need to
do for ourselves or for the world. In the expenditure of money, in the use of
time, strength, opportunities, let every Christian look to God for guidance.
"If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men
liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him." James 1:5. {MH 208.1}
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"Give, and it shall be given unto you."
"Do good, and lend, hoping for nothing again; and your
reward shall be great, and ye shall be the children of the Highest: for He is
kind unto the unthankful and to the evil." Luke 6:35. {MH 208.2}
"He that hideth his eyes shall have many a curse;"
but "he that giveth unto the poor shall not lack." Proverbs 28:27. {MH 208.3}
"Give, and it shall be given unto you; good measure,
pressed down, and shaken together, and running over, shall men give into your
bosom." Luke 6:38. {MH
208.4}
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"Ministry to the Rich"
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