The Ministry of Healing
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 40: Help in Daily Living
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It is our own character and experience that
determine our influence upon others. In order
to convince others of the power of Christ's grace,
we must know its power in our own hearts and lives.
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There is an eloquence far more powerful than the eloquence
of words in the quiet, consistent life of a pure, true Christian. What a man is
has more influence than what he says. {MH 469.1}
The officers who were sent to Jesus came back with the
report that never man spoke as He spoke. But the reason for this was that never
man lived as He lived. Had His life been other than it was, He could not have
spoken as He did. His words bore with them a convincing power, because they
came from a heart pure and holy, full of love and sympathy, benevolence and
truth. {MH 469.2}
It is our own character and experience that determine our
influence upon others. In order to convince others of the power of Christ's
grace, we must know its power in our own hearts and lives. The gospel we
present for the saving of souls must be the gospel by which our own souls are
saved. Only through a living faith in Christ as a personal Saviour is it
possible to make our influence felt in a skeptical world. If we would draw
sinners out of the swift-running current, our [470] own
feet must be firmly set upon the Rock, Christ Jesus. {MH 469.3}
The badge of Christianity is not an outward sign, not the
wearing of a cross or a crown, but it is that which reveals the union of man
with God. By the power of His grace manifested in the transformation of
character the world is to be convinced that God has sent His Son as its
Redeemer. No other influence that can surround the human soul has such power as
the influence of an unselfish life. The strongest argument in favor of the
gospel is a loving and lovable Christian. {MH 470.1}
The Discipline of Trial
To live such a life, to exert such an influence, costs at
every step effort, self-sacrifice, discipline. It is because they do not
understand this that many are so easily discouraged in the Christian life. Many
who sincerely consecrate their lives to God's service are surprised and
disappointed to find themselves, as never before, confronted by obstacles and
beset by trials and perplexities. They pray for Christlikeness of character,
for a fitness for the Lord's work, and they are placed in circumstances that
seem to call forth all the evil of their nature. Faults are revealed of which
they did not even suspect the existence. Like Israel of old they question,
"If God is leading us, why do all these things come upon us?" [471]
{MH 470.2}
It is because God is leading them that these things come
upon them. Trials and obstacles are the Lord's chosen methods of discipline and
His appointed conditions of success. He who reads the hearts of men knows their
characters better than they themselves know them. He sees that some have powers
and susceptibilities which, rightly directed, might be used in the advancement
of His work. In His providence He brings these persons into different positions
and varied circumstances that they may discover in their character the defects
which have been concealed from their own knowledge. He gives them opportunity
to correct these defects and to fit themselves for His service. Often He
permits the fires of affliction to assail them that they may be purified. {MH 471.1}
The fact that we are called upon to endure trial shows that
the Lord Jesus sees in us something precious which He desires to develop. If He
saw in us nothing whereby He might glorify His name, He would not spend time in
refining us. He does not cast worthless stones into His furnace. It is valuable
ore that He refines. The blacksmith puts the iron and steel into the fire that
he may know what manner of metal they are. The Lord allows His chosen ones to
be placed in the furnace of affliction to prove what temper they are of and
whether they can be fashioned for His work. {MH 471.2}
The potter takes the clay and molds it according to his
will. He kneads it and works it. He tears it apart and presses it together. He
wets it and then dries it. He lets it lie for a while without touching it. When
it is perfectly pliable, he [472] continues the work of making of
it a vessel. He forms it into shape and on the wheel trims and polishes it. He
dries it in the sun and bakes it in the oven. Thus it becomes a vessel fit for
use. So the great Master Worker desires to mold and fashion us. And as the clay
is in the hands of the potter, so are we to be in His hands. We are not to try
to do the work of the potter. Our part is to yield ourselves to be molded by
the Master Worker. {MH
471.3}
"Beloved, think it not strange concerning the fiery trial
which is to try you, as though some strange thing happened unto you: but
rejoice, inasmuch as ye are partakers of Christ's sufferings; that, when His
glory shall be revealed, ye may be glad also with exceeding joy." 1 Peter
4:12, 13. {MH 472.1}
In the full light of day, and in hearing of the music of
other voices, the caged bird will not sing the song that his master seeks to
teach him. He learns a snatch of this, a trill of that, but never a separate
and entire melody. But the master covers the cage, and places it where the bird
will listen to the one song he is to sing. In the dark, he tries and tries
again to sing that song until it is learned, and he breaks forth in perfect
melody. Then the bird is brought forth, and ever after he can sing that song in
the light. Thus God deals with His children. He has a song to teach us, and
when we have learned it amid the shadows of affliction we can sing it ever
afterward. {MH 472.2}
Many are dissatisfied with their lifework. It may be that
their surroundings are uncongenial; their time is occupied with commonplace
work, when they think themselves capable of higher responsibilities; often
their efforts seem to them to be unappreciated or fruitless; their future is
uncertain. {MH 472.3}
Let us remember that while the work we have to do may not be
our choice, it is to be accepted as God's choice for us. [473]
Whether pleasing or unpleasing, we are to do the duty that lies nearest.
"Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might; for there is no
work, nor device, nor knowledge, nor wisdom, in the grave, whither thou
goest." Ecclesiastes 9:10. {MH 472.4}
If the Lord desires us to bear a message to Nineveh, it will
not be as pleasing to Him for us to go to Joppa or to Capernaum. He has reasons
for sending us to the place toward which our feet have been directed. At that
very place there may be someone in need of the help we can give. He who sent
Philip to the Ethiopian councilor, Peter to the Roman centurion, and the little
Israelitish maiden to the help of Naaman, the Syrian captain, sends men and
women and youth today as His representatives to those in need of divine help
and guidance. {MH 473.1}
God's Plans the Best
Our plans are not always God's plans. He may see that it is
best for us and for His cause to refuse our very best intentions, as He did in
the case of David. But of one thing we may be assured, He will bless and use in
the advancement of His cause those who sincerely devote themselves and all they
have to His glory. If He sees it best not to grant their desires He will
counterbalance the refusal by giving them tokens of His love and entrusting to
them another service. {MH
473.2}
In His loving care and interest for us, often He who
understands us better than we understand ourselves refuses to permit us
selfishly to seek the gratification of our own ambition. He does not permit us
to pass by the homely but sacred duties that lie next us. Often these duties
afford the very training essential to prepare us for a higher work. Often our
plans fail that God's plans for us may succeed. {MH 473.3}
We are never called upon to make a real sacrifice for God.
Many things He asks us to yield to Him, but in doing this we are but giving up
that which hinders us in the heavenward way. Even when called upon to surrender
those things which [474] in themselves are good, we may
be sure that God is thus working out for us some higher good. {MH 473.4}
In the future life the mysteries that here have annoyed and
disappointed us will be made plain. We shall see that our seemingly unanswered
prayers and disappointed hopes have been among our greatest blessings. {MH 474.1}
We are to look upon every duty, however humble, as sacred
because it is a part of God's service. Our daily prayer should be, "Lord,
help me to do my best. Teach me how to do better work. Give me energy and
cheerfulness. Help me to bring into my service the loving ministry of the
Saviour." {MH 474.2}
A Lesson From the Life of Moses
Consider the experience of Moses. The education he received
in Egypt as the king's grandson and the prospective heir to the throne was very
thorough. Nothing was neglected that was calculated to make him a wise man, as
the Egyptians understood wisdom. He received the highest civil and military
training. He felt that he was fully prepared for the work of delivering Israel
from bondage. But God judged otherwise. His providence appointed Moses forty
years of training in the wilderness as a keeper of sheep. {MH 474.3}
The education that Moses had received in Egypt was a help to
him in many respects; but the most valuable preparation for his lifework was
that which he received while employed as a shepherd. Moses was naturally of an
impetuous spirit. In Egypt a successful military leader and a favorite with the
king and the nation, he had been accustomed to receiving praise and flattery.
He had attracted the people to himself. He hoped to accomplish by his own
powers the work of delivering Israel. Far different were the lessons he had to
learn as God's representative. As he led his flocks through the wilds of the
mountains and into the green pastures of the valleys, he learned faith and
meekness, patience, humility, and self-forgetfulness. He learned to care for
the weak, to [475] nurse the sick, to seek after
the straying, to bear with the unruly, to tend the lambs, and to nurture the
old and the feeble. {MH
474.4}
In this work Moses was drawn nearer to the Chief Shepherd.
He became closely united to the Holy One of Israel. No longer did he plan to do
a great work. He sought to do faithfully as unto God the work committed to his
charge. He recognized the presence of God in his surroundings. All nature spoke
to him of the Unseen One. He knew God as a personal God, and, in meditating
upon His character he grasped more and more fully the sense of His presence. He
found refuge in the everlasting arms. {MH 475.1}
After this experience, Moses heard the call from heaven to
exchange his shepherd's crook for the rod of authority; to leave his flock of
sheep and take the leadership of Israel. The divine command found him
self-distrustful, slow of speech, and timid. He was overwhelmed with a sense of
his incapacity to be a mouthpiece for God. But he accepted the work, putting
his whole trust in the Lord. The greatness of his mission called into exercise
the best powers of his mind. God blessed his ready obedience, and he became
eloquent, hopeful, self-possessed, fitted for the greatest work ever given to
man. Of him it is written: "There hath not arisen a prophet since in
Israel like unto Moses, whom Jehovah knew face to face." Deuteronomy
34:10, A.R.V. [476] {MH 475.2}
Let those who feel that their work is not appreciated, and
who crave a position of greater responsibility, consider that "promotion
cometh neither from the east, nor from the west, nor from the south. But God is
the Judge: He putteth down one, and setteth up another." Psalm 75:6, 7.
Every man has his place in the eternal plan of heaven. Whether we fill that
place depends upon our own faithfulness in co-operating with God. {MH 476.1}
We need to beware of self-pity. Never indulge the feeling
that you are not esteemed as you should be, that your efforts are not
appreciated, that your work is too difficult. Let the memory of what Christ has
endured for us silence every murmuring thought. We are treated better than was
our Lord. "Seekest thou great things for thyself? seek them not."
Jeremiah 45:5. The Lord has no place in His work for those who have a greater
desire to win the crown than to bear the cross. He wants men who are more
intent upon doing their duty [477] than upon receiving their reward—men
who are more solicitous for principle than for promotion. {MH 476.2}
Those who are humble, and who do their work as unto God, may
not make so great a show as do those who are full of bustle and
self-importance; but their work counts for more. Often those who make a great
parade call attention to self, interposing between the people and God, and
their work proves a failure. "Wisdom is the principal thing; therefore get
wisdom: and with all thy getting get understanding. Exalt her, and she shall
promote thee: she shall bring thee to honor, when thou dost embrace her."
Proverbs 4:7, 8. {MH
477.1}
Because they have not the determination to take themselves
in hand and to reform, many become stereotyped in a wrong course of action. But
this need not be. They may cultivate their powers to do the very best kind of
service, and then they will be always in demand. They will be valued for all
that they are worth. {MH
477.2}
If any are qualified for a higher position, the Lord will
lay the burden, not alone on them, but on those who have tested them, who know
their worth, and who can understandingly urge them forward. It is those who
perform faithfully their appointed work day by day, who in God's own time will
hear His call, "Come up higher." {MH 477.3}
While the shepherds were watching their flocks on the hills
of Bethlehem, angels from heaven visited them. So today while the humble worker
for God is following his employment, angels of God stand by his side, listening
to his words, noting the manner in which his work is done, to see if larger
responsibilities may be entrusted to his hands. {MH 477.4}
Not by their wealth, their education, or their position does
God estimate men. He estimates them by their purity of motive and their beauty
of character. He looks to see how [478] much of His Spirit they possess
and how much of His likeness their life reveals. To be great in God's kingdom
is to be as a little child in humility, in simplicity of faith, and in purity
of love. {MH 477.5}
"Ye know," Christ said, "that the rulers of
the Gentiles lord it over them, and their great ones exercise authority over
them. Not so shall it be among you: but whosoever would become great among you
shall be your minister." Matthew 20:25, 26, A.R.V. {MH 478.1}
Of all the gifts that heaven can bestow upon men, fellowship
with Christ in His sufferings is the most weighty trust and the highest honor.
Not Enoch, who was translated to heaven, not Elijah, who ascended in a chariot
of fire, was greater or more honored than John the Baptist, who perished alone
in the dungeon. "Unto you it is given in the behalf of Christ, not only to
believe on Him, but also to suffer for His sake." Philippians 1:29. {MH 478.2}
Plans for the Future
Many are unable to make definite plans for the future. Their
life is unsettled. They cannot discern the outcome of affairs, and this often
fills them with anxiety and unrest. Let us remember that the life of God's
children in this world is a pilgrim life. We have not wisdom to plan our own
lives. It is not for us to shape our future. "By faith Abraham, when he
was called to go out into a place which he should after [479]
receive for an inheritance, obeyed; and he went out, not knowing whither he
went." Hebrews 11:8. {MH
478.3}
Christ in His life on earth made no plans for Himself. He
accepted God's plans for Him, and day by day the Father unfolded His plans. So
should we depend upon God, that our lives may be the simple outworking of His
will. As we commit our ways to Him, He will direct our steps. {MH 479.1}
Too many, in planning for a brilliant future, make an utter
failure. Let God plan for you. As a little child, trust to the guidance of Him
who will "keep the feet of His saints." 1 Samuel 2:9. God never leads
His children otherwise than they would choose to be led, if they could see the
end from the beginning and discern the glory of the purpose which they are
fulfilling as co-workers with Him. {MH 479.2}
Wages
When Christ called His disciples to follow Him, He offered
them no flattering prospects in this life. He gave them no promise of gain or
worldly honor, nor did they make any stipulation as to what they should
receive. To Matthew as he sat at the receipt of custom, the Saviour said,
"Follow Me. And he left all, rose up, and followed Him." Luke 5:27,
28. Matthew did not, before rendering service, wait to demand a certain salary
equal to the amount received in his former [480]
occupation. Without question or hesitation he followed Jesus. It was enough for
him that he was to be with the Saviour, that he might hear His words and unite
with Him in His work. {MH
479.3}
So it was with the disciples previously called. When Jesus
bade Peter and his companions follow Him, immediately they left their boats and
nets. Some of these disciples had friends dependent on them for support; but
when they received the Saviour's invitation they did not hesitate and inquire,
"How shall I live and sustain my family?" They were obedient to the
call; and when afterward Jesus asked them, "When I sent you without purse,
and scrip, and shoes, lacked ye anything?" they could answer,
"Nothing." Luke 22:35. {MH 480.1}
Today the Saviour calls us, as He called Matthew and John
and Peter, to His work. If our hearts are touched by His love, the question of
compensation will not be uppermost in our minds. We shall rejoice to be
co-workers with Christ, and we shall not fear to trust His care. If we make God
our strength we shall have clear perceptions of duty, unselfish aspirations;
our life will be actuated by a noble purpose which will raise us above sordid
motives. {MH 480.2}
God Will Provide
Many who profess to be Christ's followers have an anxious,
troubled heart because they are afraid to trust themselves with God. They do
not make a complete surrender to [481] Him, for they shrink from the
consequences that such a surrender may involve. Unless they do make this
surrender they cannot find peace. {MH 480.3}
There are many whose hearts are aching under a load of care
because they seek to reach the world's standard. They have chosen its service,
accepted its perplexities, adopted its customs. Thus their character is marred
and their life made a weariness. The continual worry is wearing out the life
forces. Our Lord desires them to lay aside this yoke of bondage. He invites
them to accept His yoke; He says, "My yoke is easy, and My burden is
light." Worry is blind and cannot discern the future; but Jesus sees the
end from the beginning. In every difficulty He has His way prepared to bring
relief. "No good thing will He withhold from them that walk
uprightly." Matthew 11:30; Psalm 84:11. {MH 481.1}
Our heavenly Father has a thousand ways to provide for us of
which we know nothing. Those who accept the one principle of making the service
of God supreme, will find perplexities vanish and a plain path before their
feet. {MH 481.2}
The faithful discharge of today's duties is the best
preparation for tomorrow's trials. Do not gather together all tomorrow's
liabilities and cares and add them to the burden of today. "Sufficient
unto the day is the evil thereof." Matthew 6:34. {MH 481.3}
Let us be hopeful and courageous. Despondency in God's
service is sinful and unreasonable. He knows our every necessity. To the
omnipotence of the King of kings our covenant-keeping God unites the gentleness
and care of the tender shepherd. His power is absolute, and it is the pledge of
the sure fulfillment of His promises to all who trust in Him. He has means for
the removal of every difficulty, that those who serve Him and respect the means
He employs may be [482] sustained. His love is as far
above all other love as the heavens are above the earth. He watches over His
children with a love that is measureless and everlasting. {MH 481.4}
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In the darkest days, when appearances seem most forbidding,
have faith in God. He is working out His will, doing all things well in behalf
of His people. The strength of those who love and serve Him will be renewed day
by day. {MH 482.1}
He is able and willing to bestow upon His servants all the
help they need. He will give them the wisdom which their varied necessities
demand. {MH 482.2}
Said the tried apostle Paul: "He said unto me, My grace
is sufficient for thee: for My strength is made perfect in weakness. Most
gladly therefore will I rather glory in my infirmities, that the power of
Christ may rest upon me. Therefore I take pleasure in infirmities, in
reproaches, in necessities, in persecutions, in distresses for Christ's sake:
for when I am weak, then am I strong." 2 Corinthians 12:9, 10. {MH 482.3}
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"In Contact With Others"
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