The Ministry of Healing
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 42: Development and Service
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WANTED: Men of stamina, men who will not wait to have their way smoothed
and every obstacle removed, men whose hearts are warm with Christian
love and whose hands are strong to do their Master's work.
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Review and Herald Publ. Assoc. |
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Christian life is more than many take it to be. It does not
consist wholly in gentleness, patience, meekness, and kindliness. These graces
are essential; but there is need also of courage, force, energy, and
perseverance. The path that Christ marks out is a narrow, self-denying path. To
enter that path and press on through difficulties and discouragements requires
men who are more than weaklings. {MH 497.1}
Force of Character
Men of stamina are wanted, men who will not wait to have
their way smoothed and every obstacle removed, men who will inspire with fresh
zeal the flagging efforts of dispirited workers, men whose hearts are warm with
Christian love and whose hands are strong to do their Master's work. {MH 497.2}
Some who engage in missionary service are weak, nerveless,
spiritless, easily discouraged. They lack push. They have not those positive
traits of character that give power to do something—the spirit and
energy that kindle enthusiasm. Those who would win success must be courageous
and hopeful. They should cultivate not only the passive but the active virtues.
While they are to give the soft answer that turns [498] away
wrath, they must possess the courage of a hero to resist evil. With the charity
that endures all things, they need the force of character that will make their
influence a positive power. {MH
497.3}
Some have no firmness of character. Their plans and purposes
have no definite form and consistency. They are of but little practical use in
the world. This weakness, indecision, and inefficiency should be overcome.
There is in true Christian character an indomitableness that cannot be molded
or subdued by adverse circumstances. We must have moral backbone, an integrity
that cannot be flattered, bribed, or terrified. {MH 498.1}
God desires us to make use of every opportunity for securing
a preparation for His work. He expects us to put all our energies into its
performance and to keep our hearts alive to its sacredness and its fearful
responsibilities. {MH
498.2}
Many who are qualified to do excellent work accomplish
little because they attempt little. Thousands pass through life as if they had
no great object for which to live, no high standard to reach. One reason for
this is the low estimate which they place upon themselves. Christ paid an
infinite price for us, and according to the price paid He desires us to value
ourselves. {MH 498.3}
Be not satisfied with reaching a low standard. We are not
what we might be, or what it is God's will that we should be. God has given us
reasoning powers, not to remain inactive, or to be perverted to earthly and
sordid pursuits, but that they may be developed to the utmost, refined,
sanctified, ennobled, and used in advancing the interests of His kingdom. {MH 498.4}
None should consent to be mere machines, run by another
man's mind. God has given us ability, to think and to act, and it is by acting
with carefulness, looking to Him for wisdom [499] that
you will become capable of bearing burdens. Stand in your God-given
personality. Be no other person's shadow. Expect that the Lord will work in and
by and through you. {MH
498.5}
Never think that you have learned enough, and that you may
now relax your efforts. The cultivated mind is the measure of the man. Your
education should continue during your lifetime; every day you should be
learning and putting to practical use the knowledge gained. {MH 499.1}
Remember that in whatever position you may serve you are
revealing motive, developing character. Whatever your work, do it with
exactness, with diligence; overcome the inclination to seek an easy task. {MH 499.2}
The same spirit and principles that one brings into the
daily labor will be brought into the whole life. Those who desire a fixed
amount to do and a fixed salary, and who wish to prove an exact fit without the
trouble of adaptation or training, are not the ones whom God calls to work in
His cause. Those who study how to give as little as possible of their physical,
mental, and moral power are not the workers upon whom He can pour out abundant
blessings. Their example is contagious. Self-interest is the ruling motive.
Those who need to be watched and who work only as every duty is specified to
them, are not the ones who will be pronounced good and faithful. Workers are
needed who manifest energy, integrity, diligence, those who are willing to do
anything that needs to be done. [500] {MH 499.3}
Many become inefficient by evading responsibilities for fear
of failure. Thus they fail of gaining that education which results from
experience, and which reading and study and all the advantages otherwise gained
cannot give them. {MH
500.1}
Man can shape circumstances, but circumstances should not be
allowed to shape the man. We should seize upon circumstances as instruments by
which to work. We are to master them, but should not permit them to master us. {MH 500.2}
Men of power are those who have been opposed, baffled, and
thwarted. By calling their energies into action, the obstacles they meet prove
to them positive blessings. They gain self-reliance. Conflict and perplexity
call for the exercise of trust in God and for that firmness which develops
power. {MH 500.3}
Christ gave no stinted service. He did not measure His work
by hours. His time, His heart, His soul and strength, were given to labor for
the benefit of humanity. Through weary days He toiled, and through long nights
He bent in prayer for grace and endurance that He might do a larger work. With
strong crying and tears He sent His petitions to heaven, that His human nature
might be strengthened, that He might be braced to meet the wily foe in all his
deceptive workings, and fortified to fulfill His missions of uplifting
humanity. To His workers He says, "I have given you an example, that ye should
do as I have done." John 13:15. {MH 500.4}
"The love of Christ," said Paul,
"constraineth us." 2 Corinthians 5:14. This was the actuating
principle of his conduct; it was his motive power. If ever his ardor in the
path of duty flagged for a moment, one glance at the cross caused him to gird
up anew the loins of his mind and press forward in the way of self-denial. In
his labors for his brethren he relied much upon the manifestation of infinite
love in the sacrifice of Christ, with its subduing, constraining power. [501]
{MH 500.5}
How earnest, how touching, his appeal: "Ye know the
grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that, though He was rich, yet for your sakes He
became poor, that ye through His poverty might be rich." 2 Corinthians
8:9. You know the height from which He stooped, the depth of humiliation to
which He descended. His feet entered upon the path of sacrifice and turned not
aside until He had given His life. There was no rest for Him between the throne
in heaven and the cross. His love for man led Him to welcome every indignity
and suffer every abuse. {MH
501.1}
Paul admonishes us to "look not every man on his own
things, but every man also on the things of others." He bids us possess
the mind "which was also in Christ Jesus: who, being in the form of God,
thought it not robbery to be equal with God: but made Himself of no reputation,
and took upon Him the form of a servant, and was made in the likeness of men:
and being found in fashion as a man, He humbled Himself, and became obedient
unto death, even the death of the cross." Philippians 2:4-8. {MH 501.2}
Paul was deeply anxious that the humiliation of Christ
should be seen and realized. He was convinced that if men could be led to
consider the amazing sacrifice made by the Majesty of heaven, selfishness would
be banished from their hearts. The apostle lingers over point after point, that
we may in some measure comprehend the wonderful condescension of the Saviour in
behalf of sinners. He directs the mind first to the position which Christ
occupied in heaven in the bosom of His Father; he reveals Him afterward as
laying aside His glory, voluntarily subjecting Himself to the humbling
conditions of man's life, assuming the responsibilities of a servant, and
becoming obedient unto death, and that the most ignominious and revolting, the
most agonizing—the death of the cross. Can we contemplate this
wonderful manifestation of the love of God without gratitude and love, and a
deep sense of the fact that we are not our own? Such a [502] Master
should not be served from grudging, selfish motives. {MH 501.3}
"Ye know," says Peter, "that ye were not
redeemed with corruptible things, as silver and gold." 1 Peter 1:18. Oh,
had these been sufficient to purchase the salvation of man, how easily it might
have been accomplished by Him who says, "The silver is Mine, and the gold
is Mine"! Haggai 2:8. But the sinner could be redeemed only by the
precious blood of the Son of God. Those who, failing to appreciate this
wonderful sacrifice, withhold themselves from Christ's service, will perish in
their selfishness. {MH
502.1}
Singleness of Purpose
In the life of Christ, everything was made subordinate to
His work, the great work of redemption which He came to accomplish. And the
same devotion, the same self-denial and sacrifice, the same subjection to the
claims of the word of God, is to be manifest in His disciples. {MH 502.2}
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Everyone who accepts Christ as his personal Saviour will
long for the privilege of serving God. Contemplating what heaven has done for
him, his heart is moved with boundless love and adoring gratitude. He is eager
to signalize his gratitude by devoting his abilities to God's service. He longs
to show his love for Christ and for His purchased possession. He covets toil,
hardship, sacrifice. {MH
502.3}
The true worker for God will do his best, because in so
doing he can glorify his Master. He will do right in order to regard the
requirements of God. He will endeavor to improve all his faculties. He will
perform every duty as unto God. His one desire will be that Christ may receive
homage and perfect service. {MH
502.4}
There is a picture representing a bullock standing between a
plow and an altar, with the inscription, "Ready for either," ready to
toil in the furrow or to be offered on the altar of sacrifice. This is the
position of the true child of God—willing to go where duty calls, to
deny self, to sacrifice for the Redeemer's cause. {MH 502.5}
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"A Higher Experience"
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