The Acts of the Apostles
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 54: A Faithful Witness
This chapter is based on the Epistles of John.
After the ascension of Christ, John stands forth as a
faithful, earnest laborer for the Master. With the other disciples he enjoyed
the outpouring of the Spirit on the Day of Pentecost, and with fresh zeal and
power he continued to speak to the people the words of life, seeking to lead
their thoughts to the Unseen. He was a powerful preacher, fervent, and deeply
in earnest. In beautiful language and with a musical voice he told of the words
and works of Christ, speaking in a way that impressed the hearts of those who
heard him. The simplicity of his words, the sublime power of the truths he
uttered, and the fervor that characterized his teachings, gave him access to
all classes. {AA 546.1}
The apostle's life was in harmony with his teachings. The
love for Christ which glowed in his heart led him to put forth earnest,
untiring labor for his fellow men, especially for his brethren in the Christian
church. [547]
{AA 546.2}
Christ had bidden the first disciples love one another as He
had loved them. Thus they were to bear testimony to the world that Christ was
formed within, the hope of glory. "A new commandment I give unto
you," He had said, "That ye love one another; as I have loved you,
that ye also love one another." John 13:34. At the time when these words
were spoken, the disciples could not understand them; but after they had
witnessed the sufferings of Christ, after His crucifixion and resurrection, and
ascension to heaven, and after the Holy Spirit had rested on them at Pentecost,
they had a clearer conception of the love of God and of the nature of that love
which they must have for one another. Then John could say to his fellow
disciples: {AA 547.1}
"Hereby perceive we the love of God, because He laid
down His life for us: and we ought to lay down our lives for the
brethren." {AA 547.2}
After the descent of the Holy Spirit, when the disciples
went forth to proclaim a living Saviour, their one desire was the salvation of
souls. They rejoiced in the sweetness of communion with saints. They were
tender, thoughtful, self-denying, willing to make any sacrifice for the truth's
sake. In their daily association with one another, they revealed the love that
Christ had enjoined upon them. By unselfish words and deeds they strove to
kindle this love in other hearts. {AA 547.3}
Such a love the believers were ever to cherish. They were to
go forward in willing obedience to the new commandment. So closely were they to
be united with Christ that [548] they would be enabled to fulfill
all His requirements. Their lives were to magnify the power of a Saviour who
could justify them by His righteousness. {AA 547.4}
But gradually a change came. The believers began to look for
defects in others. Dwelling upon mistakes, giving place to unkind criticism,
they lost sight of the Saviour and His love. They became more strict in regard
to outward ceremonies, more particular about the theory than the practice of
the faith. In their zeal to condemn others, they overlooked their own errors.
They lost the brotherly love that Christ had enjoined, and, saddest of all,
they were unconscious of their loss. They did not realize that happiness and
joy were going out of their lives and that, having shut the love of God out of
their hearts, they would soon walk in darkness. {AA 548.1}
John, realizing that brotherly love was waning in the
church, urged upon believers the constant need of this love. His letters to the
church are full of this thought. "Beloved, let us love one another,"
he writes; "for love is of God; and everyone that loveth is born of God,
and knoweth God. He that loveth not knoweth not God; for God is love. In this
was manifested the love of God toward us, because that God sent His
only-begotten Son into the world, that we might live through Him. Herein is
love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us, and sent His Son to be the
propitiation for our sins. Beloved, if God so loved us, we ought also to love
one another." {AA
548.2}
Of the special sense in which this love should be manifested
by believers, the apostle writes: "A new commandment [549] I
write unto you, which thing is true in Him and in you: because the darkness is
past, and the true light now shineth. He that saith he is in the light, and
hateth his brother, is in darkness even until now. He that loveth his brother
abideth in the light, and there is none occasion of stumbling in him. But he
that hateth his brother is in darkness, and walketh in darkness, and knoweth
not whither he goeth, because that darkness hath blinded his eyes."
"This is the message that ye heard from the beginning, that we should love
one another." "He that loveth not his brother abideth in death.
Whosoever hateth his brother is a murderer: and ye know that no murderer hath
eternal life abiding in him. Hereby perceive we the love of God, because He
laid down His life for us: and we ought to lay down our lives for the
brethren." {AA 548.3}
It is not the opposition of the world that most endangers
the church of Christ. It is the evil cherished in the hearts of believers that
works their most grievous disaster and most surely retards the progress of
God's cause. There is no surer way of weakening spirituality than by cherishing
envy, suspicion, faultfinding, and evil surmising. On the other hand, the strongest
witness that God has sent His Son into the world is the existence of harmony
and union among men of varied dispositions who form His church. This witness it
is the privilege of the followers of Christ to bear. But in order to do this,
they must place themselves under Christ's command. Their characters must be
conformed to His character and their wills to His will. [550] {AA 549.1}
"A new commandment I give unto you," Christ said,
"That ye love one another; as I have loved you, that ye also love one another."
John 13:34. What a wonderful statement; but, oh, how poorly practiced! In the
church of God today brotherly love is sadly lacking. Many who profess to love
the Saviour do not love one another. Unbelievers are watching to see if the
faith of professed Christians is exerting a sanctifying influence upon their
lives; and they are quick to discern the defects in character, the
inconsistencies in action. Let Christians not make it possible for the enemy to
point to them and say, Behold how these people, standing under the banner of
Christ, hate one another. Christians are all members of one family, all
children of the same heavenly Father, with the same blessed hope of
immortality. Very close and tender should be the tie that binds them together. {AA 550.1}
Divine love makes its most touching appeals to the heart
when it calls upon us to manifest the same tender compassion that Christ
manifested. That man only who has unselfish love for his brother has true love
for God. The true Christian will not willingly permit the soul in peril and
need to go unwarned, uncared for. He will not hold himself aloof from the
erring, leaving them to plunge farther into unhappiness and discouragement or
to fall on Satan's battleground. {AA 550.2}
Those who have never experienced the tender, winning love of
Christ cannot lead others to the fountain of life. His love in the heart is a
constraining power, which leads men [551] to reveal Him in the
conversation, in the tender, pitiful spirit, in the uplifting of the lives of
those with whom they associate. Christian workers who succeed in their efforts
must know Christ; and in order to know Him, they must know His love. In heaven
their fitness as workers is measured by their ability to love as Christ loved
and to work as He worked. {AA
550.3}
"Let us not love in word," the apostle writes,
"but in deed and in truth." The completeness of Christian character
is attained when the impulse to help and bless others springs constantly from
within. It is the atmosphere of this love surrounding the soul of the believer
that makes him a savor of life unto life and enables God to bless his work. {AA 551.1}
Supreme love for God and unselfish love for one another—this
is the best gift that our heavenly Father can bestow. This love is not an impulse,
but a divine principle, a permanent power. The unconsecrated heart cannot
originate or produce it. Only in the heart where Jesus reigns is it found.
"We love Him, because He first loved us." In the heart renewed by
divine grace, love is the ruling principle of action. It modifies the
character, governs the impulses, controls the passions, and ennobles the
affections. This love, cherished in the soul, sweetens the life and sheds a
refining influence on all around. {AA 551.2}
John strove to lead the believers to understand the exalted
privileges that would come to them through the exercise of the spirit of love.
This redeeming power, filling the heart, would control every other motive and
raise its possessors [552] above the corrupting influences
of the world. And as this love was allowed full sway and became the motive
power in the life, their trust and confidence in God and His dealing with them
would be complete. They could then come to Him in full confidence of faith,
knowing that they would receive from Him everything needful for their present
and eternal good. "Herein is our love made perfect," he wrote,
"that we may have boldness in the day of judgment: because as He is, so
are we in this world. There is no fear in love; but perfect love casteth out
fear." "And this is the confidence that we have in Him, that, if we
ask anything according to His will, He heareth us: and if we know that He hear
us, . . . we know that we have the petitions that we desired of
Him." {AA 551.3}
"And if any man sin, we have an advocate with the
Father, Jesus Christ the righteous: and He is the propitiation for our sins:
and not for ours only, but also for the sins of the whole world." "If
we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to
cleanse us from all unrighteousness." The conditions of obtaining mercy
from God are simple and reasonable. The Lord does not require us to do some
grievous thing in order to gain forgiveness. We need not make long and
wearisome pilgrimages, or perform painful penances, to commend our souls to the
God of heaven or to expiate our transgression. He that "confesseth and
forsaketh" his sin "shall have mercy." Proverbs 28:13. {AA 552.1}
In the courts above, Christ is pleading for His church—pleading
for those for whom He has paid the redemption [553] price
of His blood. Centuries, ages, can never lessen the efficacy of His atoning
sacrifice. Neither life nor death, height nor depth, can separate us from the
love of God which is in Christ Jesus; not because we hold Him so firmly, but
because He holds us so fast. If our salvation depended on our own efforts, we
could not be saved; but it depends on the One who is behind all the promises.
Our grasp on Him may seem feeble, but His love is that of an elder brother; so
long as we maintain our union with Him, no one can pluck us out of His hand. {AA 552.2}
As the years went by and the number of believers grew, John
labored with increasing fidelity and earnestness for his brethren. The times
were full of peril for the church. Satanic delusions existed everywhere. By
misrepresentation and falsehood the emissaries of Satan sought to arouse
opposition against the doctrines of Christ, and in consequence dissensions and
heresies were imperiling the church. Some who professed Christ claimed that His
love released them from obedience to the law of God. On the other hand, many
taught that it was necessary to observe the Jewish customs and ceremonies; that
a mere observance of the law, without faith in the blood of Christ, was sufficient
for salvation. Some held that Christ was a good man, but denied His divinity.
Some who pretended to be true to the cause of God were deceivers, and in
practice they denied Christ and His gospel. Living themselves in transgression,
they were bringing heresies into the church. Thus many were being led into the
mazes of skepticism and delusion. [554] {AA 553.1}
John was filled with sadness as he saw these poisonous
errors creeping into the church. He saw the dangers to which the church was
exposed, and he met the emergency with promptness and decision. The epistles of
John breathe the spirit of love. It seems as if he wrote with a pen dipped in
love. But when he came in contact with those who were breaking the law of God,
yet claiming that they were living without sin, he did not hesitate to warn
them of their fearful deception. {AA 554.1}
Writing to a helper in the gospel work, a woman of good
repute and wide influence, he said: "Many deceivers are entered into the
world, who confess not that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh. This is a
deceiver and an antichrist. Look to yourselves, that we lose not those things
which we have wrought, but that we receive a full reward. Whosoever
transgresseth, and abideth not in the doctrine of Christ, hath not God. He that
abideth in the doctrine of Christ, he hath both the Father and the Son. If
there come any unto you, and bring not this doctrine, receive him not into your
house, neither bid him Godspeed: for he that biddeth him Godspeed is partaker
of his evil deeds." {AA
554.2}
We are authorized to hold in the same estimation as did the
beloved disciple those who claim to abide in Christ while living in
transgression of God's law. There exist in these last days evils similar to
those that threatened the prosperity of the early church; and the teachings of
the apostle John on these points should be carefully heeded. "You must
have charity," is the cry heard everywhere, [555]
especially from those who profess sanctification. But true charity is too pure
to cover an unconfessed sin. While we are to love the souls for whom Christ
died, we are to make no compromise with evil. We are not to unite with the
rebellious and call this charity. God requires His people in this age of the
world to stand for the right as unflinchingly as did John in opposition to
soul-destroying errors. {AA
554.3}
The apostle teaches that while we should manifest Christian
courtesy we are authorized to deal in plain terms with sin and sinners; that
this is not inconsistent with true charity. "Whosoever committeth
sin," he writes, "transgresseth also the law: for sin is the
transgression of the law. And ye know that He was manifested to take away our
sins; and in Him is no sin. Whosoever abideth in Him sinneth not: whosoever
sinneth hath not seen Him, neither known Him." {AA 555.1}
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As a witness for Christ, John entered into no controversy,
no wearisome contention. He declared what he knew, what he had seen and heard.
He had been intimately associated with Christ, had listened to His teachings,
had witnessed His mighty miracles. Few could see the beauties of Christ's
character as John saw them. For him the darkness had passed away; on him the
true light was shining. His testimony in regard to the Saviour's life and death
was clear and forcible. Out of the abundance of a heart overflowing with love
for the Saviour he spoke; and no power could stay his words. {AA 555.2}
"That which was from the beginning," he declared,
"which we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes, [556]
which we have looked upon, and our hands have handled, of the Word of life;
. . . that which we have seen and heard declare we unto you, that ye
also may have fellowship with us: and truly our fellowship is with the Father,
and with His Son Jesus Christ." {AA 555.3}
So may every true believer be able, through his own
experience, to "set to his seal that God is true." John 3:33. He can
bear witness to that which he has seen and heard and felt of the power of
Christ. {AA 556.1}
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"Transformed by Grace"
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