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Healthy Enthusiasm
"The Holy Spirit of God alone can create a healthy enthusiasm. Let God
work, and let the human agent walk softly before Him, watching, waiting,
praying, looking unto Jesus every moment, led and controlled by the precious
Spirit, which is light and life" (2SM 16, 17 [Letter 68, 1894]).
Build Experience on
the Word
"The Lord desires His servants today to preach the old gospel doctrine,
sorrow for sin, repentance, and confession. We want old-fashioned sermons,
old-fashioned customs, old-fashioned fathers and mothers in Israel. The
sinner must be labored for, perserveringly, earnestly, wisely, until he
shall see that he is a transgressor of God's law, and shall exercise repentance
toward God, and faith toward the Lord Jesus Christ" (2SM 19 [Undated manuscript
111]).
"It is through the Word-not
feeling, not excitement-that we want to
influence the people to obey the truth. On the platform of God's Word
we can stand with safety" (3SM 375 [MS 115, 1908], emphasis in original).
"They flatter themselves that
they are in conformity to the will of God because they feel happy; but
when they are tested, when the Word of God is brought to bear upon their
experience, they stop their ears from hearing the truth, saying, `I am
sanctified,' and that puts an end to the controversy. They will have nothing
to do with searching the Scriptures to know what is truth, and prove that
they are fearfully self-deceived. Sanctification means very much more
than a flight of feeling.
"Excitement is not sanctification.
Entire conformity to the will of our Father which is in heaven is alone
sanctification, and the will of God is expressed in His holy law. The
keeping of all the commandments of God is sanctification. Proving yourselves
obedient children to God's Word is sanctification. The Word of God is
to be our guide, not the opinions or ideas of men" (3SM 204 [RH, March
25, 1902]).
Holy Spirit Not in
Bedlam and Noise
"True religion does not demand great bodily demonstrations. . . .
These are no evidence of the presence of the Spirit of God" (2SM 26 [MS
97, 1909]).
"The things you have described
as taking place in Indiana, the Lord has shown me would take place
just before the close of probation. Every uncouth thing will be demonstrated.
There will be shouting, with drums, music, and dancing. The senses of
rational beings will become so confused that they cannot be trusted to
make right decisions. And this is called the moving of the Holy Spirit.
"The Holy Spirit never reveals
itself in such methods, in such a bedlam of noise. This is an invention
of Satan to cover up his ingenious methods for making of none evffect
the pure, sincere, elevating, ennobling, sanctifying truth for this time"
(2SM 36 [Letter 132, 1900]).
"During those trying days some
of our most precious believers were led into fanaticism. I said further
that before the end we would see strange manifestations by those who professed
to be led by the Holy Spirit. There are those who will treat as something
of great importance those peculiar manifestations, which are not of God,
but which are calculated to divert the minds of many away from the teachings
of the Word" (2SM 41 [Letter 338, 1908]).
"No greater harm could be done
to the work of God at this time than for us to allow a spirit of fanaticism
to come into our churches, accompanied by strange workings which are incorrectly
supposed to be operations of the Spirit of God" (2SM 42 [Letter 338, 1908]).
"Fearful waves of faniticism
will come. But God will deliver the people who will earnestly seek the
Lord, and consecrate themselves to His service" (2SM 47 [Pacific Union
Recorder, December 31, 1908]).
Music a Problem
"The things you have described as taking place in Indiana, the Lord has
shown me would take place just before the close of probation. Every uncouth
thing will be demonstrated. There will be shouting, with drums, music,
and dancing. The senses of rational beings will become so confused that
they cannot be trusted to make right decisions. And this is called the
moving of the Holy Spirit" (2SM 36 [Letter 132, 1900]).
"Those things which have been
in the past will be in the future. Satan will make music a snare by the
way in which it is conducted" (2SM 38 [Letter 132, 1900]).
"Any oddity or pecularity cultivated
attracts the attention of the people and destroys the serious, solemn
impression which should be the result of sacred music. Anything strange
and eccentric in singing detracts from the seriousness and sacredness
of religious service.
"Bodily exercise profiteth
little. Everything that is connected in any way with religious worship
should be dignified, solemn, and impressive. God is not pleased when ministers
professing to be Christ's represnetatives so misrepresent Christ as to
throw the body into acting attitudes, making undignified and coarse gestures,
unrefined, coarse gesticulations. All this amuses, and will excite the
curiosity of those who wish to see strange, odd, and exciting things,
but these things will not elevate the minds and hearts of those who witness
them.
"The very same may be said
of singing. You assume undignified attitudes. You put in all the power
and volume of the voice you can. You drown the finer strains and notes
of voices more musical than you own. This bodily exercise and the harsh,
loud voice makes no melody to those who hear on earth and those who listen
in heaven. This singing is defective and not acceptable to God as perfect,
softened, sweet strains of music. There are no such exhibitions among
the angels as I have sometimes eeen in our meetings. Such harsh notes
and gesticulations are not exhibited among the angel choir. Their singing
does not grate upon the ear. It is soft and melodious and comes without
this great effort I have witnessed. It is not forced and strained, requiring
physical exercise" (3SM 333 [MS 5, 1874]).
Satan's Counterfeit
in the Church
"It would be surprising if there were not some, who, not being well-balanced
in mind, have spoken and acted indiscreetly; for whenever and wherever
the Lord works in giving a genuine blessing, a counterfeit is also revealed,
in order to make of no effect the true work of God. Therefore we need
to be exceeding careful, and walk humbly before God, that we may have
spiritual eyesalve that we may distinguish the working of the Holy Spirit
of God from the working of that spirit that would bring in wild license
and fanaticism. `By their fruits ye shall know them' (Matt. 7:20). Those
who are really beholding Christ will be changed into His image, even by
the Spirit of the Lord, and will grow up to the full stature of men and
women in Christ Jesus. The Holy Spirit of God will inspire men with love
and purity; and refinement will be manifest in their characters" (1SM
142).
Calmness of Spirit's
Presence
"Let us give no place to strange exercisings, which really take the mind
away from the deep movings of the Holy Spirit. God's work is ever characterized
by calmness and dignity" (2SM 42 [Letter 338, 1908]).
"We must go to the people with
the solid Word of God; and when they receive that Word, the Holy Spirit
may come, but it always comes, as I have stated before, in a way that
commends itself to the judgment of the people. In our speaking, our singing,
and in all our spiritual exercises, we are to reveal that calmness and
dignity and godly fear that actuates every true child of God" (2SM 43
[MS 115, 1908]).
"In God's dealings with His
people, all is quiet; with those who trust in Him, all is calm and unpretending"
(2SM 97 [Letter 102, 1894]).
Ellen G. White, Selected Mesages, vols. 1, 2, 3 (Review &
Herald Pub. Assoc. 1958, 1980).
7/23/98
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