The "Review and Herald" Articles

NOTE: IN THE MID-1890'S ELLEN G. WHITE PREPARED TEN ARTICLES FOR THE REVIEW AND HERALD
DEVOTED ESPECIALLY TO THE WORK IN THE SOUTHERN FIELD. THE FIRST WAS PUBLISHED ON APRIL 2,
1895. THE OTHER NINE APPEARED IN THE ISSUES OF NOVEMBER 26 TO DECEMBER 24, 1895, AND
JANUARY 14 TO FEBRUARY 4, 1896. ALL EXCEPT THE FIRST ONE (APRIL 2, 1895), WHICH APPARENTLY
WAS OVERLOOKED BY EDSON WHITE, WERE CHOSEN FOR PUBLICATION IN THE SOUTHERN WORK. THE TEN
ARTICLES ARE REPRODUCED HERE IN THEIR ENTIRETY.--WHITE TRUSTEES.

Work Among the Coloured People
I Have A most earnest interest in the work to be done among the coloured people. This
is a branch of work that has been strangely neglected. The reason that this large class of
human beings, who have souls to save or to lose, have been so long neglected, is the
prejudice that the white people have felt and manifested against mingling with them in
religious worship. They have been despised, shunned, and treated with abhorrence, as
though crime were upon them, when they were helpless and in need, when men should have
laboured most earnestly for their salvation. They have been treated without pity. The
priests and the Levites have looked upon their wretchedness, and have passed by on the
other side.
What should be done for the coloured race has long been a vexed question, because
professed Christians have not had the Spirit of Christ. They have been called by His name
but they have not imitated His example. Men have thought it necessary to plan in such a
way as to meet the prejudice of the white people; and a wall of separation in religious
worship has been built up between the coloured people and the white people. The white
people have declared themselves willing that the coloured people should be converted. They
have no objection to this. They were willing that they should be grafted into the same
parent stock, Christ, and become branches
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with themselves of the living Vine; yet they were not willing to sit by the side of
their coloured brethren and sing and pray and bear witness to the truth which they had in
common. Not for a moment could they tolerate the idea that they should together bear the
fruit that should be found on the Christian tree. The image of Christ might be stamped
upon the soul, but it still would be necessary to have a separate church and a separate
service. But the question is, Is this in harmony with the moving of the Spirit of God? Is
it not after the manner in which the Jewish people acted in the days of Christ? Is not
this prejudice against the coloured people on the part of the white people similar to that
which was cherished by the Jews against the Gentiles? They cultivated the idea until it
became deep-rooted that the Gentile should not share the privileges of light and truth
that were given to the Jews. They believed that the Jews alone should be recipients of
heavenly grace and favour. Christ worked throughout His life to break down this prejudice.
No human power alone could overcome it. This prejudice was created not by mere flesh and
blood, but by principalities and powers; and in wrestling against it He was wrestling
against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high
places.
Again and again men have devised plans whereby to keep up the line of separation and
still bring the coloured race within the influence of the gospel; but the Lord has blown
upon the effort, and made it of none effect. The inquiry among us may be, "What shall
we do?" Wherefore take unto you the whole
armour of God, that ye may be able to withstand in the evil day, and having done all,
to stand. Stand therefore, having your loins girt about with truth, and having on the
breastplate of righteousness; and your feet shod with the preparation of the gospel of
peace; above all, taking the shield of faith, wherewith ye shall be able to quench all the
fiery darts of the wicked. And take the helmet of salvation, and the sword of the Spirit,
which is the word of God."
We should take into consideration the fact that efforts are being made at great expense
to send the gospel to the darkened regions of the world, to enlighten the savage
inhabitants of the islands of the sea, to bring instruction to the ignorant and
idolatrous; yet here in the very midst of us are millions of people who are practically
heathen, who have souls to save or to lose, and yet they are set aside and passed by as
was the wounded man by the priest and the Levite. Professedly Christian people are leaving
them to perish in their sins.
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There are two classes in our world. The Lord has sent out the message to those who are
represented by the first class, who have had great privileges and opportunities, who have
had great light and innumerable blessings. They have been entrusted by the Lord with the
living oracles. They are represented by the class to whom the king sent an invitation to
the marriage feast. Jesus said, "The kingdom of heaven is like unto a certain king,
which made a marriage for his son, and sent forth his servants to call them that are
bidden to the wedding: and they would not come. Again, he sent forth other servants,
saying, Tell them which are bidden, Behold, I have prepared my dinner: my oxen and my
fatlings are killed, and all things are ready: come unto the marriage. But they made light
of it, and went their ways, one to his farm, another to his merchandise: and the remnant
took his servants, and entreated them spitefully, and slew them. But when the king heard
thereof, he was wroth: and he sent forth his armies, and destroyed those murderers, and
burned up their city. Then saith he to his servants, The wedding is ready, but they which
were bidden were not worthy. Go ye therefore into the highways, and as many as ye shall
find, bid to the marriage. So those servants went out into the highways, and gathered
together all as many as they found, both bad and good: and the wedding was furnished with
guests."
How few respond to the gracious invitation of Heaven. Christ is insulted when His
messages are despised and His gracious, winning, liberal invitation is rejected. Those
that were bidden to the marriage feast at first, began to make excuses. They allowed minor
things to occupy their attention, and lost their eternal interests out of their reckoning.
While some made temporal interests their excuse, and were totally indifferent toward the
messages and messengers, others manifested a spirit of determined hatred, and took the
Lord's servants and entreated them spitefully and slew them. A power from beneath moved
upon human agencies who were not under the direct influence of the Holy Spirit. There are
two distinct classes--those who are saved through faith in Christ and through obedience to
His law, and those who refuse the truth as it is in Jesus. It will be impossible for those
who refuse Christ through the period of probation to become justified after the record of
their lives has passed into eternity. Now is the time to work for the salvation of men,
for probation still continues. Let national and denominational distinctions be laid aside.
Caste and rank are not recognised by God and should not be by His workers. Those who
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esteem themselves superior to their fellow men on account of position or property are
exalting themselves above their fellow men, but they are esteemed by the universe of
Heaven as the lowest of all. Let us take a lesson from the words of inspiration that
reprove us for this spirit, and also give us great encouragement: "Thus saith the
Lord, Let not the wise man glory in his wisdom, neither let the mighty man glory in his
might, let not the rich man glory in his riches: but let him that glorieth glory in this,
that he understandeth and knoweth me, that I am the Lord which exercise lovingkindness,
judgement, and righteousness, in the earth: for in these things I delight, saith the
Lord."
No human mind should seek to draw the line between the coloured and white people. Let
circumstances indicate what shall be done, for the Lord has His hand on the lever of
circumstances. As the truth is brought to bear upon the minds of both coloured and white
people, as souls are thoroughly converted, they will become new men and women in Christ
Jesus. Christ says, "A new heart also will I give you," and that new heart bears
the divine image. Those who are converted among the white people will experience a change
in their sentiments. The prejudice which they have inherited and cultivated toward the
coloured race will die away. They will realise that there is no respect of persons with
God. Those who are converted among the coloured race will be cleansed from sin, will wear
the white robe of Christ's righteousness, which has been woven in the loom of heaven. Both
white and coloured people must enter into the path of obedience through the same way.
The test will come, not as regards the outward complexion, but as regards the condition
of the heart. Both the white and the coloured people have the same Redeemer, who has paid
the ransom money with His own life for every member of the human family. If those to whom
Christ first sends His invitation to the marriage supper refuse to receive the message, He
will send His messengers into the highways and hedges to compel the people to come in, by
means of a message so full of the light of Heaven that they will not dare to refuse. The
gospel was first to be brought to those to whom God had entrusted precious truths that He
desired they should make known to others. He entrusted to them the responsibility of
imparting the knowledge of God and of Jesus Christ whom He had sent. The Lord wrought
wondrously for the children of Israel. He finally sent to them His own Son, the Prince of
life, the Messiah, to whom all their sacrifices and offerings pointed; but they would not
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receive Him. They rejected the message He bore. They refused the Messiah in whom their
hope centred; but when they refused to hear the messages, rejecting the invitation that He
gave, the Lord turned to the Gentile world. Those who ought to have known God and Jesus
Christ whom He had sent, who ought to have united with the Sent of God in giving the
message to the heathen world, would not themselves receive the invitation, and could not
therefore say to others, Come, for all things are now ready. The disciples of Christ were
commissioned to proclaim the message of mercy to those in the highways and the byways of
the Lord's great moral vineyard. "And the Spirit and the bride say, Come. And let him
that heareth {believeth} say, Come. And let him that is athirst come. And whosoever will,
let him take the water of life freely."
The Lord has a work that must be done, not only for those who are in the highways and
the byways, but for those in high positions of trust. Divine power is promised, not to
those who are strongest, but to those who are weakest. Those who are accounted the
strongest and the most enlightened should go to the aid of those who are in most need of
help and enlightenment. Everyone can become a labourer together with God, working with Him
for the salvation of the souls of the coloured race.
It was when Moses stood before God, conscious of his inefficiency, that he was in the
very condition in which the Lord could best reveal to him His saving grace. When he had
become weak, Christ could reveal to him His power and majesty. The Lord could do little
through him when he was the general of armies. He knew that he was the chosen of God, and
that he would do a great and special work in delivering the Hebrew nation from bondage;
but he sought to do his work in his own way, trusting in his zeal and violence. The Lord
did not propose to do the work in this way. For forty years Moses was placed in the
wilderness, to learn in the school of poverty, to learn in the walks of humble life, that
he was weak, inefficient, helpless. He left the court of Egypt with a full knowledge of
its fascinations, and had to come down to the simplicity of pastoral life. As a shepherd,
it was necessary for him to look after the flock, to leave the ninety and nine in the
valley and to go in search of the wandering sheep. He had to climb the mountain steep, to
search through the tangled brushwood, to look over the precipices, that he might find the
lost. One day he saw a bush ablaze on the mountain, and stood wondering because the bush
was not consumed. As he was gazing in astonishment, he heard a voice
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that seemed to come from the very centre of the flame, saying, "Moses, Moses. And
he said, Here am I. And he said, Draw not nigh hither: put off thy shoes from off thy
feet, for the place whereon thou standest is holy ground. Moreover he said, I am the God
of thy father, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob. And Moses hid
his face; for he was afraid to look upon God." Then the Lord gave Moses his
commission, sending him to deliver Israel, the lost sheep of Israel in Egypt. Moses
pleaded that he was inefficient, that Pharaoh would not believe his message nor hearken to
his voice. He pleaded that the Hebrews themselves would not hearken to him, and would
question the fact that the Lord had appeared to him. But the Lord said, "Certainly I
will be with thee." "And the Lord said unto him, What is that in thine hand? And
he said, A rod. And he said, Cast it on the ground. And he cast it on the ground, and it
became a serpent; and Moses fled from before it. And the Lord said unto Moses, Put forth
thine hand, and take it by the tail. And he put forth his hand, and caught it, and it
became a rod in his hand." The Lord revealed to him the fact that he could manifest
such signs and miracles as would convince his people of the divine authority of the
message and of the messenger that he sent. The Lord can do wonders, even with the simplest
instrumentalities.
Every one whom the Lord calls should be distrustful of self, and have full trust in
God. Moses went forth in the name of "I am that I am," without outward display
of grandeur; yet the rod in his hand was a symbol of the divine power of Jehovah, and
Moses was the instrumentality through whom God would deliver Israel from the bondage of
tyranny. There is a work that must be done now by the children of God. For long years the
coloured race has been neglected, has been left in the slavery of sin, and they are as
sheep that have no shepherd. Long ago much might have been done that has not been done. As
a people we should do more for the coloured race in America than we have yet done. In the
work we shall need to move with carefulness, being endowed with wisdom from above.--
Review and Herald, April 2, 1895.
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An Appeal for the Southern Field
Dear Brethren and Sisters in America: I would appeal to you in behalf of the Southern
field. If we consulted our own ease and pleasure, we would not desire to enter this field;
but we are not to consult our own ease. "Even Christ pleased not himself"; but
we are to consider the fact that that field is no more discouraging to those who would be
labourers together with God than was the field of the world as it presented itself before
the only-begotten Son of God. When He came to earth to seek and to save that which was
lost, He did not consult His own ease or pleasure. He left His high command, He laid aside
His heavenly honour and glory, He laid off His glorious diadem and royal robe, and left
the royal courts, in order that He might come to earth to save fallen man. Though He
possessed eternal riches, yet for our sakes He became poor, that He might enrich the human
race. By accepting the Son of God as their Redeemer, by exercising faith in Him, the sons
and the daughters of Adam may become heirs of God and joint heirs with Jesus Christ. The
apostle says: "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." Christ
was willing to come to a world that was all marred and seared with the curse--the result
of Adam's transgression of the law of God. He was willing to undertake the case of fallen
beings who had lost their original holiness, and who were in ignorance of the perfection
of God's character. He was willing to come to bring back to loyalty those who were not
subject to God's moral government. In the grand counsels of Heaven it was found that it
was positively necessary that there should be a revelation of God to man in the person of
His only-begotten Son. He came to earth to be "the true Light, which lighteth every
man that cometh into the world."
The Southern field is beset with difficulties, and should I present the field to you as
it has been presented to me, many of you would draw back and say, "No, I cannot enter
such a field." But the condition of the coloured race is no more disheartening than
was the condition of the world when Christ left heaven to work for
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fallen man. He clothed His divinity with humanity, and came into the world, in order
that His humanity might touch humanity and His divinity lay hold upon the throne of God in
man's behalf. He came to seek the one lost sheep, to bring back the wandering one from the
wilderness of sin to the heavenly fold. He was treated with every indignity by those whom
He came to save from eternal ruin, and the missionary to the Southern field will need to
arm himself with the mind that was in Christ Jesus. The record says: "He came unto
his own, and his own received him not. But as many as received him, to them gave he power
to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name."
The Southern race has been neglected. Men have passed by on the other side, as the
priest and the Levite passed by the wounded, robbed, bruised, and beaten one. But a
certain Samaritan, as he journeyed that way, not only saw him, but he had compassion on
him, and went to him, and bound up his wounds, set him on his own beast, brought him to an
inn, and took care of him. How many have left the coloured race to perish by the wayside?
Since the slaves gained their freedom at terrible loss of life both to the North and to
the South, they have been greatly neglected by those who professed to know God, and as a
result thousands of them have failed to gain spiritual freedom. But shall this
indifference continue? Shall not decided efforts be made to save them? Sin has degraded
and corrupted the human family, but Christ did not leave men to perish in their
degradation. He who was one with the Father came to our world to bridge the gulf that sin
had made, which separated man from God because of transgression. Christ, the brightness of
His Father's glory, beheld humanity in its wretchedness and sinfulness, beheld souls
tainted with corruption, depraved and deformed. He knew that the fallen race tended more
to evil than to good, and practised the most hateful vices. The heavenly hosts looked upon
the world as undeserving of the sympathy and love of God. Angels marvelled that Christ
should undertake to save man in his lost, and as it seemed to them, hopeless condition.
They marvelled that God could tolerate a race so foul with sin as to be a blot upon His
creation. They could see no room for love, but Christ saw that souls must perish unless an
arm strong to deliver was reached forth to save.
Satan is the destroyer, but Christ is the restorer. From the first it was Satan's
purpose to cause men to transgress the law of God. He misrepresented the character of the
Father, trampled upon His
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law, and cast contempt upon His precepts. He inspired men with his own spirit, and made
them partakers of his own attributes, and caused them to transgress the law of God. When
he had accomplished his work of ruin, he pointed to the degraded, sin-polluted souls whom
he had made subject to a thousand vices, and declared that they were too degraded, too
wretched, to be redeemed by Heaven. He sought to present mankind in the most discouraging
aspect, so that reformation might seem hopeless. Though he could not prevail with his
temptations in assailing Christ, or cause Him to fail or be discouraged, yet he often
succeeds too well with those who should be labourers together with God. But his plans to
cause the work to cease are not wholly successful. Through the grace of God those whom the
enemy has oppressed for generations, rise up to the dignity of God-given manhood and
womanhood and present themselves as sons and daughters of the Most High. This result is
generally brought about through well-directed, persevering missionary labour.
Why should not Seventh-day Adventists become true labourers together with God in
seeking to save the souls of the coloured race? Instead of a few, why should not many go
forth to labour in this long-neglected field? Where are the families who will become
missionaries and who will engage in labour in this field? Where are the men who have means
and experience so that they can go forth to these people and work for them just where they
are? There are men who can educate them in agricultural lines, who can teach the coloured
people to sow seed and plant orchards. There are others who can teach them to read, and
can give them an object lesson from their own life and example. Show them what you
yourself can do to gain a livelihood, and it will be an education to them. Are we not
called upon to do this very work? Are there not many who need to learn to love God
supremely and their fellow men as themselves? In the Southern field are many thousands of
people who have souls to save or to lose. Are there not many among those who claim to
believe the truth who will go forth into this field to do the work for which Christ gave
up His ease, His riches, and His life?
Christ gave up all in order that He might bring salvation to every people, nation, and
tongue. He bridged the gulf that sin had made, in order that through His merits man might
be reconciled to God. Why is there not an army of workers enlisted under the bloodstained
banner of Prince Emmanuel, ready to go forth to
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enlighten those who are ignorant and depraved? Why do we not go forth to bring souls
out of darkness into light? Why do we not teach the perishing to believe in Christ as
their personal Saviour, and aid them to see Christ by faith, and wash in the fountain that
has been opened to cleanse away the sins of the world? We should teach those who are
filthy how to cast away their old, sin-stained garments of character, and how to put on
Christ's righteousness. We should plant in their darkened minds the elevating, ennobling
thoughts of heavenly things. By faith, by Christlike sympathy and example, we should lead
the polluted into pure and holy lives. We should live such a life before them that they
will discern the difference between error and vice, and purity, righteousness, and
holiness. We should make straight paths for our feet, lest the lame be turned out of the
way.
Many who claim to be Christians have accomplished little in the world because they have
not kept their eyes upon Jesus, and have permitted iniquity to overcome them. Many who
have gone forth as missionaries have fallen into sin, and Satan has exulted because men
who claimed to be workers together with God were not daily converted, and were not, by
looking unto Jesus, transformed in character. They did not make God their strength, and so
made crooked paths for their feet. They could not bring the poor, ignorant souls who were
debased by sin into a new life, even into the life of God, because their own life was not
hid with Christ in God. As workers together with God, we must yoke up with Jesus Christ,
and put on Christ. When we are planted in Him, we shall grow in likeness of Christ's
character. We are to be living epistles, and men are to read in our lives what it means to
be a Christian. We are to represent Christ in character, and self is to be hidden with
Christ in God. When this is our experience, we shall find that the angels of God will
co-operage with us. Feeling our dependence upon God, we shall realise the force of
Christ's words when He said, "Without me ye can do nothing." We shall then know
how to have sympathy for the neglected, the oppressed, the despised, and yet at the same
time have no sympathy with degradation, but in the midst of sin press closer and closer to
the side of Jesus. We shall be grieved and shocked at the sins which are committed while
we wear the yoke with Christ and are preparing to be temples for the indwelling of the
Holy Ghost.
Men who have faith and hope and love are partakers of the divine nature and have
overcome the corruption that is in the
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world through lust. Such men are successful workers; for they build upon the sure
foundation, gold, silver, and precious stones. They build with goodly material which is
most valuable. They do not build with that which is perishable, with that which is
compared to wood, hay, and stubble, which will be burned up in the fires of the last days.
Their work results in redeeming souls that shall stand before the throne of God.
Christ said to His disciples: "They that be whole need not a physician, but they
that are sick. . . . I am not come to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance."
Those who realise their guilt, feel their need of the Saviour. Why, O why, has not more
been done to diffuse light into the darkened minds of the coloured race? Christ died for
the coloured people as verily as He died for the white people. Through faith in Christ the
coloured people may attain unto eternal life as verily as may the white people. Those whom
the Lord sees neglected by us have been entrusted with reasoning powers, and yet they have
been treated as though they had no souls. They have been wounded by a so-called Christian
nation. They have been left by the wayside, and decided efforts will have to be made to
counteract the wrong that has been done them. But though they have been despised and
neglected of men, God has given special help and enlightenment to many who were in
slavery. He has illuminated their darkness when they were in the most unfavourable
circumstances, and they have revealed to the world the elements of the greatness in
Christian character. Many of the black race have been rich in faith and trust in God. They
have manifested divine compassion for those whom they could help. They have known what it
was to hunger for sympathy and help; for they were but neglected by those who saw their
wretchedness and could have helped them, but who passed by on the other side, as the
priest and the Levite passed by the bruised and wounded one. There are souls among the
coloured race that can be reached, and the very kind of labour which their circumstances
require should be put forth, that they may be saved. When these souls are converted to the
truth, they will become partakers of the divine nature, and will go forth to rescue their
fellow men, to lead those who are in darkness into light. They can be helped in their low
estate, and in their turn can contribute to the good of others.
But there are many among the coloured people whose intellect has been too long darkened
to be speedily fitted for fruitfulness in good works. Many are held in bondage to depraved
appetite.
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Many are slaves to debasing passions, and their character is of such an order as will
not enable them to be a blessing. Sin and depravity have locked up their senses. They need
help as much as the veriest heathen, and unless they have the right kind of help, they
will be lost. But they may be taught to know God and Jesus Christ whom He has sent. The
bright beams of the Sun of Righteousness may shine into the darkened chambers of their
mind. They need to catch a glimpse of God. It is their privilege to have eternal life, to
be in union with God, and it is the privilege of those who know the truth to repeat the
story again and again of God's wonderful love to man as manifested on Calvary's cross. The
chain that is let down from the throne of God is long enough to reach into the lowest
depths of sin. Hold up a sin-pardoning Saviour before the lost and lowly, for Jesus has
made a divine interposition in their behalf. He is able to reach to the lowest depths and
lift them up from the pit of sin, that they may be acknowledged as children of God, heirs
with Christ to an immortal inheritance. They may have the life that measures with the life
of God.-- Review and Herald, Nov. 26, 1895.
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An Appeal for the South--2
God estimates man not by the circumstances of his birth, not by his position or wealth,
not by his advantages in educational lines, but by the price paid for his redemption. Man
is of value with God in proportion as he permits the divine image to be retraced upon his
soul. However misshapen has been his character, although he may have been counted as an
outcast among men, the man who permits the grace of Christ to enter his soul will be
reformed in character and will be raised up from his condition of guilt, degradation, and
wretchedness. God has made every provision in order that the lost one may become His
child. The frailest human being may be elevated, ennobled, refined, and sanctified by the
grace of God. This is the reason God values men; and those who are workers together with
God, who are filled with divine compassion, will see and estimate men in the same way that
God sees and estimates them. Whatever may be the nationality or colour, whatever may be
the social condition, the missionary for God will look upon all men as the purchase of the
blood of Christ, and will understand that there is no caste with God. No one is to be
looked upon with indifference or to be regarded as unimportant, for every soul has been
purchased with an infinite price. Therefore, in the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, let
not the coloured race be longer neglected by those who claim to believe in Christ as the
Saviour of men. Let not one who claims to have heard the gracious words, "Thy sins be
forgiven thee," hold himself aloof from those whose lives have been dark and
shadowed.
Was it God's purpose that the coloured people should have so much guilt and woe in
their lives?--No. Men who have had greater advantages than they have had, have taught them
immorality, both by precept and example. Debasing practices have been forced upon them,
and they have received low conceptions of life, and even their conceptions of the
Christian life are of a depraved order. But the people who have been more favourably
situated, who have had light and liberty, who have had an opportunity to know God, and
Jesus Christ whom He has sent, are responsible
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for the moral darkness that enshrouds their coloured brethren. Can they who have been
so highly privileged afford to stand in their pride and importance and feel that they are
altogether too good to associate with this depraved race? Let those who profess to be
Christians look to the example of Christ. He stooped to take human nature, in order that
He might be able to reach man where he was. The Majesty of heaven came to seek and to save
that which was lost; and shall those for whom Christ has done so much, stand aloof from
their fellow men who are now perishing in their sins?
The Lord invites His people to become workers together with Him in rebuilding and
reshaping character according to the true standard of moral rectitude. Through faith in
Christ we are to be recreated in His image. Jesus says, Behold, I create a new thing in
the earth. Apostate man is to be recovered; fallen humanity is to be elevated; sin is to
be pardoned; and sinners are to be saved, that God may be eternally glorified. The
treasures of wisdom which have been hidden for ages are to be brought forth for the
enriching of the lost. O what treasures of wisdom are to be opened up for the view of the
world! Every divine resource is placed at the disposal of man, in order that he may become
a co-laborer with God. Nothing has been withheld. When God gave His only-begotten Son to
our world, He gave all the treasures of heaven. What power, what glory, has been revealed
in Christ Jesus! The greatest display of majesty and power is given to the world through
the only-begotten Son of God. With this power at our command, I would ask in the name of
Jesus Christ of Nazareth why it is that God's people do not awake to their duty? Why is it
that every individual does not become an example in doing the work that the time demands
in first giving himself and then his talents of means and ability for the enlightenment
and salvation of a people who are in the dense darkness of pitiful and most deplorable
ignorance? Are there not men, women, and youth who will go forth to establish schools, and
thus become teachers to instruct the coloured people so that they may be enabled to read
the word of God? We must teach them to read God's word, or they will become the ready
dupes of false shepherds that misinterpret the Scriptures and that manufacture doctrines
and teach traditions which will lead them into the paths of perdition There are preachers
and teachers among the coloured people who are addicted to licentious habits; and how can
they understand the binding claims of the law of God when the standard of righteousness is
not
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revealed and exalted before their eyes by the precept and example of their teachers? We
must go among them and show them how to honour and obey God's law, in order that they may
be prepared to have a part in the new earth.
Are there not those who can go from house to house, from family to family, and who can
repeat the A B C of true Christian experience? Let Christ be your text. In all your labour
let it be apparent that you know Jesus. Present His purity and saving grace, that by
beholding, these people may become changed into the divine image. Among most of the
coloured people we find unseemly practices in their worship of God. They become much
excited, and put forth physical exertions that are uncalled for in the solemn worship of
God. Their superstitious ideas and uncomely practices cannot at once be dispelled. We must
not combat their ideas and treat them with contempt. But let the worker give them an
example of what constitutes true heart-service in religious worship. Let not the coloured
people be excluded from the religious assemblies of the white people. They have no chance
to exchange their superstitious exercises for a worship that is more sacred and elevating
if they are shut out from association with intelligent white people who should give them
an example of what they should be and do. Let the white people practice the self-denial
necessary, and let them remember that nothing is to be regarded as unimportant which
affects the religious life of so vast a number of people as that which composes the
coloured race. They conduct their worship according to the instruction they have received,
and they think that a religion which has no excitement, no noise, no bodily exercises, is
not worth the name of religion. These ignorant worshipers need instruction and guidance.
They can be won by kindness, and can be confirmed in well-doing. Both old and young will
need to be instructed as one would instruct a family of children.
Let the worker give them an example by associating with them and by revealing the
virtues of Christ Jesus. They need to be brought in contact with cultivated minds, to come
into association with those whose hearts are softened and subdued by the Holy Spirit. They
are imitative, and will catch up pure sentiments, and be influenced by elevated
aspirations. A new taste will thus be created, and elevated desires will spring up for
things that are of good report, pure, honest, and lovely. But if the coloured people are
left in their present condition, and do not have presented before them a higher standard
of Christianity than they now have, their ideas
34
will become more and more confused, and their religious worship more and more
demoralised. They have been strangely neglected. Poverty and want are common among them,
and very little has been done to relieve their distress. We cannot be surprised that such
neglect should result in hardness of heart and in the practice of vice, but God cares for
this neglected class. The coloured people have souls to save, and we must enter into the
work, and become co-laborers with Jesus Christ. We cannot leave them as we have left them
in the past. We cannot be justified in expending money so lavishly in providing
conveniences for ourselves and in furnishing facilities for those who have been more
fortunate, and are already abundantly supplied with every facility, and do nothing for
those who know not God and Jesus Christ whom He hath sent. We must not abandon millions of
the coloured race to their degradation, and because they are degraded, pass them by on the
other side.
Let us bear in mind the words that Christ spoke to the people who were honoured above
others in being privileged to have the Lord Jesus Christ to labour among them, and yet who
did not appreciate this privilege and did not diffuse the light of Heaven to others. He
said: "Woe unto thee, Chorazin! woe unto thee, Bethsaida! for if the mighty works,
which were done in you, had been done in Tyre and Sidon, they would have repented long ago
in sackcloth and ashes. But I say unto you, It shall be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon
at the day of judgement, than for you. And thou, Capernaum, which art exalted unto heaven,
shalt be brought down to hell: for if the mighty works, which have been done in thee, had
been done in Sodom, it would have remained until this day. But I say unto you, That it
shall be more tolerable for the land of Sodom in the day of judgement, than for
thee."
But while Christ pronounced a woe upon those who did not repent at His preaching, He
had a word of encouragement for the lowly: "At that time Jesus answered and said, I
thank thee, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because thou hast hid these things from
the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes. Even so, Father: for so it seemed
good in thy sight." Many of the coloured people are among the lowly who will receive
the Word of God, and shall not this long-neglected work of enlightening the coloured
people be entered into perseveringly, and be carried forward all the more diligently
because it has been so long neglected? We must do a work for the coloured race that has
not yet been done. "God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that
whosoever
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believeth in him might not perish, but have everlasting life." The Son of God, the
Creator of the world, sacrificed His own life in order that He might become the Redeemer
of fallen humanity. He made an infinite sacrifice that He might become man's surety and
substitute, and shall we remain indifferent to a downtrodden, abused race?
God cares for the coloured people, and if we would co-operage with Him for the
salvation of their souls, we must care for them, too, and become labourers together with
Him. We need to repent before God, because we have neglected missionary work in the most
abandoned part of God's moral vineyard. There needs to be a stirring up among the members
of our churches. There needs to be concern created for our coloured brethren at the great
heart of the work. We should rouse up to the interest that true Christians ought to feel
for those who are depressed and morally degraded. The fact that their skin is dark does
not prove that they are sinners above the white race. Much of their depravity is the fruit
of the neglect of the white people. They have not felt the sympathy that they ought to
have felt for the abandoned and wretched. Those who profess to love Christ should have
worked for their coloured brethren until hope would have sprung up in their hearts. Many
are completely discouraged, and they have become stolid because they have been neglected,
despised, and forsaken. The poor and unfortunate are numbered by thousands, and yet we
have looked on indifferently, and seen their sorrow, and have passed by on the other side.
Their degraded condition is our condemnation. The Christian world are guilty because they
have failed to help the very ones who most need help. Christ says, "I am not come to
call the righteous, but sinners to repentance."
Should we not work the Southern field? We have had every advantage in temporal and
spiritual things, and shall we do nothing for our coloured brethren? We cannot abandon the
coloured race and be accounted as guiltless. Christ speaks of His own mission in these
words: "The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he hath anointed me to preach the
gospel to the poor; he hath sent me to heal the broken-hearted, to preach deliverance to
the captives, and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty them that are
bruised, to preach the acceptable year of the Lord." Are we not to follow the example
of Christ? Are we not, as His human agents, to carry forward the work He came to do?
Christ said, "They that be whole need not a physician, but they that are sick."
We cannot leave
36
souls for whom Christ died to be the prey of Satan's temptations. We cannot abandon
this great flock to their ignorance, want, suffering, and corruption. This would not be
doing the will of God. We cannot heap advantages upon ourselves and upon those who are not
in need and pass by those who are in utter want, and be approved of God. This neglect is
charged against those who have had great light, who have had marvellous opportunities, and
who yet leave so large a portion of God's moral vineyard unworked. For years Satan has
been sowing his tares among the coloured people, and the field cannot be worked as easily
now as it could have been worked years ago. But there should be no delay now. Reproach is
brought upon Jesus Christ when those who profess to be carrying the last message of mercy
to the world pass this field by. Christ did not pass by the needy and suffering. He united
works of mercy with the message of salvation He came to bear to men. He engaged in a
constant, untiring ministry, and worked for the perishing and sorrowful. He prefaced His
message of love by deeds of ministry and beneficence, leaving us an example that we should
follow in His steps.-- Review and Herald, Dec. 3, 1895.
37
An Appeal for the South--3
The World's Redeemer clearly defines what our duty is. To the lawyer who asked Him how
he should obtain eternal life, He said: "What is written in the law? how readest
thou? And he answering said, Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with
all thy soul, and with all thy strength, and with all thy mind; and thy neighbour as
thyself. And he said unto him, Thou hast answered right: this do, and thou shalt live. But
he, willing to justify himself, said unto Jesus, And who is my neighbour?" Then Jesus
related the parable of the good Samaritan, and clearly showed that he is our neighbour who
most needs our charity and help. We are to practice the commandments of God, and stand
true to the relation which God has designed shall exist between man and his fellow man. It
was never God's purpose that society should be separated into classes, that there should
be an alienation between the rich and the poor, the high and the low, the learned and the
unlearned. But the practice of separating society into distinct circles is becoming more
and more decided. God designed that those to whom He entrusted talents of means, ability,
and gifts of grace, should be good stewards of His beneficence, and not seek to reap all
the advantages for themselves. God does not estimate man by the amount of wealth, talent,
or education that he may have. He values man in proportion as he becomes a good steward of
His mercy and love.
Those who centre everything upon themselves misinterpret the character of God. The Lord
designed that the gifts He bestows upon men should be used to minister to the unfortunate
and the suffering ones among humanity.
We are in God's world, and are handling His goods, and we shall be called upon to
render a strict account of the use that we have made of His entrusted riches. If we have
hoarded God's gifts for our own advantage, if we have indulged in luxury, if we have
heaped up treasure for ourselves, and have been indifferent to the wants of those who are
suffering around us, we shall be charged as guilty of embezzling God's goods. The cries of
suffering humanity go up to God, and He hears their complaints of hunger, of
38
ignorance, and of darkness. He will surely judge those who neglect His purchased
possession, who leave the suffering to perish when it is in their power to relieve them.
He will hold us accountable for the guilt of those who are left to be the sport of Satan's
temptations, and who in their ignorance and blindness charge God with dealing partially
with the human race. It is because the rich neglect to do the work for the poor that God
designed they should do, that they grow more proud, more self-sufficient, more
self-indulgent and hardhearted. They separate the poor from them simply because they are
poor, and thus give them occasion to become envious and jealous. Many become bitter, and
are imbued with hatred toward those who have everything when they have nothing.
God weighs actions, and every one who has been unfaithful in his stewardship, who has
failed to remedy evils which it was in his power to remedy, will be of no esteem in the
courts of heaven. Those who are indifferent to the wants of the needy will be counted
unfaithful stewards, and will be registered as enemies of God and man. Those who
misappropriate the means that God has entrusted to them to help the very ones who need
their help, prove that they have no connection with Christ, because they fail to manifest
the tenderness of Christ toward those who are less fortunate than themselves. As
Christians, we are to manifest to the world the character of Christ in all the affairs of
life. To be a Christian means to act in Christ's stead, to represent Christ. We are not to
seek to get rid of the responsibilities that connect us with our fellow men. God has not
placed us in the world simply to please and honour and glorify ourselves. The character of
our Christianity is tested by the dependent ones who are around us, who are ignorant and
helpless. It is not proper to pile building upon building in localities where there are
abundant facilities, and neglect fields that are nigh and afar off, where there is need of
starting missionary enterprises. Instead of closing our eyes and senses to the wants of
those who have nothing, instead of adding more and more facilities to those that are
already abundant, let us seek to see what we can do to relieve the distresses of the poor,
bruised souls of the coloured people. Those who are heaping advantages upon advantages
where there are already more than ample facilities, are not doing a work that will
strengthen men in spirituality; and for neglecting destitute fields they are weighed in
the balances of the sanctuary and are found wanting. The Lord has given abundant light
upon the subject of diffusing the knowledge of the truth, and no one is justified
39
in following a selfish course. Those to whom God has entrusted much, who command the
largest resources in doing a good work in behalf of the needy, and who yet have failed to
do it, have withdrawn themselves from their own flesh, and have neglected their ministry
to God's purchased possession, in order to gratify their own inclination. How does God
look upon those who have left the poor to their poverty, the ignorant to their darkness
and ignorance? How does He regard those who are willing to let the lost remain the slaves
of circumstances which could have been changed in such a way as to bring relief to the
distressed? God calls upon men to become Bible Christians, to represent the example given
them by Christ. Who can tell what will be the result of a self-denying, cross-bearing
life? Eternity will reveal the result of following Jesus, and all will be amazed at the
fruit that will be made manifest.
We need men who will become leaders in home and foreign missionary enterprises. We need
men whose sympathies are not congealed, but whose hearts go out to the perishing that are
nigh and afar off. The ice that binds about souls that are frozen up with selfishness
needs to be melted away, so that every brother shall realise that he is his brother's
keeper. Then everyone will go forth to help his neighbour to see the truth and to serve
God in an acceptable service. Then those who profess the name of Christ will aid others in
the formation of a Christlike character. If everyone would work in Christ's lines, much
would be done to change the condition that now exists among the poor and distressed. Pure
religion and undefiled would gleam forth as a bright and shining light. God's love in the
heart would melt away the barriers of race and caste and would remove the obstacles with
which men have barred others away from the truth as it is in Jesus. True religion will
induce its advocates to go forth into the highways and byways of life. It will lead them
to help the suffering, and enable them to be faithful shepherds going forth into the
wilderness to seek and to save the lost, to lead back the perishing sheep and lambs.
The most unfortunate may bear the image of God, and they are of value to God. Those who
have true religion will realise that it is their supreme duty to reveal Christ to men, to
make manifest the fact that they have learned in the school of Christ. O that we might
individually realise that we are simply stewards in trust of God's means, and that we are
to use the gifts God has given us as Christ used His eternal riches in seeking and saving
that which is
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lost. We are only trustees, only stewards, and by and by we must give a reckoning to
the Master. He will inquire how we have used His goods, and whether or not we have
ministered to His family in the world. If we have enjoyed the comforts and blessings of
life, and have had no care for those who were less fortunate, and have failed to relieve
those who were needy and suffering, for whom Christ has given His life, we shall not hear
the words of approval, "Well done, thou good and faithful servant."
If God has entrusted to us the precious light of truth, and has given us a knowledge of
Jesus Christ whom He has sent, and we have failed to diffuse that light, we shall be
confronted with the souls whom we have held in darkness in the great day of God. We shall
be dealt with as we have dealt with others. The King will say to those on His right hand:
"Come, ye blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the
foundation of the world: for I was an hungred, and ye gave me meat: I was thirsty, and ye
gave me drink: I was a stranger, and ye took me in: naked, and ye clothed me: I was sick,
and ye visited me: I was in prison, and ye came unto me. Then shall the righteous answer
him, saying, Lord, when saw we thee an hungred, and fed thee? or thirsty, and gave thee
drink? When saw we thee a stranger, and took thee in? or naked, and clothed thee? Or when
saw we thee sick, or in prison, and came unto thee? And the King shall answer and say unto
them, Verily I say unto you, Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my
brethren, ye have done it unto me."-- Review and Herald, Dec. 19, 1895.
41
An Example in History
The Hebrew nation were in servitude for a great number of years. They were slaves in
Egypt, and the Egyptians treated them as though they had a right to control them in soul,
body, and spirit. But the Lord was not indifferent to their condition, He had not
forgotten His oppressed people. The record says: "God heard their groaning, and God
remembered his covenant with Abraham, Isaac, and with Jacob. And God looked upon the
children of Israel, and God had respect unto them." "The Lord said, I have
surely seen the affliction of my people which are in Egypt, and have heard their cry by
reason of their taskmasters; for I know their sorrows; and I am come down to deliver them
out of the hand of the Egyptians, and to bring them up out of that land unto a good land,
and a large, unto a land flowing with milk and honey."
When God called Moses to be His instrument in delivering the Hebrew nation out of cruel
bondage, Moses considered the difficulties of the situation, and thought of the obstacles
that he would have to encounter in doing this great work. He knew that the people were in
blindness and ignorance, that their minds had become beclouded in faith, and that they
were almost destitute of a knowledge of God. They had become degraded by associating with
a nation of idolaters, and had corrupted their ways by practising idolatry. Yet there were
many who were righteous and steadfast among this downtrodden people. The Lord directed
Moses to give them a message from Himself. He said: "Wherefore say unto the children
of Israel, I am the Lord, and I will bring you out from under the burdens of the
Egyptians, and I will rid you out of their bondage, and I will redeem you with a stretched
out arm, and with great judgements: and I will take you to me for a people, and I will be
to you a God: and ye shall know that I am the Lord your God, which bringeth you out from
under the burdens of the Egyptians."
This nation of slaves was to be taught of God. Jesus Christ, enshrouded in the pillar
of cloud and fire, was to be their invisible leader, the ruler over all their tribes.
Moses was to be the mouthpiece
42
of God. For forty years God ruled over them as they journeyed through the wilderness.
But the Hebrew nation is not the only nation that has been in cruel bondage, and whose
groanings have come to the ears of the Lord of hosts. The Lord God of Israel has looked
upon the vast number of human beings who were held in slavery in the United States of
America. The United States has been a refuge for the oppressed. It has been spoken of as
the bulwark of religious liberty. God has done more for this country than for any other
country upon which the sun shines. It has been marvellously preserved from war and
bloodshed. God saw the foul blot of slavery upon this land, He marked the sufferings that
were endured by the coloured people. He moved upon the hearts of men to work in behalf of
those who were so cruelly oppressed. The Southern States became one terrible battlefield.
The graves of American sons who had enlisted to deliver the oppressed race are thick in
its soil. Many fell in death, giving their lives to proclaim liberty to the captives and
the opening of the prison to them that were bound. God spoke concerning the captivity of
the coloured people as verily as He did concerning the Hebrew captives, and said: "I
have surely seen the affliction of my people . . . , and have heard their cry by reason of
their taskmasters; for I know their sorrows; and I am come down to deliver them." The
Lord wrought in freeing the Southern slaves; but He designed to work still further for
them as He did for the children of Israel, whom He took forth to educate, to refine, and
ennoble. Christ Himself wrought with His appointed leaders, and directed them as to what
they should do for His people that had become so terribly degraded. They were to be kept
separate from all nations, to be directed and counselled until, through a correct
representation of the divine character, they should come to know God, to reverence and
obey His commandments.
Those who study the history of the Israelites should also consider the history of the
slaves in America, who have suffered, who have been educated in crime, degraded, and
oppressed, and left in ignorance to perish. Their physical freedom was obtained at a great
loss of life, and Christians generally should have looked with compassion upon the
coloured race, for which God had a care. They should have done a work for them that would
have uplifted them. They should have worked through the wisdom of God to educate and train
them. We have been very neglectful of our coloured brethren, and are not yet prepared for
the coming of our Lord. The cries of these neglected people have come up before God.
43
Who has entered into the work since their deliverance from bondage, to teach them the
knowledge of God? The condition of the coloured people is no more helpless than was the
condition of the Hebrew slaves. The children of Israel were addicted to licentiousness,
idolatry, gluttony, and gross vices. This is ever the result of slavery. But the Lord
looked upon His people, and after their deliverance He educated them. They were not left
uncared for. Though they had lost in years of bondage the knowledge of the true God and of
His holy law, yet God again revealed Himself to them. In terrible grandeur and awful
majesty He proclaimed to them His holy precepts, and commanded them to obey His law. The
Ten Commandments are a transcript of the divine character, and are as unchangeable as the
eternal throne. But since the slaves of the South attained to freedom, what have we as
Christians done to bear any comparison to what was done for them by those who poured out
their lives on the battlefield? Have we not looked upon the difficulties that presented
themselves, and drawn back from the work? Perhaps some of us have felt sad over their
wretchedness, but what have we done to save them from the slavery of sin? Who have taken
hold of this work intelligently? Who have taken upon them the burden of presenting to them
spiritual freedom that has been purchased for them at an infinite price? Have we not left
them beaten, bruised, despised, and forsaken by the way? Is this the example that God has
given us in the history of the deliverance of the children of Israel? By no means.
Walls of separation have been built up between the whites and the blacks. These walls
of prejudice will tumble down of themselves as did the walls of Jericho, when Christians
obey the Word of God, which enjoins on them supreme love to their Maker and impartial love
to their neighbours. For Christ's sake, let us do something now. Let every church whose
members claim to believe the truth for this time, look at this neglected, downtrodden
race, that, as a result of slavery, have been deprived of the privilege of thinking and
acting for themselves. They have been kept at work in the cotton fields, have been driven
before the lash like brute beasts, and their children have received no enviable heritage.
Many of the slaves had noble minds, but the fact that their skin was dark, was sufficient
reason for the whites to treat them as though they were beasts. When freedom was
proclaimed to the captives, a favourable time was given in which to establish schools and
to teach the people to take care of themselves. Much of this kind of work was
44
done by various denominations, and God honoured their work. Those who attempted to work
for the black race had to suffer persecution, and many were martyrs to the cause. It was
difficult to educate these people in correct ideas, because they had been compelled to do
according to the word of their human masters. They had been subject to human passions,
their minds and bodies had been abused, and it was very hard to efface the education of
these people and to lead them to change their practices. But these missionaries persevered
in their work. They knew that the black man had not chosen his colour or his condition and
that Christ had died for him as verily as He had died for his white brother. To show
sympathy for the released slaves was to expose one's self to ridicule, hatred, and
persecution. Old-time prejudice still exists, and those who labour in behalf of the
coloured race will have to encounter difficulties.
The neglect of the coloured race by the American nation is charged against them. Those
who claim to be Christians have a work to do in teaching them to read and to follow
various trades and engage in different business enterprises. Many among this race have
noble traits of character and keen perception of mind. If they had an opportunity to
develop, they would stand upon an equality with the whites. The Hebrew nation were
educated during their journeying through the wilderness. They engaged in physical and
mental labour. They used their muscles in various lines of work. The history of the
wilderness life of God's chosen people was chronicled for the benefit of the Israel of God
till the close of time. The apostle says, "Now all these things happened unto them
for ensamples: and they are written for our admonition, upon whom the ends of the world
are come." The Lord did not forsake His people in their wanderings through the
wilderness, but many of them forsook the Lord. The education they had had in Egypt made
them subject to temptation, to idolatry, and to licentiousness, and because they
disregarded the commandments of the Lord, nearly all the adults who left Egypt were
overthrown in the wilderness; but their children were permitted to enter Canaan.
The land of Egypt was nearly desolated to bring freedom to the children of Israel; the
Southern States were nearly ruined to bring freedom to the coloured race. For four years
war was carried on, and many lives were sacrificed, and there is mourning today because of
broken family circles. Unspeakable outrages have been committed against the coloured race.
They had lived on through years of bondage with no hope of deliverance, and there
stretched
45
out before them a dark and dismal future. They thought that it was their lot to live on
under cruel oppression, to yield their bodies and souls to the dominance of man. After
their deliverance from captivity how earnestly should every Christian have co-operated
with heavenly intelligences who were working for the deliverance of the downtrodden race.
We should have sent missionaries into this field to teach the ignorant. We should have
issued books in so simple a style that a child might have understood them, for many of
them are only children in understanding. Pictures and object lessons should have been used
to present to the mind valuable ideas. Children and youth should have been educated in
such a way that they could have been instructors and missionaries to their parents.
Let us prayerfully consider the coloured race, and realise that these people are a
portion of the purchased possession of Jesus Christ. One of infinite dignity, who was
equal with God, humbled Himself so that He might meet man in his fallen, helpless
condition, and become an advocate before the Father in behalf of humanity. Jesus did not
simply declare His good will toward perishing man, but humbled Himself, taking upon
Himself the nature of man. For our sakes He became poor, that we might come into
possession of an immortal inheritance, be heirs of God and joint heirs with Jesus
Christ.-- Review and Herald, Dec. 17, 1895.
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The Bible the Coloured People's Hope
The Bible is the most precious book in the world. It is the only guide to direct the
soul to the paradise of God. The apostle says: "All scripture is given by inspiration
of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in
righteousness: that the man of God may be perfect, throughly furnished unto all good
works." The Bible is a precious treasure. It should be in every home, not to be laid
away or put upon a shelf, but to be diligently studied. The Bible is the hope of both the
white and the coloured race. The idea is disseminated that common people should not study
the Bible for themselves, but that the minister or teacher should decide all matters of
doctrine for them. This is the doctrine that is taught to the coloured people; but the
Bible is the poor man's book, and all classes of people are to search the Scriptures for
themselves. God has given reasoning powers to men, and by bringing our mental faculties
into connection with the Word of God, the spiritual powers are awakened, and common
people, as well as teachers and clergymen, may understand the will of God.
Christ said to the people, "Search the scriptures; for in them ye think ye have
eternal life: and they are they which testify of me." Many of the coloured people are
unable to read, and as it is necessary to understand the Word of God, it is necessary to
teach these people to read. During the days of slavery the coloured people were not
generally taught to read, because through this accomplishment they became more fully awake
to the degradation of their condition. In attaining knowledge, their desire was increased
to have liberty, that they might still further pursue their search for knowledge. They saw
that it was their right to be subject to no man, but to obey God only. The proclamation
that freed the slaves in the Southern States, opened a field into which Christlike workers
should have entered to teach those who were hungering and thirsting for knowledge, that
they might know God and Jesus Christ whom He has sent. There were precious jewels of truth
that should have been searched for as a man would search for hidden treasure.
The Lord has given the Bible to us, and it is our privilege to read
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it for ourselves. It is our duty to search it diligently, that we may receive more and
more light from its sacred pages. As we search the Bible to comprehend the truths of
salvation, angels of God are present to strengthen the mind and to aid us in understanding
that which will be a benefit to us and to others. We are to explore the sacred volume as a
miner explores the veins of ore in the earth, and finds the precious seams of gold. While
time shall last, we shall desire to know what the Bible has to say in regard to our
relation to Jesus Christ, our responsibility to God as free moral agents. We must search
the Scriptures, so that we may know how to accept our responsibilities and how to impart
the knowledge we have gained to others who are in need of comfort and hope. We must know
by experience what it is to have Christ for our sin bearer, in order that we may
intelligently say to others, "Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of
the world!"
The opinions we have received through listening to the traditions of men must not be
permitted to bar the way so that we shall not receive the light that requires reformation
and transformation. Enter your closets with the Bible in your hand, and there commune with
God, having an ear to hear what the Spirit saith unto you. Let your heart be humbled and
teachable, softened and subdued by the Holy Spirit. If you find that your former views are
not sustained by the Bible, it is for your eternal interest to learn this as soon as
possible; for when God speaks in His Word, our preconceived opinions must be yielded up
and our ideas brought into harmony with a "Thus saith the Lord." Christ said,
"Sanctify them through thy truth; thy word is truth." With submissive spirit you
are to obey the truth at any cost, knowing that the precepts of the Bible are the word of
the eternal God.
An experience that brings us into harmony with the Word of God will cost the sacrifice
of self. It will require humility of mind and a realisation of utter dependence upon God.
But those who gain this experience will realise the need of working for others, that they
also may believe and rejoice in the truth. Very much depends upon the manner in which the
truth is presented. The human heart is a hard field to work. Let the missionary ever keep
the Word of God upon his lips. Those who talk the truth will have light upon the Word of
God. Contemplating the Word of Christ is beholding Christ by the eye of faith. The Word of
God is quick and powerful, and coming in contact with the faculties of men, and human mind
becomes strong and vigorous, and able to
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exercise its powers in learning the lesson of sinking self into Christ.
The Bible contains the living bread for the soul. Shall this Book, with its treasures
of wisdom, be opened to those who are unlearned, and especially to the vast numbers of the
coloured people who are scattered through the United States? Shall we be justified in
withholding this precious Word from the ignorant and depraved, when by partaking of it by
faith is eternal life? Shall we expend labour most largely for those who know the truth?
Shall weeks be occupied in seeking to work up a greater interest among those who have
heard the truth of salvation over and over again, and leave those who have never heard it
with no effort for their enlightenment? How much more appropriate would it be for those
who have been thus privileged, to expend their time, talent, and money in imparting that
which they understand to those who do not know God, and have never had the Scriptures
opened up before them--in presenting the special message that is to be given to the world
in these last days! Gather up the precious fragments of truth and go to work to present
them to those who are starving for the Word of life.
Through the study of the Word of God, a great work may be done for the Southern people.
The coloured people, though emancipated from physical slavery, are still in the slavery of
ignorance. They are led to believe that they should do just what their ministers tell them
to do. Unless their minds are enlightened so that they may understand the Scripture for
themselves, and know that God has spoken to their souls, they will not be benefited by the
preaching of the truth; for they are in a condition to be deceived easily by false
teachers. In reaching the coloured people, it is best to seek to educate them before
presenting the pointed truths of the third angel's message. Let missionaries work quietly
for both white and coloured people in the South. Let them work in a way to help those who
most need help, who are surrounded with influences that are misleading. Many of them are
under the control of those who will stir up the worst passions of the human heart. The
priests and rulers in Christ's day worked most successfully in stirring up the passions of
the mob, because they were ignorant, and had placed their trust in man. Thus they were led
to denounce and reject Christ and to choose a robber and murderer in His place. The work
in the South should be done without noise or parade. Let missionaries who are truly
converted, and who feel the burden of the work, seek wisdom from God, and with all the
tact they can command, let them go into this field. Medical missionaries can find a field
in which to relieve
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the distress of those who are failing under bodily ailments. They should have means so
that they may clothe the naked and feed the hungry. Christian help work will do more than
the preaching of sermons. There is a great need that a class of workers should go to this
field who will do this kind of work. Let them meet together and relate their experiences,
pray together, and hold their services, not in a way to attract attention to themselves,
but in quietness, in meekness, and lowliness. But while they pursue this humble course,
let them not sink down into cheapness in conversation, cheapness in manners and ways. Let
the workers be Christlike, that they may by precept and example exert an elevating
influence. Let them furnish themselves with the most appropriate, simple lessons from the
life of Christ to present to the people. Let them not dwell too much upon doctrinal
points, or upon features of our faith that will seem strange and new; but let them present
the sufferings and the sacrifice of Christ; let them hold up His righteousness and reveal
His grace; let them manifest His purity and holiness of character. Workers in the Southern
field will need to teach the people line upon line, precept upon precept, here a little
and there a little.
As men and women embrace the truth in this field, there will be abundant opportunity
for relieving their pressing necessities. Unless this can be done, the work will largely
prove a failure. To say, Be ye warmed, and be ye clothed, and be ye fed, and take no steps
to bring these things to pass, will have a bad influence upon our work. Object lessons
will be of far more value than mere precepts. Deeds of sympathy will be needed as well as
words that will touch the heart and leave an ineffaceable impression upon the mind. Small
schools should be established in many localities, and teachers who are tender and
sympathetic, who can, like the Master, be touched by suffering, should be engaged to
educate old and young. Let the Word of God be taught in the simplest manner. Let the
pupils be led to study the lessons of Christ; for the study of the Bible will do more to
enlarge the mind and strengthen the intellect than will any other study. Nothing will so
awaken the dormant energies and give vigour to the faculties as coming in contact with the
Word of God.
There is much talent among the coloured people. Their minds must be aroused, their
intellects quickened into activity, that they may grasp the precious truths of the plan of
salvation. Their minds have become dwarfed and enfeebled, because they have been called
out and exercised upon commonplace matters, and have been occupied
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with low, cheap ideas. But as elevating truths are repeated, their minds will expand,
and their ability increase to take in and comprehend the subjects with which they become
more familiar. A field left uncultivated will soon be filled with unsightly weeds and
thistles. The mind left uncultivated will be filled with that which is unsightly, and
where seeds of truth are not sown, there will be no fruit of a heavenly order. The
coloured people have been left in ignorance, and the minds of many have lost the ability
to expand. But many are not satisfied. They hunger for something they have not. Were they
educated so that they could read the Bible, they would draw comfort from the plan of
salvation as it is revealed in Jesus Christ. The influence of truth would work for the
enlargement of their minds and the strengthening of their faculties. Thus they would be
enabled to grasp other branches of knowledge, and prepared to receive information of a
general character.-- Review and Herald, Dec. 24, 1895.
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Spirit and Life for the Coloured People
The psalmist says, "The entrance of thy words giveth light; it giveth
understanding unto the simple." Heavenly intelligences are close by the side of every
one who is seeking to open the Word of God to the understanding of the simple, or to those
who are really desirous of becoming acquainted with the will of God. Those who open the
Scripture to others should teach them the Word of life, realising the solemn, sacred work
that they are doing; for they are bringing souls in contact with God and with Jesus
Christ, whom He has sent. Any trifling, jesting, or joking over the Word of God is
dishonouring to Him, and leaves an influence that is anything but good upon the mind. But
if we desire to enlarge a man's mind, let us turn his attention to the Scriptures. In the
Bible we behold Him who is the way, the truth, and the life. Through understanding the
Word of God, efficiency is obtained for both the practical and the religious life.
Jesus said: "Labour not for the meat which perisheth, but for that meat which
endureth unto everlasting life, which the Son of man shall give unto you: for him hath God
the Father sealed. Then said they unto him, What shall we do, that we might work the works
of God? Jesus answered and said unto them, This is the work of God, that ye believe on him
whom he hath sent. They said therefore unto him, What sign shewest thou then, that we may
see, and believe thee? what dost thou work? Our fathers did eat manna in the desert; as it
is written, He gave them bread from heaven to eat. Then Jesus said unto them, Verily,
verily, I say unto you, Moses gave you not that bread from heaven: but my Father giveth
you the true bread from heaven. For the bread of God is he which cometh down from heaven,
and giveth life unto the world. Then said they unto him, Lord, evermore give us this
bread. And Jesus said unto them, I am the bread of life: he that cometh to me shall never
hunger; and he that believeth on me shall never thirst.... I am that bread of life. Your
fathers did eat manna in the wilderness, and are dead. This is the bread which cometh down
from heaven, that a man may eat thereof, and not die. I am the living bread which came
down from
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heaven: if any man eat of this bread, he shall live for ever: and the bread that I will
give is my flesh, which I will give for the life of the world.... Verily, verily, I say
unto you, Except ye eat the flesh of the Son of man, and drink his blood, ye have no life
in you. Whoso eateth my flesh, and drinketh my blood, hath eternal life; and I will raise
him up at the last day. For my flesh is meat indeed, and my blood is drink indeed. He that
eateth may flesh, and drinketh my blood, dwelleth in me, and I in him. As the living
Father hath sent me, and I live by the Father: so he that eateth me, even he shall live by
me." Jesus explained what He meant by eating His flesh and drinking His blood. He
meant that His disciples were to partake of His Word. He said, "It is the Spirit that
quickeneth; the flesh profiteth nothing: the words that I speak unto you, they are spirit,
and they are life."
The Word of Christ is the bread of life that is furnished for every soul that liveth.
To refuse to eat this bread is death. He that neglects to partake of the Word of God shall
not see life. Receiving the Word is believing the Word, and this is eating Christ's flesh,
drinking His blood. To dwell and abide in Christ is to dwell and abide in His Word; it is
to bring heart and character into conformity to His commands. In the parable of the vine
and the branches, Jesus shows the vital connection that must exist between Himself and His
followers. He says: "I am the true vine, and my Father is the husbandman. Every
branch in me that beareth not fruit he taketh away: and every branch that beareth fruit,
he purgeth it, that it may bring forth more fruit. Now ye are clean through the word which
I have spoken unto you. Abide in me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit of
itself, except it abide in the vine; no more can ye, except ye abide in me. I am the vine,
ye are the branches: He that abideth in me, and I in him, the same bringeth forth much
fruit: for without me ye can do nothing."
The branches represent the believers in Jesus Christ. Those who truly believe, will do
the same works that He did. They are united to Christ by the faith that works by love and
purifies the soul. As the branch is nourished by the sap which flows from the parent
stock, so the believer in Christ is sustained by the life of Christ. The branches
represent the very youngest of the followers of Christ, as the branch includes all the
tiny tendrils that belong to it. Jesus is our centre. He is the parent stock that bears
the branches. In Him our eternal life is centred. The words that He has spoken unto us are
spirit and life, and those who feed upon his Word, and are doers of
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his Word, represent Him in character. His patience, meekness, humility, and love
pervade their hearts. Jesus said, "Herein is my Father glorified, that ye bear much
fruit; so shall ye be my disciples." If we are indeed grafted into the True Vine, we
shall bear fruit similar to that of the parent stock.
Those who love Christ will do the works of Christ. They will go forth to seek and to
save that which was lost. They will not shun those who are despised, and turn aside from
the coloured race. They will teach them how to read and how to perform manual labour,
educating them to till the soil and to follow trades of various kinds. They will put forth
painstaking efforts to develop the capabilities of the people. The cotton field will not
be the only resource for a livelihood to the coloured people. There will be awakened in
them the thought that they are of value with God, and that they are esteemed as His
property. The work pointed out is a most needful missionary enterprise. It is the best
restitution that can be made to those who have been robbed of their time and deprived of
their education. The fact that this is the case leaves a heavy debt upon the American
nation. As a nation, we have been made the depository of sacred truth, and we are to
impart the precious knowledge of the Word of God to others. Every earthly blessing has
come to us because of the infinite price that has been paid in our behalf. If it has cost
so great a price to redeem man, so that he should not perish, but have everlasting life,
how we should rejoice that we are privileged to become co-workers with Christ in saving
those for whom He has given His precious life! The Lord Jesus loves those for whom He has
made the greatest sacrifice. He gave His own most precious life to bring life and
immortality to light to all those who should believe. "This is life eternal, that
they might know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou has sent." Those
who receive Christ are in co-partnership with Him, and will not mistake their lifework.
They will heed the words spoken by Christ. They will be guided by the Holy Spirit, and
become more and more intelligent in regard to the requirements of God, and will reveal the
love and grace that were revealed in the life of Christ toward those with whom He came in
contact.-- Review and Herald, Jan. 14, 1896.
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"Am I My Brother's Keeper?"
The law of God contained in the Ten Commandments reveals to man his duty to love God
supremely and his neighbour as himself. The American nation owes a debt of love to the
coloured race, and God has ordained that they should make restitution for the wrong they
have done them in the past. Those who have taken no active part in enforcing slavery upon
the coloured people are not relieved from the responsibility of making special efforts to
remove, as far as possible, the sure result of their enslavement.
When the duty of bringing the gospel to the coloured race is presented, many make the
plea that association with the coloured people will contaminate society. But this very
plea is evidence that means should be instituted to remove from this race the degradation
that has been brought upon them. As a people we should no longer say by our attitude,
"Am I my brother's keeper?" We should arouse ourselves to do justly, to love
mercy. We should make manifest by our actions that we have the faith for which the saints
are to contend. We should go forth to seek the oppressed, to lift up the fallen, and to
bring help to those who need our assistance. We should remember that many among the
coloured people who have been entrusted with God-given ability, who had intellectual
capabilities far superior to those of the masters who claimed them as their property, were
forced to endure every indignity, and their souls groaned under the most cruel and unjust
oppression. They were ambitious to obtain their freedom, and sought in every possible way
to obtain it. At times their deferred hope caused them to flash out with indignation, and
they were forced to suffer such fearful punishments that their courage was broken, and to
all outward appearances their spirits were subdued. But others planned for years, and
finally were successful in gaining their freedom. Many of these have filled positions of
trust, and have demonstrated the fact that the coloured race is capable of cultivation and
improvement. As a people claiming to be proclaiming the last message of mercy to the
world, we cannot consistently neglect the Southern field, for it is a portion of God's
moral vineyard. It is not our place to study consequences,
55
but we are to go to the field and labour for the coloured people as earnestly as for
the white people, and leave results with God. It is our part to work with all our
God-given capabilities to redeem the time that we have wasted in planning how to avoid
unhappy results in working the Southern fields.
We are God's messengers, and He has sent us forth to work for both the white and the
black race without partiality and without hypocrisy. We are to set forth the truth in
warnings and entreaties. We are to point out the path of light in plain and simple
language, easy to be understood by both white and black. We have no time to build up walls
of distinction between the white and the black race. The white people who embrace the
truth in the Southern field, if converted to God, will discern the fact that the plan of
redemption embraces every soul that God has created. The walls of sectarianism and caste
and race will fall down when the true missionary spirit enters the hearts of men.
Prejudice is melted away by the love of God. All will realise that they are to become
labourers together with God. Both the Ethiopian and the white race are God's purchased
possession, and our work is to improve every talent that has been lent to us of God, to
save the souls of both white and black. If men and women of either race refuse the truth
of God, they must answer to God for their rejection of Jesus Christ, who died for their
salvation. With all our might we must do our work now.
God's object in bringing us to Himself is to conform us to the image of Christ Jesus.
All who believe in Christ will understand the personal relation that exists between them
and their brethren. They are to be as branches grafted into the same parent stock, to draw
sustenance from the root. Believers, whether white or black, are branches of the True
Vine. There is to be no special heaven for the white man and another heaven for the black
man. We are all to be saved through the same grace, all to enter the same heaven at last.
Then why not act like rational beings, and overcome our unlikeness to Christ? The same God
that blesses us as His sons and daughters blesses the coloured race. Those who have the
faith that works by love and purifies the soul will look with compassion and love upon the
coloured people. Many of those who have had every advantage, who have regarded themselves
as superior to the coloured people because their skin was white, will find that many of
the coloured race will go into heaven before them.
Let every one who values the precious sacrifice made by Jesus
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Christ, lift up his voice in prayer to God, and exclaim: "Behold, O Lord, this
poor, oppressed people that have been despised and maltreated by the white nation. Breathe
into their souls the breath of spiritual life. If no effort is made on their behalf, they
will perish in their sins, and their blood will be found upon our garments. Father of
mercies, pity thine offspring. Breath upon these beaten, bruised, ignorant souls, that
they may live. Give thy Holy Spirit to those who shall go forth as messengers to this
people. Take not thy Holy Spirit from us in our councils, and enable us to make plans and
devise means for the spread of the truth among them."
We need to awaken, and to understand the truth as it is in Jesus. We need to consult
the Word of God, in order that we shall not seek to evade disagreeable work. When we
realise that we are workers together with God, the promises will not be spoken with half
indifference, but will burn in our hearts, and kindle on our lips. We shall present them
to the throne of God with earnestness, and the Lord will pour out His Spirit upon the
devoted, consecrated worker. Those who plead with God, as did Moses, will receive the same
assurances that Moses received. When Moses pleaded: "I pray thee, if I have found
grace in thy sight, shew me now thy way, that I may know thee, that I may find grace in
thy sight: and consider that this nation is thy people. And He said, My presence shall go
with thee, and I will give thee rest." Again the Lord said to Moses, "Certainly
I will be with thee." The same assurances given to Moses will be given to those who
go forth to be co-laborers with Jesus Christ in the Southern field. We are not to wait for
great men to undertake the work. We are to encourage those who have a burden to go to this
field, who are willing to undertake the work. Let those in responsible positions give
their sympathy to such workers, and furnish them with facilities whereby they may do the
work required. Let not men in our institutions feel that it is their prerogative to tie
the hands of workers at every step. Let those who have a mind to work, do with their might
whatsoever their hands find to do. Let those who take no part in the trying experience of
teaching the coloured people, unite their petitions with those of the workers, and plead
that the Holy Spirit may move upon the hearts of the workers and aid them in doing
successful work for the Master. The Lord God of Sabaoth will hear earnest prayer. He will
lead those who feel their dependence upon Him, and will so guide the workers that many
souls shall come to a knowledge of the truth.
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Truth as it is in Jesus exercises a transforming influence upon the minds of its
receivers. Let no one forget that God is always a majority, and that with Him success is
bound to crown all missionary effort. Those who have a living connection with God know
that divinity works through humanity. Every soul that co-operates with God will do justly,
love, mercy, and walk humbly with God. The Lord is a God of mercy, and cares even for the
dumb beasts He has created. When He healed on the Sabbath day, and was accused of breaking
the law of God, He said to his accusers: "Doth not each one of you on the sabbath
loose his ox or his ass from the stall, and lead him away to watering? And ought not this
woman, being a daughter of Abraham, whom Satan hath bound, lo, these eighteen years, be
loosed from this bond on the sabbath day? And when he had said these things, all his
adversaries were ashamed: and all the people rejoiced for all the glorious things that
were done by him." The Lord looks upon the creatures He has made with compassion, no
matter to what race they may belong. God "hath made of one blood all nations of men
for to dwell on all the face of the earth, and hath determined the times before appointed,
and the bounds of their habitation; that they should seek the Lord, if haply they might
feel after him, and find him, though he be not far from every one of us: for in him we
live, and move, and have our being; as certain also of your own poets have said, For we
are also his offspring." Speaking to His disciples the Saviour said, "All ye are
brethren." God is our common Father, and each one of us is our brother's keeper.--
Review and Herald, Jan. 21, 1896.
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Lift Up Your Eyes and Look on the Field
Those who work in the Southern field will need to have a sanctified judgement, in order
to discriminate in applying help where it will do the greatest amount of good. They should
help those who will be a help to others, as well as those who may not be able to carry on
very decided missionary operations. I know that it will be impossible for workers to
remain in this field in a bare-handed condition and do the work that is required to be
done in the Southern States. It will be necessary that a fund shall be created so that the
workers may have means with which to help those who are in poverty and distress, and this
practical ministry will open their hearts to respond to the truth.
It will be necessary for the worker in the Southern field not only to have an
appreciation of the physical wants of the coloured people, but his heart must also be
aglow with the love of God. He must present the love of God with faith and assurance, and
not follow any bleak, cold, methodical style. The Southern field is a field where the
religious instruction will have to be repeated again and again. The language must be most
simple in style, for many of the coloured people are only children in understanding; but
though this field has been long neglected, the words of Christ are applicable to it. Our
Lord said to His disciples, "Say not ye, There are yet four months, and then cometh
harvest? behold, I say unto you, Lift up your eyes, and look on the fields; for they are
white already to harvest. And he that reapeth receiveth wages, and gathereth fruit unto
life eternal: that both he that soweth and he that reapeth may rejoice together."
When the Lord spoke these words to the disciples, they did not see anything that
denoted that they were in an encouraging field. The seed of truth had been sown, and the
harvest was about to follow. While they had been away purchasing food, Christ had preached
a sermon to the woman at the well, and had sown the seed, and the harvest was to come
forth speedily. She had gone back into the city of Samaria and had spread abroad the words
of Christ.
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She gave the invitation to those she met, saying with assurance, "Come, see a man,
which told me all things that ever I did: is not this the Christ?" Jesus knew that at
the report of the woman many, out of curiosity, would come to see and to hear Him, and
that many would believe on Him, and drink of the water of life that He should give them.
"And many of the Samaritans of that city believed on him for the saying of the woman,
which testified, He told me all that ever I did. So when the Samaritans were come unto
him, they besought him that he would tarry with them: and he abode there two days. And
many more believed because of his own word; and said unto the woman, Now we believe, not
because of thy saying: for we have heard him ourselves, and know that this is indeed the
Christ, the Saviour of the world." Thus the harvest came speedily after the sowing,
for the Holy Spirit had impressed the truth upon the hearts of the Samaritans.
The words that Jesus spoke to His disciples, saying that the fields were white for the
harvest, are addressed to every genuine Christian. We also are to look upon the fields,
and see the necessities of men. The disciples were encouraged as they saw the readiness of
the Samaritans to receive the truth. They had regarded this field as a very hard field,
and yet they saw men acknowledging the words of the Master, and believing on Him for
themselves. This lesson is for our encouragement as well, and while there are many who
will not yield to the convicting power of God's Spirit, there are also many who are
hungering for the words of light and salvation. Many will receive the truth, and testify
as did the Samaritans that Christ is the Saviour of the world. In their turn they will
become sowers of the seed of truth. We are to lift up our eyes and look upon the fields
that are white already for the harvest. For years we have passed by the Southern field,
and have looked upon the coloured race, feebly deploring their condition; but our eyes
have been fastened upon more promising fields. But now God's people should lift up their
eyes and look upon this destitute field that has not been worked. The missionary spirit
must prevail if we form characters after the pattern, Christ Jesus. We are to love our
neighbours as ourselves, and the coloured people, in the sight of God, are our neighbours.
It is not enough for us merely to look on and deplore the discouraging appearance of the
field, and then pass by on the other side and do nothing. Unitedly and interestedly we
must take hold of the work. We are not only to look upon the fields, but we are to reap,
and gather fruit unto life eternal.
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God calls us to consider and to help those who are in most need of help. As workers
together with God, we are not simply to deplore the destitute condition of the Southern
people, but we are to seek to alleviate their condition. Here is a field in America that
is nigh at hand. One is to sow the seed, another to reap the harvest, another to bind it
up. There is a variety of work, which must be done now while the angels continue to hold
the four winds. Many who desire to do missionary work may labour in this field. There is
no time to be lost. As men, women, and children among the coloured people receive the
truth, they should be instructed by those who are imbued with the Spirit of God, and
educated and directed in such a way that they may help others.
The Southern field is right in the shadow of your own doors. It is as land that has had
a touch of the plough here and there, and then has been left by the ploughman, who has
been attracted to some easier or more promising field; but those who work the Southern
field must make up their minds to practice self-denial. Those who would aid in this work
must also practice self-denial, in order that facilities may be provided whereby the field
may be worked. God calls for missionaries, and asks us to take up our neglected duties.
Let farmers, financiers, builders, and those who are skilled in various arts and crafts go
to this field to improve lands and to build humble cottages for themselves and their
neighbours. Christ says to you, Lift up your eyes, and look upon this Southern field; for
it needs the sowers of seed and the reapers of grain. The grace of Christ is unlimited; it
is God's free gift. Why should not this neglected people have the benefit of divine hope
and courage and faith? All those who will accept Christ will have sunlight in the heart,
and the wholehearted, unselfish worker will receive a reward. Those who are labourers
together with God will enter into the joy of their Lord. What is this joy? It is the joy
that is felt in the presence of the angels over one sinner that repenteth more than over
ninety and nine just persons who need no repentance.
Those who labour in the Southern field will meet with deplorable ignorance. The
coloured people are suffering the results of the bondage in which they were held. When
they were slaves they were taught to do the will of those who called them their property.
They were kept in ignorance, and today there are thousands among them that cannot read.
Many who profess to be teachers among them are corrupt in character, and they interpret
the Scriptures in such a way as to fulfil their own purposes and degrade those who are in
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their power. The coloured people are taught that they must not think or judge for
themselves, but that their ministers must be permitted to judge for them. Because of this,
the divine plan of salvation has been covered up with a mass of human rubbish and
falsehood. The Scripture has been perverted, and the people have been perverted, and the
people have been so instructed as to be easily seduced by evil spirits. Mind as well as
body has been long abused. The whole system of slavery was originated by Satan, who
delights in tyrannising over human beings. Though he has been successful in degrading and
corrupting the black race, many are possessed of decided ability, and if they were blessed
with opportunities, they would show more intelligence than do many of their more favoured
brethren among the white people. Thousands may now be uplifted, and may become agents by
which to help those of their own race. There are many who feel the necessity of becoming
elevated, and when faithful teachers open the Scriptures, presenting the truth in its
native purity to the coloured people, the darkness will be dispelled under the bright
beams of the Sun of righteousness. Directed in their search for truth by those who have
had advantages enabling them to know the truth, they will become intelligent in the
Scriptures.
When laws are enacted that bind the consciences of those whom God has made free, and
men are cast into prison for exercising their religious liberty, many poor, timid,
ignorant souls will be hindered from doing the will of God; but many will learn aright
from Jesus Christ, and will maintain their God-given freedom at any cost. The coloured
people have been slow to learn what is their right in religious liberty, because of the
attitude that men have assumed toward them. In many minds there is great confusion in
regard to what is individual right. Men have exercised compelling power over the mind and
judgement of the coloured race. Satan is the originator of all oppression, and history
shows a record of the terrible results of oppressive tortures that have been endured by
men who are God's property, both by creation and by redemption. Through human agencies,
Satan has manifested his own attributes and passions; but every act of injustice, every
fraudulent purpose, every pang of anguish, is written down in the books of heaven as done
against Christ Jesus, who has purchased man at an infinite price. The manner in which men
treat their fellow men is registered as done unto Christ; but those who have been faithful
winners of souls will receive commendation, and will join in the song of those
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who rejoice, and shout the harvest home. How great will be the joy when the redeemed of
the Lord will all meet together in the mansions prepared for them! What rejoicing will
come to those who have been impartial, unselfish labourers together with God in winning
souls to Christ! What satisfaction will fill the breast of every reaper when he hears the
musical voice of Jesus saying, "Well done, thou good and faithful servant; . . .
enter thou into the joy of thy Lord!"
Those who win souls to Christ glorify their Redeemer. He has not died in vain for them,
for they are in harmony with Christ. They look upon those who have turned to God through
their efforts, with glad rejoicing; for they also see of the travail of their souls, and
are satisfied. They see that the anxious hours they have spent, the perplexing
circumstances they have had to meet, the sorrows they have to endure, have worked for them
a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory. As they look upon the souls they have
won to Christ, and know that they are eternally saved, are monuments of God's mercy and of
a Redeemer's love, they touch the golden harp and fill the arches of heaven with praise
and thanksgiving. They sing, "Thou wast slain, and hast redeemed us to God by thy
blood out of every kindred, and tongue, and people, and nation; and hast made us unto our
God kings and priests: and we shall reign on the earth. . . . Worthy is the Lamb that was
slain to receive power, and riches, and wisdom, and strength, and honour, and glory, and
blessing."
"They that be wise shall shine as the brightness of the firmament; and they that
turn many to righteousness as the stars for ever and ever." How great is the reward
that will come to those who devote their God-given abilities to doing the works of Christ.
Those who are partakers of His sufferings in this world will be partakers of His glory in
the world hereafter, and will sit down with Christ upon His throne.-- Review and Herald,
Jan. 28, 1896.
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Volunteers Wanted for the Southern Field
Instruction is to be given to our coloured neighbours concerning the physical, mental,
and moral nature. We must give them line upon line, precept upon precept, here a little,
and there a little. The youth will catch the lessons that are given, and retain them much
more readily than those who are aged. How important it is that this large class of human
beings, who are now in ignorance, should be taught to read for themselves, that they may
know what saith the Lord unto them! How anxious every Christian family should be to have a
part in helping on the education of the coloured race! Many of them are poor, neglected,
homeless creatures. We should teach them how to build cheap houses, how to erect school
buildings in cities and villages, and how to carry on their education.
God holds us accountable for our long neglect of doing our duty to our neighbours. He
sees precious jewels that will shine out from among the coloured race. Let the work be
taken up determinedly, and let both the young and those of mature age be educated in
essential branches. Take hold of this nation that has been in bondage, as the Lord Jesus
Christ took hold of the Hebrew nation after they came forth from Egypt. God will put His
Holy Spirit upon those who put heart and soul into the work, realising the truth of the
words of inspiration: "We are labourers together with God: ye are God's husbandry, ye
are God's building." The Lord has long been waiting for human instrumentalities
through whom He could work. How much longer shall heavenly agencies be obliged to wait for
human agents who will respond to the words of Christ, "Go work to day in my
vineyard"? When the hearts of God's professed people are animated by the principle of
the living faith that works by love and purifies the soul, there will be a response to
these appeals. Christ linked Himself in brotherhood to all nationalities. He made no
distinction between the white race and the black race in His plan of salvation. He bought
the meanest of humanity with an infinite price, and He notes when we
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leave the naked unclad, the poor unfed, the destitute unrelieved, the despised
forsaken.
Those who labour in the Southern field will have many prejudices to overcome, many
difficulties to encounter. At the present time there is great want among many of the
coloured people. Self- denial must be practised by us. We must strip ourselves of all
extravagance; we must deny ourselves luxuries and the undue gratification of appetite. Let
those who have not laid aside unnecessary articles of diet, do so. Let them refrain from
adornment and costly furnishings. Let us set ourselves to do a work for the Southern
people. Let us not be content with simply looking on, with simply making resolutions that
are never acted upon; but let us do something heartily unto the Lord, to alleviate the
distress of our coloured brethren. The burden of poverty is sufficiently weighty to arouse
our heartfelt sympathy. We are not simply to say, "Be ye warmed and filled," but
we are actually to relieve the needs of the poor. Filthiness is prevalent among the
coloured people, and it is a breeder of disease. Discouragement is deep and widespread,
and shall we refuse to stretch forth our hands to help in this time of peril?
But it is of no use to send missionaries to work in the Southern field unless they are
furnished with means from your abundance to help the distressed and those who are in
poverty that cannot be described. We may do the work that Christ would do if He were upon
earth. We may relieve those whose lives have been one long scene of sorrow. Who will go on
in indifference and pay no attention to the woes of those who are in hunger, in nakedness,
in ignorance and degradation? Who will rouse up and go without the camp and bear reproach
for Christ's sake? Who will put on Christ and seek to rescue their coloured brethren from
ignominy, crime, and degradation? Who will seek to restore them to the ranks of common
humanity? We must not consider them irreclaimable and utterly degenerate. With the spirit
of Christ, who did not fail or become discouraged, we may do a work that will cause the
heavenly hosts to fill the courts of God with songs of rejoicing. There are many who are
looked upon as stoical; who are thought to be unfit to be taught the gospel of Jesus
Christ; and yet through the ministration of the Holy Spirit they may be changed by the
miracle of divine grace. The stupidity that makes their cases look so hopeless will pass
away, for it is the result of great ignorance. The influence of grace will prevail on the
human subject, and the dull and
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clouded mind will awake and break its fetters. Through divine power the slave to sin
may be set free. The sunshine of Christ's righteousness may beam into the chambers of mind
and heart. Spiritual life will be seen, and the brutishness will disappear. Inclination to
vice will disappear, and ignorance will be overcome. The heart will be purified by the
faith that works by love.
There are thousands who are capable of instruction, cultivation, and elevation. With
proper, preserving labour, many who have been considered hopeless cases will become
educators of their race. The coloured people deserve much more from the hands of the white
people than they have received. The coloured people may be compared to a mine that is to
be worked, in which is valuable ore of most precious material. Christ has given these
people souls capable of winning and enjoying immortal life in the kingdom of God. One
tenth of the advantages that their more favoured brethren have received and failed to
improve, would cause them to become mediums of light through which the brightness of the
righteousness of Christ might shine forth. Who will enlist in this work, and willingly
teach the ignorant what saith the Word of God? Who will engage in the work of quickening
the mental faculties into sensibility, of uplifting those who are downtrodden? Can we not
show that we are willing to try to repair as far as possible the injury that has been done
to them in the past? Shall not missionaries be multiplied? Shall we hear of volunteers,
who are willing to go into the field to bring souls out of darkness and ignorance into the
marvellous light in which we rejoiced, that they also may see the glory of God in the face
of Jesus Christ? "And this is life eternal, that they might know thee the only true
God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent."-- Review and Herald, Feb. 4, 1896.
