Seite 167 - Testimonies for the Church Volume 7 (1902)

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Church and the Publishing House
163
will go far toward shaping the characters of these youths for the service
of God and their fellow men, both in this life and in the life to come.
Duty of the Publishing House to the Church
While the church has a responsibility to the publishing house, so
also has the publishing house to the church. Each is to uphold the
other.
Those in positions of responsibility in the publishing houses should
not allow themselves to be so pressed with work that they have no
time for maintaining the spiritual interest. When this interest is kept
alive in the publishing house, it will exert a powerful influence in the
church; and when it is kept alive in the church, it will exert a powerful
influence in the publishing house. God’s blessing will rest on the work
when it is so conducted that souls are won to Christ.
All the workers in the publishing house who profess the name of
Christ should be workers in the church. It is essential to their own
spiritual life that they improve every means of grace. They will obtain
strength, not by standing as spectators, but by becoming workers.
[188]
Everyone should be enlisted in some line of regular, systematic labor
in connection with the church. All should realize that as Christians this
is their duty. By their baptismal vow they stand pledged to do all in
their power to build up the church of Christ. Show them that love and
loyalty to their Redeemer, loyalty to the standard of true manhood and
womanhood, loyalty to the institution with which they are connected,
demands this. They cannot be faithful servants of Christ, they cannot
be men and women of real integrity, they cannot be acceptable workers
in God’s institution, while neglecting these duties.
The managers of the institution in its various departments should
have a special care that the youth form right habits in these lines. When
the meetings of the church are neglected or duties connected with its
work are left undone, let the cause be ascertained. By kind, tactful
effort endeavor to arouse the careless and to revive a waning interest.
None should allow their own work to excuse neglect of the Lord’s
sacred service. Much better might they lay aside the work which
concerns themselves than neglect their duty to God.
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