Page 351 - This Day With God (1979)

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Honesty in Business Practices, November 24
Not slothful in business; fervent in spirit; serving the Lord.
Romans 12:11
.
The servants of God are obliged to be more or less connected with the
worldly by business transactions, but they should buy and sell with a realiza-
tion that the eye of God is upon them. No false balances or deceitful weights
are to be used, for these are an abomination to the Lord. In every business
transaction a Christian will be just what he wants his brethren to think he
is. His course of action is guided by underlying principles. He does not
scheme, therefore, he has nothing to conceal, nothing to gloss over. He may
be criticized, he may be tested, but his unbending integrity will shine forth
like pure gold. He is a blessing to all connected with him, for his word is
trustworthy. He is a man who will not take an advantage of his neighbor. He
is a friend and benefactor to all, and his fellow men put confidence in his
counsel....
A truly honest man will never take advantage of weakness or incompe-
tency in order to fill his own purse. He accepts a fair equivalent for that which
he sells. If there are defects in the articles sold, he frankly tells his brother or
his neighbor, although by so doing he may work against his own pecuniary
interests. In all the details of life the strictest principles of honesty are to
be maintained. These are not the principles which govern our world, for
Satan—deceiver, liar, and oppressor—is the master, and his subjects follow
him and carry out his purposes. But Christians serve under a different Master,
and their actions must be wrought in God, irrespective of all selfish gain.
Deviation from perfect fairness in a business deal may appear as a small thing
in the estimation of some, but our Saviour did not thus regard it. His words
on this point are plain and explicit: “He that is faithful in that which is least
is faithful also in much” (
Luke 16:10
)....
In the Christian world today fraud is practiced to a fearful extent. God’s
commandment-keeping people should show that they are above all these
things. The dishonest practices which mar the dealing of man with his fellow
man should never be practiced by one who professes to be a believer in present
truth.—
Letter 3, November 24, 1878
, to Brother O, a colporteur given to
questionable business practices.
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