Seite 176 - Testimonies for the Church Volume 5 (1889)

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Testimonies for the Church Volume 5
In the same manner do those who profess to have a knowledge of
God’s word dishonor Him when they turn from the Source of strength
and wisdom to ask help or counsel from the powers of darkness. If
God’s wrath was kindled by such a course on the part of a wicked,
idolatrous king, how can He regard a similar course pursued by those
who profess to be His servants?
Why is it that men are so unwilling to trust Him who created man,
and who can by a touch, a word, a look, heal all manner of disease?
Who is more worthy of our confidence than the One who made so
great a sacrifice for our redemption? Our Lord has given us definite
instruction through the apostle James as to our duty in case of sickness.
When human help fails, God will be the helper of His people. “Is any
sick among you? let him call for the elders of the church; and let them
pray over him, anointing him with oil in the name of the Lord: and
the prayer of faith shall save the sick, and the Lord shall raise him
up.” If the professed followers of Christ would, with purity of heart,
exercise as much faith in the promises of God as they repose in satanic
agencies, they would realize in soul and body the life-giving power of
the Holy Spirit.
God has granted to this people great light, yet we are not placed
beyond the reach of temptation. Who among us are seeking help from
the gods of Ekron? Look on this picture—not drawn from imagination.
In how many, even among Seventh-day Adventists, may its leading
characteristics be seen? An invalid—apparently very conscientious,
yet bigoted and self-sufficient—freely avows his contempt for the
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laws of health and life, which divine mercy has led us as a people to
accept. His food must be prepared in a manner to satisfy his morbid
cravings. Rather than sit at a table where wholesome food is provided,
he will patronize restaurants, because he can there indulge appetite
without restraint. A fluent advocate of temperance, he disregards its
foundation principles. He wants relief, but refuses to obtain it at the
price of self-denial. That man is worshiping at the shrine of perverted
appetite. He is an idolater. The powers which, sanctified and ennobled,
might be employed to honor God, are weakened and rendered of little
service. An irritable temper, a confused brain, and unstrung nerves are
among the results of his disregard of nature’s laws. He is inefficient,
unreliable.