Be Honest With Others and With God, June 3
You shall have a perfect and just weight, a perfect and just measure, that
your days may be lengthened in the land which the Lord your God is giving
you.
Deuteronomy 25:15
, NKJV.
It is best to deal honestly with your fellow beings and with God. You are
dependent upon Christ for every favor you enjoy; you are dependent upon Him
for the future, immortal life; and you cannot afford to be without respect unto the
recompense of reward. Those who realize their dependence upon God will feel
that they must be honest with others, and, above all, they must be honest with God,
from whom come all the blessings of life. The evasion of the positive commands of
God concerning tithes and offerings is registered in the books of heaven as robbery
toward Him.
No one who is dishonest with God or with others can truly prosper.... The Lord
has bought us with His own precious blood, and it is because of His mercy and
grace that we may hope for the great gift of salvation. And we are enjoined to deal
justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with our God. Yet the Lord declares, “Ye
have robbed me, even this whole nation.” When we deal unjustly with other human
beings or with our God, we despise the authority of God and ignore the fact that
Christ has purchased us with His own life.
The world is robbing God upon the wholesale plan. The more He imparts of
wealth, the more thoroughly do people claim it as their own, to be used as they
shall please. But shall the professed followers of Christ follow the customs of the
world? Shall we forfeit peace of conscience, communion with God, and fellowship
with our brethren and sisters because we fail to devote to His cause the portion He
has claimed as His own?
Let those who claim to be Christians bear in mind that they are trading on the
capital entrusted them of God, and that they are required to faithfully follow the
directions of the Scriptures in regard to its disposal. If your heart is right with
God, you will not embezzle your Lord’s goods and invest them in your own selfish
enterprises.—
The Review and Herald, December 17, 1889
.
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