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         Christian Experience and Teachings of Ellen G. White
      
      
        proof texts were repeated. Among them I remember these impressed
      
      
        me very forcibly: “The soul that sinneth, it shall die.”
      
      
         Ezekiel 18:4
      
      
        .
      
      
        “The living know that they shall die: but the dead know not anything.”
      
      
         [40]
      
      
        Ecclesiastes 9:5
      
      
        . “Which in His times He shall show, who is the
      
      
        blessed and only Potentate, the King of kings, and Lord of lords; who
      
      
        only hath immortality.”
      
      
         1 Timothy 6:15, 16
      
      
        . “To them who by patient
      
      
        continuance in well-doing seek for glory and honor and immortality,
      
      
        eternal life.”
      
      
         Romans 2:7
      
      
        .
      
      
        “Why,” said my mother, after quoting the foregoing passage,
      
      
        “should they seek for what they already have?”
      
      
        I listened to these new ideas with an intense and painful interest.
      
      
        When alone with my mother, I inquired if she really believed that the
      
      
        soul was not immortal. Her reply was, that she feared we had been in
      
      
        error on that subject, as well as upon some others.
      
      
        “But, mother,” said I, “do you really believe that the soul sleeps in
      
      
        the grave until the resurrection? Do you think that the Christian, when
      
      
        he dies, does not go immediately to heaven, nor the sinner to hell?”
      
      
        She answered: “The Bible gives us no proof that there is an eter-
      
      
        nally burning hell. If there is such a place, it should be mentioned in
      
      
        the Sacred Book.”
      
      
        “Why, mother!” cried I, in astonishment, “this is strange talk for
      
      
        you! If you believe this strange theory, do not let anyone know of it;
      
      
        for I fear that sinners would gather security from this belief, and never
      
      
        desire to seek the Lord.”
      
      
        “If this is sound Bible truth,” she replied, “instead of preventing
      
      
        the salvation of sinners, it will be the means of winning them to Christ.
      
      
        If the love of God will not induce the rebel to yield, the terrors of an
      
      
        eternal hell will not drive him to repentance. Besides, it does not seem
      
      
        a proper way to win souls to Jesus by appealing to one of the lowest
      
      
        attributes of the mind,—abject fear. The love of Jesus attracts; it will
      
      
        subdue the hardest heart.”
      
      
         [41]
      
      
        It was some months after this conversation before I heard anything
      
      
        further concerning this doctrine; but during this time my mind had
      
      
        been much exercised upon the subject. When I heard it preached, I
      
      
        believed it to be the truth. From the time that light in regard to the sleep
      
      
        of the dead dawned upon my mind, the mystery that had enshrouded
      
      
        the resurrection vanished, and the great event itself assumed a new and
      
      
        sublime importance. My mind had often been disturbed by its efforts