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         Christian Experience and Teachings of Ellen G. White
      
      
        Action gives power. Entire harmony pervades the universe of God.
      
      
        All the heavenly beings are in constant activity; and the Lord Jesus,
      
      
        in His life work, has given an example for everyone. He went about
      
      
        “doing good.” God has established the law of obedient action. Silent
      
      
        but ceaseless, the objects of His creation do their appointed work. The
      
      
        ocean is in constant motion. The springing grass, which today is and
      
      
        tomorrow is cast into the oven, does its errand, clothing the fields
      
      
        with beauty. The leaves are stirred to motion, and yet no hand is seen
      
      
        to touch them. The sun, moon, and stars are useful and glorious in
      
      
        fulfilling their mission.
      
      
        At all times the machinery of the body continues its work. Day
      
      
        by day the heart throbs, doing its regular, appointed task, unceasingly
      
      
        forcing its crimson current to all parts of the body. Action, action, is
      
      
        seen pervading the whole living machinery. And man, his mind and
      
      
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        body created in God’s similitude, must be active in order to fill his
      
      
        appointed place. He is not to be idle. Idleness is sin.
      
      
        A Severe Trial
      
      
        In the midst of my experiences in meeting fanaticism, I was sub-
      
      
        jected to a severe trial. If the Spirit of God rested upon anyone in
      
      
        meeting, and he glorified God by praising Him, some raised the cry of
      
      
        mesmerism; and if it pleased the Lord to give me a vision in meeting,
      
      
        some would say that it was the effect of excitement and mesmerism.
      
      
        Grieved and desponding, I often went alone to some retired place
      
      
        to pour out my soul before Him who invites the weary and heavy-laden
      
      
        to come and find rest. As my faith claimed the promises, Jesus would
      
      
        seem very near. The sweet light of heaven would shine around me, and
      
      
        I would seem to be encircled by the arms of my Saviour, and would
      
      
        there be taken off in vision. But when I would relate what God had
      
      
        revealed to me alone, where no earthly influence could affect me, I
      
      
        was grieved and astonished to hear some intimate that those who lived
      
      
        nearest to God were most liable to be deceived by Satan.
      
      
        Some would have had me believe that there was no Holy Spirit,
      
      
        and that all the exercises that holy men of God experienced, were only
      
      
        the effect of mesmerism or the deception of Satan.
      
      
        Those who had taken extreme views of certain texts of Scripture,
      
      
        refraining wholly from labor, and rejecting all who would not receive