Extremes in Diet
      
      
        [
      
      
        Christian Temperance and Bible Hygiene, 55-59
      
      
        (1890).]
      
      
        Many of the views held by Seventh-day Adventists differ widely
      
      
        from those held by the world in general. Those who advocate an
      
      
        unpopular truth should, above all others, seek to be consistent in their
      
      
        own life. They should not try to see how different they can be from
      
      
        others, but how near they can come to those whom they wish to in-
      
      
        fluence, that they may help them to the positions they themselves so
      
      
        highly prize. Such a course will commend the truths they hold.
      
      
        Those who are advocating a reform in diet should, by the provision
      
      
        they make for their own table, present the advantages of hygiene in
      
      
        the best light. They should so exemplify its principles as to commend
      
      
        it to the judgment of candid minds.
      
      
        There is a large class who will reject any reform movement, how-
      
      
        ever, reasonable, if it lays a restriction upon the appetite. They consult
      
      
        taste, instead of reason and the laws of health. By this class, all who
      
      
        leave the beaten track of custom and advocate reform will be opposed
      
      
        and accounted radical, let them pursue ever so consistent a course.
      
      
        But no one should permit opposition or ridicule to turn him from
      
      
        the work of reform or cause him to lightly regard it. He who is
      
      
        imbued with the spirit which actuated Daniel, will not be narrow or
      
      
        conceited, but he will be firm and decided in standing for the right.
      
      
        In all his associations, whether with his brethren or with others, he
      
      
        will not swerve from principle, while at the same time he will not fail
      
      
        to manifest a noble Christlike patience. When those who advocate
      
      
        hygienic reform carry the matter to extremes, people are not to blame
      
      
         [154]
      
      
        if they become disgusted. Too often our religious faith is thus brought
      
      
        into disrepute, and in many cases those who witness such exhibitions
      
      
        of inconsistency can never afterward be brought to think that there is
      
      
        anything good in the reform. These extremists do more harm in a few
      
      
        months than they can undo in a lifetime. They are engaged in a work
      
      
        which Satan loves to see go on....
      
      
        166