The Power of Association
      
      
        [
      
      
        Testimonies for the Church 4:587-591
      
      
        (1881).]
      
      
        In our institutions, where many are laboring together, the influence
      
      
        of association is very great. It is natural to seek companionship. Ev-
      
      
        eryone will find companions or make them. And just in proportion to
      
      
        the strength of the friendship, will be the amount of influence which
      
      
        friends will exert over one another for good or for evil. All will have
      
      
        associates, and will influence and be influenced in their turn.
      
      
        The link is a mysterious one which binds human hearts together, so
      
      
        that the feelings, tastes, and principles of two individuals are closely
      
      
        blended. One catches the spirit, and copies the ways and acts, of the
      
      
        other. As wax retains the figure of the seal, so the mind retains the
      
      
        impression produced by intercourse and association. The influence
      
      
        may be unconscious, yet it is no less powerful.
      
      
        If the youth could be persuaded to associate with the pure, the
      
      
        thoughtful, and the amiable, the effect would be most salutary. If
      
      
        choice is made of companions who fear the Lord, the influence will
      
      
        lead to truth, to duty, and to holiness. A truly Christian life is a power
      
      
        for good. But, on the other hand, those who associate with men and
      
      
        women of questionable morals, of bad principles and practices, will
      
      
        soon be walking in the same path. The tendencies of the natural heart
      
      
        are downward. He who associates with the skeptic will soon become
      
      
        skeptical; he who chooses the companionship of the vile will most
      
      
        assuredly become vile. To walk in the counsel of the ungodly is the
      
      
        first step toward standing in the way of sinners and sitting in the seat
      
      
        of the scornful.
      
      
         [415]
      
      
        Choose Noble Associates
      
      
        Let all who would form a right character choose associates who are
      
      
        of a serious, thoughtful turn of mind, and who are religiously inclined.
      
      
        Those who have counted the cost and wish to build for eternity must
      
      
        put good material into their building. If they accept of rotten timbers, if
      
      
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