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         The Great Controversy 1888
      
      
        they have spoken were not theirs, but His who bade them give the
      
      
        warning. God put the truth into their hearts, and they could not forbear
      
      
        to proclaim it.
      
      
        The same trials have been experienced by men of God in ages
      
      
        past. Wycliffe, Huss, Luther, Tyndale, Baxter, Wesley, urged that
      
      
        all doctrines be brought to the test of the Bible, and declared that
      
      
        they would renounce everything which it condemned. Against these
      
      
        men, persecution raged with relentless fury; yet they ceased not to
      
      
        declare the truth. Different periods in the history of the church have
      
      
        each been marked by the development of some special truth, adapted
      
      
        to the necessities of God’s people at that time. Every new truth has
      
      
        made its way against hatred and opposition; those who were blessed
      
      
        with its light were tempted and tried. The Lord gives a special truth
      
      
        for the people in an emergency. Who dare refuse to publish it? He
      
      
        commands his servants to present the last invitation of mercy to the
      
      
        world. They cannot remain silent, except at the peril of their souls.
      
      
        Christ’s ambassadors have nothing to do with consequences. They
      
      
        must perform their duty, and leave results with God.
      
      
        As the opposition rises to a fiercer height, the servants of God are
      
      
        again perplexed; for it seems to them that they have brought the crisis.
      
      
        But conscience and the Word of God assure them that their course is
      
      
        right; and although the trials continue, they are strengthened to bear
      
      
        them. The contest grows closer and sharper, but their faith and courage
      
      
         [610]
      
      
        rise with the emergency. Their testimony is, “We dare not tamper with
      
      
        God’s Word, dividing his holy law, calling one portion essential and
      
      
        another non-essential, to gain the favor of the world. The Lord whom
      
      
        we serve is able to deliver us. Christ has conquered the powers of
      
      
        earth; and shall we be afraid of a world already conquered?”
      
      
        Persecution in its varied forms is the development of a principle
      
      
        which will exist as long as Satan exists, and Christianity has vital
      
      
        power. No man can serve God without enlisting against himself the
      
      
        opposition of the hosts of darkness. Evil angels will assail him, alarmed
      
      
        that his influence is taking the prey from their hands. Evil men, rebuked
      
      
        by his example, will unite with them in seeking to separate him from
      
      
        God by alluring temptations. When these do not succeed, then a
      
      
        compelling power is employed to force the conscience.
      
      
        But so long as Jesus remains man’s intercessor in the sanctuary
      
      
        above, the restraining influence of the Holy Spirit is felt by rulers and