Moses, September 5
            
            
              And Moses said unto God, Who am I, that I should go unto Pharaoh,
            
            
              and that I should bring forth the children of Israel out of Egypt? And
            
            
              he said, Certainly I will be with thee; and this shall be a token unto
            
            
              thee, that I have sent thee: When thou hast brought forth the people
            
            
              out of Egypt, ye shall serve God upon this mountain.
            
            
              Exodus 3:11, 12
            
            
              .
            
            
              Devotion and humility have ever characterized the men with whom God
            
            
              has entrusted important responsibilities in His work. The divine call to Moses
            
            
              in the desert found him distrustful of self. He realized his unfitness for the
            
            
              position to which God had called him; but having accepted the trust, he
            
            
              became a polished instrument in the hand of God to accomplish the greatest
            
            
              work ever committed to mortals.
            
            
              Had Moses trusted to his own strength and wisdom, and eagerly accepted
            
            
              the great charge, he would have evinced his entire unfitness for such a work.
            
            
              The fact that a man feels his own weakness is at least some evidence that he
            
            
              realizes the magnitude of the work appointed him, and this gives room for
            
            
              hope that he will make God his counselor and his strength. Such a person
            
            
              will move no farther nor faster than he knows God is leading him.
            
            
              A man will gain power and efficiency as he accepts the responsibilities
            
            
              which God places upon him, and with his whole soul seeks to qualify himself
            
            
              to bear them aright. However humble his position or limited his ability, that
            
            
              individual will attain true greatness who cheerfully responds to the call of duty,
            
            
              and, trusting to the divine strength, seeks to perform his work with fidelity.
            
            
              He will feel that he has a sacred commission to battle against wrong, to
            
            
              strengthen the right, to elevate, comfort, and bless his fellow men. Indolence,
            
            
              selfishness, and love of worldly approbation must yield to this high and holy
            
            
              calling.
            
            
              Engaged in such a work, the weak man will become strong; the timid,
            
            
              brave; the irresolute, firm and decided. Each sees the importance of his
            
            
              position and his course, inasmuch as heaven has chosen him to do a special
            
            
              work for the King of kings. Such men will leave the world better for their
            
            
              having lived in it. Their influence is exerted to elevate, to purify, and to
            
            
              ennoble all with whom they come in contact, and thus they help to prepare
            
            
              their fellow men for the heavenly courts.—
            
            
              The Signs of the Times, August
            
            
              11, 1881
            
            
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