Has God
Ordained SeIf-Supporting Work?
by Pastor John Grosboll
I am very happy that we
have the opportunity to study Gods word this morning and it is my earnest
prayer that the Holy Spirit will teach us what the Lord wants us to learn and
to know in the days for which we are living. I have something very
serious to talk to you about today, something which is easily misunderstood
because it is impossible to look at all sides of the truth at the same time.
I want to invite you to pray with me that through the Holy Spirit we will
correctly divide the word of truth and correctly understand it as we study.
Please bow your head. Father in heaven, as we
are going to open the Holy Book, and we are going to look at a very
controversial subject, I pray that your Holy Spirit will be here. Lord, that
not our own ideas may be presented, but that we may understand what has been
inspired in the sure word of truth. Help us to rightly divide the word of
truth and to understand what it is telling us in these last days and to live
by every word of it. For Jesus sake we ask it. Amen. The subject that I want
to talk to you about today, many of you here will say, well that is perfectly
obvious; I can answer the question in one word. But just the same, we need to
look at the history of this subject and how we got to the point that we are
at right now. What I want to study about with you is this question, has God
authorized independent, self-supporting work? This idea of independent,
self-supporting work is very old. Some people think that this has just
existed in the last few years, but there were a number of independent,
self-supporting workers in Bible times that we do not have time to look at
today. The disciples came to
Jesus and said, "What shall be the sign of thy coming, and of the end of
the world. Jesus answered and said unto them, Take heed that no man deceive
you." Matthew 24:3,4. That is the first thing that Jesus said when they
asked Him for the sign of His coming and the end of the world. Be careful
that somebody does not deceive you. Before we look at what
the Bible has to say about this subject, I want to mention, for clarification
sake, the Bible teaches that in the multitude of counselors there is safety.
In Bible times, Gods people counseled with one another. We are not talking
about being independent in the sense that a person goes off and just does his
own thing. We are not talking about that. This spring (1991) my brother wrote
a booklet on that very subject. If you have not read it, I would like to
invite you to get a copy and read it. It is called Sinful Independence. Now
that is a different subject. We are not talking about people just going off
and doing their own thing. Gods people are never independent in that sense.
All of Gods children counsel with other people that the Lord is leading, and
they work together. That is the way things are done in heaven. They don’t
just go off and do their own thing. The angels are organized and all of Gods
work is organized. If we are not organized in our work fort he Lord, He
cannot work with us--the angels cannot work with us. We cannot have the
success that the Lord wants to give us if we are not organized. We are not
talking about disorder or people just going off on their own, but just the
same we are asking the question, has God authorized independent (when I say
independent I mean independent from the true church), self-supporting work? Jesus had this problem.
"And when he was come into the temple, the chief priests and the elders
of the people came unto him as he was teaching, and said, By what authority
doest thou these things? And who gave thee this authority?" Matthew
21:23. Have you ever heard that question asked? Who gave you authority to do
this? Has your meeting been authorized? Have you ever heard of that? Has your
preacher received authority? Is he duly credentialed? Does your institution
have somebody from the right place on your board? Have you been given
permission to give Bible studies? When I was a boy I never would have thought
that a question like that would be asked in the Seventh-day Adventist church.
But it is being asked today. I received a telephone
call the other day. A person who has been actively involved in evangelism
visited a certain conference office. This person has some baptismal
candidates that are ready to be baptized and he was told, we do not want to
baptize your candidates because you have been involved with special
ministries and your people are tainted. What are they talking about? He had
been giving the Revelation Seminars. He had been using materials from our
publishing houses to teach these people. Are you authorized to do
what you are going to do? Or is there a representative? Have you been given
permission? Have you been recognized? The next thing people say is, since you
have not been authorized, you are against the church. That is a pure
supposition. Eventually it comes to a threat and people say, If you cannot
follow directions, then you are going to have to be disfellowshipped, or your
ordination is going to have to be taken away, and you are not part of the
church, and so forth. Jesus had this problem. We see it right here in Matthew
21:23. They said, "By what authority?" Did Jesus have authority
from the Sanhedrin? No, He did not. Did He have a certificate from any of the
schools? No, He did not. Did John the Baptist? No, he didn’t either. Neither
John the Baptist or Jesus had received permission from the "right
sources" to do what they were doing. They were not authorized. Their
meetings were not authorized, their ministry was not authorized, they had not
received permission. I want you to see that
this is a very current thought subject that we are talking about. I am
holding in my hand a paper that was published March 30, 1991. Here are ten
questions that it says to address to find out whether you ought to listen to
somebody or not. The third question is, "Are you authorized by the
General Conference committee?" Let me ask you this question. If you had
asked this question in Jesus day, would you have gone to listen to Jesus? No,
you would not Would you have gone to listen to John the Baptist? No, you
would not. Well let us take it back a little farther. If you had asked that
question in Isaiah’s day, would you have gone to listen to him? Would you
have gone to listen to Elisha? Would you have gone to listen to Elijah?
Friends, if it would not have worked then, if it would have caused you to
reject the Messiah, if it would have caused you to reject John the Baptist,
if it would have cause you to reject the greatest of the prophets, I wonder
if that is a good question to help us figure out what to do now. In one of
our church papers, that is a question that people are being told to ask. There are nine other questions.
I do not have time to address all nine today. But we need to ask this
question, has God authorized independent self-supporting work? We need to do
the same thing that Jesus did when He was challenged as to His authority. Who
gave you the authority to do this? Who gives you the authority to teach? Who
gave you the authority to come in here to the temple and talk in public? Who
gave you the authority to do that? That is what they were saying. I want you
to notice how Jesus answered that question. Do you suppose that would be a
good model for us to follow to figure out how to answer this question--to
answer it the same way that Jesus answered it? Do you know how Jesus answered
this question? They asked Him this question, "By what authority doest
thou these things? Who gave thee this authority?" Matthew 21:23. This is
the way Jesus answered the question. I am going to show you--this is not a
trick. Jesus was not playing a trick on them when He did this, this is a
straight forward answer to the question. "And Jesus answered
and said unto them, I also will ask you one thing, which if ye tell me, I in
like wise will tell you by what authority I do these things. The baptism of
John, whence was it? from heaven, or of men? And they reasoned with themselves,
saying, If we shall say, >From heaven; he will say unto us, Why did ye not
then believe him? But if we shall say, Of men; we fear the people; for all
hold John as a prophet. And they answered Jesus, and said, We cannot
tell." They were telling a lie by the way. "And he said unto them,
Neither tell I you by what authority I do these things." Matthew
21:24--27. Now I want you to notice
what Jesus did here. They said to Jesus, Who gave you the authority to do
what you are doing? Who gave you the authorization? Where did you get
permission? Jesus led them backward in the providence of God to the time of
John the Baptist and He said, The baptism of John, where was the authority
for that? Was the authority for John’s baptism from heaven or was it just
human authority? Where was the authority? Now let me ask you this question.
Suppose that they would have told the truth. They knew what the truth was,
but they saw that telling the truth would get them into trouble. One of the great shocks
that had as a young minister was being in a meeting with young ministers and
having a man in very high position in the Adventist church say to us, don’t
do this and this and this, because if you do this, you will make us tell a
lie. I thought to myself, what are you talking about, make you tell a lie?
Nobody has to tell a lie. That is the way these people felt. They would have
to tell a lie, because if we tell the truth, Jesus is going to get us in
trouble right in public. We are going to really be embarrassed. If they had
told the truth that they knew, and said that John the Baptists baptism was
from heaven, what would Jesus have said? Had John the Baptist
recognized who Jesus was and told everybody who Jesus was? Have you read it
from the first chapter of the gospel of John? Remember John the Baptist said,
"He that sent me to baptize with water, the same said unto me, Upon whom
thou shalt see the Spirit descending, and remaining on him, the same is he
which baptizeth with the Holy Ghost And I saw, and bear record that this is
the Son of God." John 1:33, 34. That is what John the Baptist said. If
they had recognized that John the Baptists authority came from heaven, would
their question have been answered as to where Jesus authority came from? Oh,
they would have known exactly where Jesus authority came from. It came from
heaven. The question that Jesus asked them was a straight forward way to
answer their question and teach them the answer to the question they were
asking. But they did not want that answer and so they told a lie. The answer to the
question, has God authorized independent, self-supporting work, is the same
answer today as it was in Jesus day. The way to find the answer to the
question is to go backward in the providence of God and see what God has
authorized, and what God has done in the past. As we go backward, we will
find the answer to the question. That is what I want to do for just a few
minutes. Do you understand the
difference between a Protestant and a Roman Catholic? I am going to run out
of time if I go into that. I don’t have time to discuss it. I will just tell
you in one sentence. The difference between a Protestant and a Roman Catholic
is this; for a Protestant, the highest authority is Gods word, and underneath
that is every other authority, including the authority of the church--that is
a Protestant. Ellen White says that Jesus was a Protestant, she was a
Protestant, Adventists are Protestants, and if you and I are Seventh-day
Adventists, we should be Protestants. lam sorry to tell you Mends that there
are some Adventists today that are more like Roman Catholic Adventists. Now
this is what a Roman Catholic is. It is different than a Protestant. For a
Roman Catholic, the supreme authority is the authority of the church and even
the Bible is underneath that. That is what a Roman Catholic is. The church is
the supreme authority and the Bible is authoritative. You cannot say to a
Roman Catholic that they do not believe the Bible, because they do believe
it, but they believe that it is under the authority of the church. A
Protestant believes that the authority of the Bible is above the authority of
the church. That is the difference between a Protestant and a Roman Catholic.
You have to understand, that if you are going to understand this subject. Has
God ordained independent, or self-supporting work? Let us look at a little
history. In 1888 we had the culmination of a great problem that had developed
in the Seventh-day Adventist Church. It did not end at that time, it went on.
But that was a crisis point in our history. One of the primary problems that
the Seventh-day Adventist Church had in 1888 was the problem of finite men
putting themselves in Gods place and taking a Roman Catholic position. "Finite men should
beware of seeking to control their fellow-men, taking the place assigned to
the Holy Spirit. Let not men feel that it is their prerogative to give to the
world what they suppose to be truth, and refuse anything that should be given
contrary to their ideas. This is not their work. Many things will appear
distinctly as truth which will not be acceptable to those who think their own
interpretations of the Scripture always right. Most decided changes will have
to be made in regard to ideas which some have accepted as without a flaw.
These men give evidence of fallibility in very many ways; they work upon
principles which the word of God condemns. " Ellen White says,
"That which makes me feel to the very depths of my being, and makes me
know that their works are not the works of God, is that they suppose they
have the authority to rule their fellowmen. The Lord has given them no more
right to rule others than He has given others to rule them. Those who assume
the control of their fellowmen take into their finite hands a work that
devolves upon God alone. "That men should
keep alive the spirit which ran riot at Minneapolis is an offense to God. All
heaven is indignant at the spirit that for years has been revealed."
Testimonies to Ministers, 76 Oh friend, do you want to
manifest a spirit that will cause all heaven to be indignant at what you are
doing? This is what was happening in our work in the 1880s, and it reached a
crisis point in Minneapolis in 1888. This idea of trying to control and rule
Gods work by finite man causes all heaven to be indignant. Here is another statement: "There are men whose
character and life testify to the fact that they are false prophets and
deceivers. These we are not to hear or tolerate." Ibid., 294 "Men can become just
as were the Pharisees--wide-awake to condemn the greatest teacher that the
world ever knew." Ibid., 294 "There are those who
are today doing the very same things." Ibid., 294 "These men who
presume to judge others should take a little broader view and say, Suppose
the statements of others do not agree with our ideas; shall we for this
pronounce them heresy? Shall we, uninspired men, take the responsibility of
placing our stakes, and saying, This shall not appear in print?" Ibid.,
294,295 "Has not our past
experience in these things been sufficient?" Now notice the next sentence.
She says, "Will we ever learn." Does it sound like the prophet is
frustrated? She says, "Will we ever learn the lessons which God designs
we shall learn? Will we ever realize that the consciences of men are not
given into our command? If you have appointed committees to do the work which
has been going on for years in Battle Creek, dismiss them; and remember that
God, the infinite God, has not placed men in any such positions as they
occupied at Minneapolis, and have occupied since then. . . I feel deeply over
this matter of men being conscience for their fellowmen. "Ibid., 295 What about in the local
church? Or what about in a conference? Now this took place at the General
Conference level. Lets look at the church: "A strange thing has come
into our churches" What do you suppose it is? Here it is.. "Men who
are placed in positions of responsibility that they may be wise helpers to
their fellow workers have come to suppose that they were set as kings and
rulers in the churches." A strange thing indeed. "To say to one
brother, Do this; to another, Do that; and to another, Be sure to labor in
such and such away. There have been places where the workers have been told
that if they did not follow the instruction of these men of responsibility,
their pay from the conference would be withheld." Ibid., 477. That has
happened lots of times. "I write thus fully,
because I have been shown that ministers and people are tempted more and more
to trust in finite man for wisdom, and to make flesh their arm. To conference
presidents, and men in responsible places, I bear this message: Break the
bands and fetters that have been placed upon Gods people. To you the word is
spoken, 'Break every yoke. Unless you cease the work of making man amenable
to man, unless you become humble in heart, and yourselves learn the way of
the Lord as little children, the Lord will divorce you from His work"
Ibid., 480, 481 Oh friend, I do not want
God to divorce me from His work. Do you? If I lose everything else in this
world, I do not want to lose the Lord. I do not want the Lord to cut me off
and divorce me from His work. Do you? Ellen White said that if you keep on
doing this, that is what is going to happen. This problem did not
cease at Minneapolis. We reached a crisis point at that time, but it did not
cease at Minneapolis in 1888. "The prejudices and
opinions that prevailed at Minneapolis are not dead by any means; the seeds
sown there in some hearts are ready to spring into life and bear a like
harvest. The tops have been cut down, but the roots have never been
eradicated, and they will bear their unholy fruit to poison the judgment,
pervert the perceptions, and blind the understanding of those with whom you
connect, in regard to the message and the messengers. "Testimonies to
Ministers, 467 We are not to our subject
yet We need to give a historical setting--a historical background to what we
want to study. I hope that you have seen from these statements, that in the
Adventist church, we were in the middle of a gigantic apostasy from truth. What
did this apostasy involve? It involved men in positions of responsibility
dictating and controlling what other people should do, and that you could not
follow your own conscience, you had to follow and do what you were told. The
problem came when some men had convictions about how something should be
done, but they could not carry it out There were men who were trying to do
Gods work and they could not do what they in their conscience thought that
they should do, because they were receiving orders and instructions from men
in responsibility. They said, "we are in authority and you are going to
do it this way." Because of this gigantic apostasy, there were sincere
men in the Seventh-day Adventist Church that wanted to do Gods work in the
way that God had specified, and the way that it was spelled out in the Spirit
of Prophecy, but they could not do it. They found it impossible to carry out
Gods instructions within the organization of His true church. Isn’t that
ironic? But that happened. This is what eventually led to self-supporting
work. Apparently the
educational work was the first work to be reformed on a different basis in a
self-supporting way. There were two young men by the name of Sutherland and
Magan who were trying to follow the counsel of the Spirit of Prophecy in
regard to education, and they found it impossible to do so. The development
of self-supporting work at Madison, Tennessee came into being because our
church leaders would not listen to the counsel from the Spirit of Prophecy
about Gods method of organization. Listen to what Ellen White says about
that: "A great many of the
difficulties that have come in to our work in California and elsewhere have
come in through a misunderstanding on the part of men in official positions
concerning their individual responsibility in the matter of controlling and
ruling their fellow laborers. Men entrusted with responsibilities have
supposed that their official position embraced very much more than was ever
thought of by those who placed them in office, and serious difficulties arose
as the result" "Simple organization
and church order are set forth in the New Testament Scriptures." The
Paulson Collection, 298. Let me just take just
thirty seconds or so on that, Mend. I have had ministers in the Adventist
church challenge me and say, "Do you believe that our church
organization, the way that it is now, is divinely inspired." Friend, if
you want to find what method of church organization is condoned by the God of
heaven, Ellen White says you better go to the New Testament. If what happens
in your church organization is not according to the New Testament, you had
better watch out, your organization is not divinely inspired. Let me take one
or two minutes on that. This is important. Take your Bible and turn
to the book of Galatians. I want you to see something here that for some
reason we have often overlooked. The apostle Paul is writing to the brethren
which were at the churches in Galatia. See Galatians 1:2. Now who is he
writing to? Is he writing to a world headquarters organization, or is he
writing to the believers in these churches in Galatia? He is writing to the
believers. Notice what he tells them: "And that because of false
brethren unawares brought in, who came in privily to spy out our liberty
which we have in Christ Jesus, that they might bring us into bondage: To whom
we gave place by subjection, no, not for an hour; that the truth of the
gospel might continue with you. But of these who seemed to be somewhat,
(whatsoever they were, it maketh no matter to me: God accepteth no mans
person:)." Galatians 2:4--6. Notice, Paul said,
"I don’t care who they are." Do you know who some of them were?
Some of them were from the General Conference of those days. Did you know
that? Some of them were people that had eaten with, and had been some of the
twelve disciples of Jesus. The apostle Paul said you better reject what they
did and you better refuse it and he stood up to them to their face. Notice
what it says here, "But when Peter was come to Antioch, I withstood him
to the face, because he was to be blamed. For before that certain came from
James, he did eat with the Gentiles: but when they were come, he withdrew and
separated himself, fearing them which were of the circumcision. And the other
Jews dissembled likewise with him; insomuch that Barnabas also was carried
away with their dissimulation. But when I saw that they walked not uprightly
according to the truth of the gospel..." Galatians 2:11--14. The New
Testament teaching here, is that if somebody comes to your church, whether
they are from the General Conference, or wherever they are, if they say
something that is not according to the truth, you should oppose it. That is
what the Bible says. Now this was Peter that he is talking about. This was
one of the leading of the twelve disciples of Jesus. Paul had to stand up and
oppose him in public. Why? Oh, but you say, that is the rock on whom the
church is built, you cannot oppose him! It depends whether you are a
Protestant or a Roman Catholic. If you are a Protestant, you have to take
your position on the truth, and it does not matter, Paul says--whoever it is.
"But though we, or an angel from heaven, preach any other gospel unto
you than that which we have preached unto you, let him be accursed."
Galatians 1:8. Paul said, if an angel from heaven comes and tells you
something that is contrary to the truth, oppose it. That is the New Testament
position. "Simple organization and church order are set forth in the New
Testament scriptures and the Lord has ordained these for the unity and
perfection of the church." Paulson Collection, 298 I want you to see what
the Lord says is the rightful position of a leader and what is the wrong
position for a leader. We are going to specify it right here. Here is what a
person should do if they hold an office in the church: "The man who holds
office in the church should stand as a leader, as an advisor and a counselor
and a helper in carrying the burdens of the work." That is what they
should be if a person holds an office in the church--a leading position--that
is their function. They should be a leader, an advisor, a counselor, and a
helper--those four things. Now here is what they should not do. He should be
a leader in offering thanksgiving to God. But he is not appointed to order
and command the Lords laborers" Ibid. Now that is Bible, church
organization.. "He is not appointed to order and command the Lords
laborers. The Lord is over His heritage. He will lead His people if they will
be lead of the Lord in the place of assuming a power God has not given them..
.Position does not give a man kingly authority. The meekness of Christ is a
wonderful lesson given to the fallen world. Learning this meekness from the
great Teacher, the worker will become Christ-like." Ibid., 298, 299 Oh, friends, as I have
studied this subject, my great desire is that the work that I do for Jesus
will become Christ-like. Do you want your work for Jesus to become
Christ-like? If that is going to happen, you and I are going to have to
humble ourselves. I am very concerned, I can easily get worked up over this
subject because I realize as I study, that unless you and I learn the lesson
of humiliation and penitence at the foot of the cross, we will not be saved.
Read it in Desire of Ages, page 83, 84. She says that is why we should spend
an hour every day studying the life of Christ, especially the closing scenes.
She says "If we would be saved at last, we must learn the lesson of
penitence and humiliation at the foot of the cross." Desire of Ages, 83 Because of these problems
with kingly authority--the rule or ruin principle, the desire to control
others--because of this great apostasy that came into our church and
continued, after 1888, (See Testimonies to Ministers, page 467) because of
this great apostasy over the issue of church authority and church
organization, Ellen White began to encourage self-supporting work and she
helped to set up a self-supporting school near Madison, Tennessee. She
counseled them to get a non-profit organization and she told them to remain
separate from the General Conference. The basic issues were always the same.
Sutherland and Magan were opposed by the General Conference, and especially
by the president of the General Conference. They said to them, "You
should not work independent of the conference and you must not ask
Seventh-day Adventists for any money to do a project which the General
Conference has no vote or control over." That was the issue. Ellen White
wrote to Magan from Loma Linda, California on May 14, 1907. She said, "I
bear positive testimony that you and your fellow workers in Madison are doing
the work that God has appointed to you. . .The attitude of opposition or
indifference on the part of some of your brethren has created conditions that
have made your work more difficult than it should have been. You have not received
from some many words of encouragement, but the Lord is pleased that you have
not been easily discouraged. "Some have
entertained the idea that because the school at Madison is not owned by a
conference organization, those who are in charge of the school should not be
permitted to call upon our people for the means that is greatly needed to
carry on their work. This idea needs to be corrected. In the distribution of
the money that comes into the Lords treasury, you are entitled to a portion
just as verily as are those connected with other needy enterprises that are
carried forward in harmony with the Lords instruction." The
Spalding-Magan Collection, 411 When we look at the
diaries and letters from this period, we find that the General Conference
president was one of the main ones, if not the main one who was always in
opposition to self-supporting work. "The Lord does not
set limits about His workers in some lines as men are wont to set. In their
work, Brethren Magan and Sutherland have been hindered unnecessarily. Means
have been withheld from them because in the organization and management of
the Madison School, it was not placed under the control of the conference.
But, the reasons why this school was not owned and controlled by the
conference have not been duly considered. The Lord does not require that the
educational work at Madison should be changed all about before it can receive
the hearty support of our people.. .The work that has been done there is
approved of God." Series B, No. 11, page 32. Now that we have gone
backward in the providence of God, let us ask ourselves, did God in 1907
approve independent, self-supporting work? Did He do it? He did, and we have
seen why He did. He did it because of the difficulties that we were
experiencing. People could not follow the dictates of their own conscience
and follow the counsels of the Lord because their brethren would not let them
do it within the organization. That was the precise problem. It cannot be
denied by anyone who looks at the evidence. "The work that has
been done that is approved of God, and He forbids" (Now this is getting
strong, Mends, are you listening to the rest of the sentence? The first part
of this sentence says this work is approved of God and notice what the last
part of the sentence says) "and He forbids that this line of work shall
be broken up." God forbids it. Now I want to tell you Mends, when
Madison was organized, Ellen White did not allow them to place themselves
under the control of the conference. She did not allow it. She told them not
to do it. And she said God forbids that this line of work be broken up. I see
people today that say, Well unless you have somebody from the conference on
your board, then you should not be recognized. I want to tell you Mends, that
is directly contrary to the divine counsel. Directly contrary. "The Lord
will continue to bless and sustain the workers so long as they follow His
counsel." Ibid. Notice what the emphasis
is. The emphasis is not on who you are associated with, the emphasis is are
you following the divine counsel. Are you following the truth? That was the position
of the apostle Paul. The apostle Paul’s position was not who are you
connected with, the apostle Paul said that even if somebody comes from the
General Conference at Jerusalem and says something that is contrary to the
truth, oppose it. Ellen White was very
emphatic about how the title should be held and where the controls of this
property at Madison should be. Dr. Floyd Bralier, was a well known doctor in
the Adventist church. He died in 1952. He was a naturalist and a writer, a
prominent Madison worker in the early years, and he relates that Ellen White
said the following: "I want you to know that I have been shown how this
school should be organized, it is not to be organized like our older schools,
neither owned or controlled by them. I want you, professor Magan, to go with
me and we will get hold of an attorney and we will get him to draw up the
papers and take it to the state authorities and get the institution
incorporated and I will stay here until we get that done and then I will go
to California. I want you professor Sutherland, to go North and see if you
can get enough money to make the first payment on this place." She was
advising Dr. Sutherland to go to Seventh-day Adventists in Michigan and
solicit money for Madison. That is exactly what she was advising. From P.T. Magan’s diary,
August 7, 1904: He says he worked with W.C. White during the forenoon getting
article of plans ready regarding the incorporation of the school at
Nashville. In the afternoon he met with Daniels, Prescott, Griggs, Washburn,
Byrd and W.C. White to consider our plan of organization. Daniels did not
like it. You ought to think about
that a little while. Here is a plan that the Spirit of Prophecy has
authorized and said to do, but the General Conference President does not like
it. "Prescott thought
that we traveled too much. So did Daniels. Bland thought other teachers would
envy our independence and would like to do likewise." August 9, 1904, two days
later: "Talked with Mrs. E.G. and W.C. White regarding our plan for organization.
She said we were not to go under the dominion of the Southern Union
Conference." April 14, 1906:
"Spent forenoon with Daniels. Had a very satisfactory conversation. Told
him why our school was independent and would have to eat showbread." That is something you
ought to study through a little bit. What did it mean when they said they
would have to eat showbread. You better think that over. May 7, 1907, Paradise
Valley: "Talked with Sister White regarding attitude of General
Conference toward us. Miss. Sarah Mc Enterfer and Lillian present Told Sister
White about the administration that we had no right to go and get money
unless we were owned by the conference. She replied; 'You are doing double
what they are. Take all the donations you can get. The money belongs to the
Lord and not to these men. The position they take is not of God. The Southern
Union Conference is not to own or control you. You cannot turn things over to
them." Why? Because when things were turned over to them, they forced
people to go against people and not follow their conscience. May 14, 1907, Magan sees
Sister White. He says, "I talked to her about the General Conference
position that concerns non-conference owned [enterprises] should have no
money. She answered, 'Daniels and those with him have taken a position on
this matter that is not of God. She said she had something written on this
and would try to find it." If you want to find
something that she wrote on that subject, we just read it in the
Spalding-Magan Collection page 411,412. May 23, 1907, St. Helena:
"Spent the forenoon with W.C. White. He gave me Sister Whites letters to
Daniels regarding us. He told me he did not agree with the administration at
Washington in insisting that all moneys pass through their hands. Said that
he would not agree to our going under conference domination." January 19, 1907, this is
from Ellen White. "Today I have been carrying a heavy burden on my
heart.. .You have a work to do to encourage the school work at Madison,
Tennessee. ..The brethren who have influence should do all in their power to
hold up the hands of these workers by encouraging and supporting the work of
the Madison School. Means should be appropriated to the needs of the work in
Madison,--that the labor of the teachers may not be so hard in the
future." Spalding and Magan Collection, 395, 396 Now, I want to ask you
some questions. This self-supporting school that was begun in Madison,
Tennessee around the turn of the century, was it a Seventh-day Adventist
school? Yes, it was. Do you know what you just said? Here is a school that is
not owned or controlled or operated by the conference, but it is a
Seventh-day Adventist school. It was not some school owned by some other
church, these people were Seventh-day Adventists. You do not know where I am
leading you, but you are going to find out. Did they start a
sanitarium at Madison? Was this a Seventh-day Adventist sanitarium? Was it
owned and operated by the conference? No, it was self-supporting. It was
independent from the conference but it was Seventh-day Adventist. It was not
anything else. Did they later start a printing operation and did Madison
start many, many self-supporting schools and sanitariums and print shops all
over this area of the United States? Yes. Those printing shops that were
self-supporting and not owned or controlled by the conference, were they
Seventh-day Adventist? Yes. Do you see, Mend, any area of Gods work, even if
it is self-supporting, can still be Seventh-day Adventist, even if it is not
connected or controlled by the conference. Is it then possible for a
local church to be a self-supporting congregation that is not controlled or
operated by the conference and still be Seventh-day Adventist? Is that
possible? It most certainly is. Now I am not telling people to do that, but
people have been forced to do that in the same way that Sutherland and Magan
were forced to do it. People say, Oh you are starting a new church.
Absolutely not, we are not starting a new church. Were Sutherland and Magan
starting a new church when they started a self-supporting school? No, they
just wanted to be Seventh-day Adventists, but they wanted to be able to
follow the counsels. If somebody cannot go to a Celebration church and there
is no place for them to go and they have church in their home, if they are
not recognized, are they still Seventh-day Adventists? Yes they are. Has God
authorized that? Yes He has, we just read it. Now one of the questions
that always comes up as in this recent Seventh-day Adventist publication of March
30 of 1991, which says something like this, that all genuine independent
ministries will encourage their supporters to return their tithes and
offerings through the appropriate channels and so forth. I want you to see,
Mends, what inspiration says about that question. You cannot have a candid
conversation about self-supporting work without discussing finances--it is
impossible. God is not raining manna from heaven to support us today, He has
given us, however, guidelines and taught us what we should do and how His
work is to be supported. Do you think that God has designed for any work to
be done and not have any idea about how He would support it? Can you
comprehend such a thing? Friend, any kind of work that God wants to be done
in the world, He has it figured out how it is to be supported. Don’t you
believe that? Did God have a plan how His ministers would be supported? Yes,
He did. Did He have a plan how literature evangelists would be supported?
Yes, He did. Did He have a plan how sanitariums would be supported? Yes, He
did. Did He have a plan how Bible workers should be supported? Yes, He did.
Now let me ask you a question. Do you think it would be at all safe for you
and me to try to figure out our own way about how things should be supported
instead of following Gods direction? Do you think that would be safe? Do you know that the Lord
has given us instruction that Bible workers are to be supported from the
tithe. Did you know that? Do you think that it would be safe for me to say
that I am going to hire a Bible worker and lam going to support them from
secular money because we have it. Do you think that would be safe? You better
not, Mend. God has told us how that is to be done and it is dangerous for you
and me to go trying to do things on our own in a different way. It always
alarms me when I hear of a church that is saying that they are going to hire
a Bible worker and we will just pay him out of church expense. Watch out! You
are contrary to divine counsel and you cannot expect the Lords blessing. Let
us read a few statements on how our means are to be used. "There are fearful
woes for those who preach the truth, but are not sanctified by it, and also
for those who consent to receive and maintain the unsanctified to minister to
them in word and doctrine." Testimonies, vol. 1, 261, 262. If you
maintain the unsanctified minister, Ellen White says a fearful woe is upon
you. We are held responsible as to how our tithe and offerings are used. We
will have to answer for it in the judgment. "If God pronounces a
woe upon those who are called to preach the truth and refuse to obey, a
heavier woe rests upon those who take upon them this sacred work without
clean hands and pure hearts. As there are woes for those who preach the truth
while they are unsanctified in heart and life, so there are woes for those
who receive and maintain the unsanctified in the position which they cannot
fill." Testimonies, vol. 2, 552 Do you want to come under
the curse of God? Here is how to do it. Just take your tithe and offering and
just send it to support an unsanctified minister, the curse of God will be on
you. That is what inspiration says. "I call upon Gods
people to open their eyes. When you sanction or carry out the decisions of
men who, as you know, are not in harmony with truth and righteousness, you
weaken your own faith and lose your relish for communion with God."
Testimonies to Ministers, 91 "The Lord has made
us individually His stewards. We each hold a solemn responsibility to invest
this means ourselves.. .God does not lay upon you the burden of asking the
conference or any counsil of men whether you shall use your means as you see
fit to advance the work of God." Special Testimonies to Battle Creek,
41, 42 According to the comments
in the diaries, one of the main points of contention between the General
Conference and those who were trying to start Madison was, who is going to
get the money? Who is going to use the money of Gods people? Inspiration has
given us no right to feel that all the means should be handled through one
organization. Notice this is to those bearing responsibilities in Washington
and other centers by Ellen White. January 6, 1908,. "Those who have had
experience in the work of God should be encouraged to follow the guidance and
counsel of the Lord. "Do not worry lest
some means shall go directly to those who are trying to do missionary work in
a quiet and effective way. All the means is not to be handled by one agency
or organization." Did you get that? That is the servant of the Lord
speaking. She says, "All the means is not to be handled by one agency or
organization. "To those in our
conferences who have felt that they had authority to forbid the gathering of
means in certain territory I now say: This matter has been presented to me
again and again. I now bear my testimony in the name of the Lord to those
whom it concerns. Wherever you are, withhold your forbiddings. The work of
God is not to be thus trammeled.. .This wonderful burden of responsibility
which some suppose God has placed upon them with their official position, has
never been laid upon them." Spalding and Magan Collection, 421, 422 This is written to a
person in self-supporting work: "You ask me what you shall do in view of
the fact that so little help is given to that department of the work in which
you are working. "I would say, trust
it with the Lord. There is a way opened for you in regard to securing help
for the Southern field. Appeal to the people. This is the only course you can
pursue, under the circumstances. "Send no statement
of the situation through our religious papers; because it will not be
honored. Send direct to the people. Gods ways are not to be counter worked by
mans ways. There are those who have means, and who will give large and small
sums. Have this money come direct to your destitute portion of the vineyard.
The Lord hasn’t specified any regular channel through which means should
pass." Spalding-Magan Collection, 498 By the way friends, is
that plain? I hope it is. If we cannot understand language as plain as that,
I don’t know what we will do. James White foresaw all
this kind of thing. He said one time to Ellen White that he would rather die
than have these institutions that he had started get mismanaged. Maybe that
is why the Lord let him die, I don’t know. In closing, I want to
read you a statement by James White in regard to church organization. I will
tell you before I read it, it is directly contrary to what I was trained and
taught as a young minister. All the time that I was going through the
Adventist educational system studying theology, first at Walla Walla College
and then at the seminary, and then working as a minister in the North Dakota
Conference, I was trained, I was taught over and over again, everything goes
to the conference committee. Place your hands in the hands of the conference
committee. When my brother was
threatened to be fired in Wichita, Elder Pierson had this same misconception.
He came to Wichita and he said to my brother, "Just place yourself in
the hands of the brethren." My brother Marshall said to him, "Elder
Pierson, I cannot do that with a clear conscience." Praise the Lord,
Elder Pierson was a Christian and he said, "Well, if you cant do it with
a clear conscience, don’t do it." But that idea of placing yourselves in
the hands of the conference or in the hands of the conference committee, just
doing whatever the conference committee tells you, is a misconception and
James White, one of the founding fathers of the Adventist Church was
absolutely against it. Notice the strong language he uses. This is what James
White said concerning leaders and conferences: "They should have a
fatherly care of all branches of the work in the conference. It is their duty
to counsel together in the fear and love of God and regard themselves as a
board of counselors to all the ministers and churches under their supervision
and not a board of directors. Our great leader and director is Christ Their
strength is in so counseling with their brethren in the spirit of tenderness
and love as to bind the hearts of all the laborers to their hearts and give
room for the voice of the Holy Ghost as was manifested in the days of the
apostles. They should ever bear in mind that the head of every man is Christ.
They may counsel with the state conference committee in reference to
ministers laboring here or there, but should never direct. The head of every
man is Christ. The minister who throws himself on conference committee for
direction takes himself out of the hands of Christ" The Review and Herald,
January 4, 1881 Did you know that that is
what James White believed? He said that the one who throws himself on the
conference committee for direction is taking himself out of the hands of
Christ. And he said that "that committee that takes into its own hands
the work of directing the ambassadors for Christ takes a fearful
responsibility. One is your Master, even Christ, and all ye are brethren. May
God preserve to us our organization and form of church discipline in its
original simplicity and efficiency." Ibid I do not want to comment
on that last sentence. I don’t know if you could take it or not. But Mends,
because of what happened, because of the great apostasy, God authorized
independent, self-supporting work as one of the means through which He would
finish His work. And Mends, don’t let anybody tell you that self-supporting
work is not Seventh-day Adventist, that something that is not controlled,
directed, or authorized by the conference is not Seventh-day Adventist It is.
A self-supporting school can be Seventh-day Adventist, a self-supporting
sanitarium can be Seventh-day Adventist, a self-supporting printing press can
be Seventh-day Adventist, and a self-supporting congregation can be
Seventh-day Adventist I believe that before the second coming of Christ, we
are going to see far more little groups of self-supporting congregations than
most people have any idea of yet. The important thing is to do what Paul said
in Galatians the second chapter. Is it according to the truth? And if it is
according to the truth of inspiration, you can depend on Friend, I want to stay
with the truth. Do you? Whatever happens, one of these days very soon the
truth is going to triumph. I have been looking for several years to see if
there is any statement in the Spirit of Prophecy that says that our
organization is going to triumph, and I have not found any yet. If you find
one, let me know because I have been sincerely looking to see if there is any
such statement, but I cannot find it. I will tell you that I found a whole bunch
of statements that say the truth is going to triumph. And when the truth
triumphs, I want to be with it. Do you? If that is your desire and the
earnest longing of your heart, I want you to kneel with me in prayer. Let us
dedicate ourselves to be faithful to the truth, no matter what happens. Father in heaven, as we
have looked backward in you providence, in your providential leadings to your
people in time past, and we see the problems and trials of our forefathers,
and we see that as a result of great apostasy and refusal to follow the
divine counsel, that you have ordained independent, self-supporting work to
help in the finishing of your work Lord help us each one to determine
whatever our post of duty, whether in a conference, or a union or in the General
Conference, or in some self-supporting unit, help us, by Your grace to stand
for the truth though the heavens fall, to be faithful to truth, and Lord, one
of these days, very soon, when the truth triumphs at last, may every one of
us here be found a part of that truth. We pray in Jesus name. Amen |