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Battle Creek, Mich., December 9, 1888
Dear Brother
Healey:
I have not had a very easy time since I left the Pacific Coast. Our first
meeting was not like any other General Conference I ever
attended. The thought that some of our brethren ventured to
entertain some ideas contrary to those of the leading brethren
filled the minds of some of our brethren with such prejudice
that they could not with any fairness even come to an
investigation of the positions of our faith with anything like
Christian feelings. It was more after the order developed by the
priests and rulers and Pharisees in the days of Christ. Because
I came from the Pacific Coast they would have it that I had been
influenced by W. C. White, Dr. Waggoner, and A. T. Jones.
Brother Butler wrote me a letter of a most singular purport, and made
wonderfully strong statements in it. He called these men whom
God has appointed to do a special work in His cause fledglings.
He moreover said that he had received letters from Northern and
Central California, saying that they would not send their
children to the college if the views of E. J. Waggoner and A. T.
Jones were brought in. Well, I will not attempt to tell
you all about this matter; but I learned that you were one who
wrote letters of warning to Elder Butler. I asked him if I might
see the letter, but he said that he had destroyed it. Strange
proceedings! My brother, Is the Lord leading you? or is the
enemy working upon your mind as upon the minds of others? I have
come to the conclusion that this is the case. I have not changed
my views in reference to the law in Galatians, but I hope that I
shall never be left to entertain the spirit that was brought
into the General Conference. I have not the least hesitancy in
saying it was not the Spirit of God.
If every idea we have
entertained in doctrines is truth will not the truth bear to be
investigated? Will it totter and fall if criticized? If so, let
if fall, the sooner the better. The spirit that would close the
door to investigation of points of truth in a Christlike manner
is not the Spirit from above.
You wrote that plans were all laid, and that A. T. Jones, Dr. Waggoner, and
W. C. White, had things all prepared to make a drive at the
General Conference. And you warned Elder Butler--a poor sick
man, broken in body and in mind,-to prepare for the emergency;
and in that conference Elder Butler felt called upon to send in
telegrams and long letters, "Stand by the old landmarks." Just
as though the Lord was not present at that conference, and would
not keep His hand on the work!
My testimony was ignored, and never in my life experience was I treated as
at that conference; and I give you, my brother, with some others
of our brethren, the credit of doing what you could to bring
this state of affairs about. You may have thought that you were
verily doing God service; but it served the cause of the enemy
rather than the cause of God.
I would
write you more fully, but the particulars may all be written out
and you will have them in time.
Elder
Butler has been doing a work in the interpretation of the
testimony and upon the inspiration of the Scriptures which God
has never put upon him, and its influence was brought over to
the General Conference in Oakland, and since then has been at
work like leaven, and the very same prejudice and irritation of
spirit that was upon the Pacific Coast in a degree we find this
side of the Rocky Mountains. I was grieved and distressed when I
learned that you had done the very same work others have done,
stirred up the mind of a feeble, sick man, and caused him to
look at things in a distorted light. In the responsible position
which Elder Butler has occupied some have looked at him rather
than to God. They have accepted his exaggerated ideas, and they
have felt that they must, as he said, "Stand by the old
landmarks." I am sorry to hear that you are willing to work as a
traitor against your brethren. Upon whom can we rely? And what
is this all about? Why A. T. Jones and Dr. Waggoner hold views
upon some doctrinal points which all admit are not vital
questions, different from those which some of the leading ones
of our people have held. But it is a vital question whether we
are Christians, whether we have a Christian spirit, and are
true, open, and frank with one another. I do not like the
unchristian spirit which has prevailed both east of the Rocky
Mountains, and on the Pacific Coast on this subject. Could you
not trust God to manage these matters? Has not the Lord been
speaking through His servant for the last forty-five years, and
has He left me to walk alone? If ever our brethren needed their
eyes anointed with eyesalve it is at the present time. I do not
want our brethren to know that you were the one who communicated
to Elder Butler the information you did, for I fear it would
create suspicion in them that you were not a man to be trusted;
that you would betray them if you had a chance.
I think it
is high time that we were Christians at heart. The condition of
things here is such that it requires most earnest, persevering
labor to counteract the work that has been done here for a few
years in the past.
I am glad that a time has come when something will stir our people to
investigate the points of our faith for themselves. We should
not consider that either Elder Butler or Elder Smith are the
guardians of the doctrines for Seventh-day Adventists, and that
no one may dare to express an idea that differs from theirs. My
cry has been: Investigate the Scriptures for yourselves, and
know for yourselves what saith the Lord. No man is to be
authority for us. If he has received his light from the Bible so
may we also go to the same source for light and proof to
substantiate the doctrines which we believe. The Scriptures
teach that we should give a reason of the hope that is within us
with meekness and fear.
Brother
Healey, it is best for us to look to God and trust in God. The
ideas you have given to Elder Butler may have placed Dr.
Waggoner, A. T. Jones, Willie, and myself in a false light. The
information coming as it did from Pacific Coast had great weight
with him. I think we better know what kind of laborers we are
connected with, whether because they feel like it they will
betray the brethren and create suspicion and distrust or will
seek to promote peace and harmony between the two great
institutions East and West.
I have not
told you that my views are not changed in regard to the law in
Galatians. But if we have had the truth upon this subject our
brethren have failed to be sanctified through it; the fruits are
not after Christ's order, but bitter as gall.
I have been
working as I never worked before. I have felt that something
must be done or many souls will be lost. This church in Battle
Creek is like the valley of dry bones. They need to be stirred
with some power to give them life.
Why we have had to work and pray and work even to have Brother Jones obtain
a hearing in Battle Creek, and many of our leading men were
provoked after they heard him talk to think that there were
those in responsible positions who would close the door to light
and to knowledge, keeping out just what they needed. But I have
not time to write more.
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