The Story of Patriarchs and Prophets
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 41: Apostasy at the Jordan
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Satan is using every means to make crime and debasing vice
popular. We cannot walk the streets of our cities without
encountering flaring notices of crime presented in some novel, or to
be acted at some theater. The mind is educated to familiarity
with sin. The course pursued by the base and vile is kept before
the people in the periodicals of the day, and everything that can
excite passion is brought before them in exciting stories. They
hear and read so much of debasing crime that the once tender
conscience, which would have recoiled with horror from such
scenes, becomes hardened, and they dwell upon these things with
greedy interest.
Many of the amusements popular in the world today, even
with those who claim to be Christians, tend to the same end as
did those of the heathen. There are indeed few among them
that Satan does not turn to account in destroying souls. Through
the drama he has worked for ages to excite passion and glorify
vice. The opera, with its fascinating display and bewildering [p. 460] music, the masquerade, the dance, the card table, Satan employs
to break down the barriers of principle and open the door to
sensual indulgence. In every gathering for pleasure where pride
is fostered or appetite indulged, where one is led to forget God
and lose sight of eternal interests, there Satan is binding his chains
about the soul.
"Keep thy heart with all diligence," is the counsel of the wise
man; "for out of it are the issues of life." Proverbs 4:23. As man
"thinketh in his heart, so is he." Proverbs 23:7. The heart must
be renewed by divine grace, or it will be in vain to seek for purity
of life. He who attempts to build up a noble, virtuous character
independent of the grace of Christ is building his house upon the
shifting sand. In the fierce storms of temptation it will surely be
overthrown. David's prayer should be the petition of every soul:
"Create in me a clean heart, O God; and renew a right spirit
within me." Psalm 51:10. And having become partakers of the
heavenly gift, we are to go on unto perfection, being "kept by
the power of God through faith." 1 Peter 1:5.
Yet we have a work to do to resist temptation. Those who
would not fall a prey to Satan's devices must guard well the
avenues of the soul; they must avoid reading, seeing, or hearing
that which will suggest impure thoughts. The mind should not
be left to wander at random upon every subject that the adversary
of souls may suggest. "Girding up the loins of your mind,"
says the apostle Peter, "Be sober, . . . not fashioning yourselves
according to your former lusts in . . . your ignorance: but like
as He which called you is holy, be ye yourselves also holy in all
manner of living." 1 Peter 1:13-15, R.V. Says Paul, "Whatsoever
things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever
things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things
are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report; if there be any
virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these things." Philippians
4:8. This will require earnest prayer and unceasing watchfulness.
We must be aided by the abiding influence of the Holy
Spirit, which will attract the mind upward, and habituate it to
dwell on pure and holy things. And we must give diligent study
to the word of God. "Wherewithal shall a young man cleanse his
way? by taking heed thereto according to Thy word." "Thy
word," says the psalmist, "have I hid in mine heart, that I might
not sin against Thee." Psalm 119:9, 11. [p. 461]
Israel's sin at Beth-peor brought the judgments of God upon
the nation, and though the same sins may not now be punished
as speedily, they will as surely meet retribution. "If any man defile
the temple of God, him shall God destroy." 1 Corinthians
3:17. Nature has affixed terrible penalties to these crimes—penalties
which, sooner or later, will be inflicted upon every transgressor.
It is these sins more than any other that have caused
the fearful degeneracy of our race, and the weight of disease
and misery with which the world is cursed. Men may succeed
in concealing their transgression from their fellow men, but they
will no less surely reap the result, in suffering, disease, imbecility,
or death. And beyond this life stands the tribunal of the
judgment, with its award of eternal penalties. "They which do such
things shall not inherit the kingdom of God," but with Satan
and evil angels shall have their part in that "lake of fire" which
"is the second death." Galatians 5:21; Revelation 20:14.
"The lips of a strange woman drop as an honeycomb, and her
mouth is smoother than oil: but her end is bitter as wormwood,
sharp as a two-edged sword." Proverbs 5:3, 4. "Remove thy way
far from her, and come not nigh the door of her house: lest thou
give thine honor unto others, and thy years unto the cruel: lest
strangers be filled with thy wealth; and thy labors be in the house
of a stranger; and thou mourn at the last, when thy flesh and
thy body are consumed." Verses 8-11. "Her house inclineth unto
death." "None that go unto her return again." Proverbs 2:18, 19.
"Her guests are in the depths of hell." Proverbs 9:18.
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