Steps to Christ
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 13: Rejoicing in the Lord
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The children of God are called to be representatives
of Christ, showing forth the goodness and
mercy of the Lord. As Jesus has revealed to us
the true character of the Father, so we are to reveal
Christ to a world that does not know His tender,
pitying love. "As Thou hast sent Me into the world,"
said Jesus, "even so have I also sent them into the
world." "I in them, and Thou in Me; . . . that the
world may know that Thou hast sent Me." John 17:
18, 23. The apostle Paul says to the disciples of Jesus,
"Ye are manifestly declared to be the epistle of
Christ," "known and read of all men." 2 Corinthians
3:3, 2. In every one of His children, Jesus sends a
letter to the world. If you are Christ's follower, He
sends in you a letter to the family, the village, the
street, where you live. Jesus, dwelling in you, desires
to speak to the hearts of those who are not acquainted
with Him. Perhaps they do not read the Bible, or do
not hear the voice that speaks to them in its pages;
they do not see the love of God through His works.
But if you are a true representative of Jesus, it may
be that through you they will be led to understand
something of His goodness and be won to love and
serve Him.
Christians are set as light bearers on the way to
heaven. They are to reflect to the world the light
shining upon them from Christ. Their life and
character should be such that through them others will get
a right conception of Christ and of His service. [p. 116]
If we do represent Christ, we shall make His
service appear attractive, as it really is. Christians
who gather up gloom and sadness to their souls, and
murmur and complain, are giving to others a false
representation of God and the Christian life. They
give the impression that God is not pleased to have
His children happy, and in this they bear false witness
against our heavenly Father.
Satan is exultant when he can lead the children
of God into unbelief and despondency. He delights
to see us mistrusting God, doubting His willingness
and power to save us. He loves to have us feel that
the Lord will do us harm by His providences. It is
the work of Satan to represent the Lord as lacking
in compassion and pity. He misstates the truth in
regard to Him. He fills the imagination with false
ideas concerning God; and instead of dwelling upon
the truth in regard to our heavenly Father, we too
often fix our minds upon the misrepresentations of
Satan and dishonor God by distrusting Him and
murmuring against Him. Satan ever seeks to make the
religious life one of gloom. He desires it to appear
toilsome and difficult; and when the Christian presents
in his own life this view of religion, he is, through
his unbelief, seconding the falsehood of Satan.
Many, walking along the path of life, dwell upon
their mistakes and failures and disappointments, and
their hearts are filled with grief and discouragement.
While I was in Europe, a sister who had been doing
this, and who was in deep distress, wrote to me, asking
for some word of encouragement. The night
after I had read her letter I dreamed that I was in
a garden, and one who seemed to be the owner of [p. 117] the garden was conducting me through its paths. I
was gathering the flowers and enjoying their
fragrance, when this sister, who had been walking by my
side, called my attention to some unsightly briers that
were impeding her way. There she was mourning
and grieving. She was not walking in the pathway,
following the guide, but was walking among the
briers and thorns. "Oh," she mourned, "is it not a
pity that this beautiful garden is spoiled with thorns?"
Then the guide said, "Let the thorns alone, for they
will only wound you. Gather the roses, the lilies,
and the pinks."
Have there not been some bright spots in your
experience? Have you not had some precious
seasons when your heart throbbed with joy in response
to the Spirit of God? When you look back into the
chapters of your life experience do you not find some
pleasant pages? Are not God's promises, like the
fragrant flowers, growing beside your path on every
hand? Will you not let their beauty and sweetness
fill your heart with joy?
The briers and thorns will only wound and grieve
you; and if you gather only these things, and present
them to others, are you not, besides slighting the
goodness of God yourself, preventing those around
you from walking in the path of life?
It is not wise to gather together all the unpleasant
recollections of a past life,—its iniquities and
disappointments,—to talk over them and mourn over them
until we are overwhelmed with discouragement. A
discouraged soul is filled with darkness, shutting out
the light of God from his own soul and casting a
shadow upon the pathway of others. [p. 118]
Thank God for the bright pictures which He has
presented to us. Let us group together the blessed
assurances of His love, that we may look upon them
continually: The Son of God leaving His Father's
throne, clothing His divinity with humanity, that He
might rescue man from the power of Satan; His
triumph in our behalf, opening heaven to men, revealing
to human vision the presence chamber where
the Deity unveils His glory; the fallen race uplifted
from the pit of ruin into which sin had plunged it,
and brought again into connection with the infinite
God, and having endured the divine test through faith
in our Redeemer, clothed in the righteousness of
Christ, and exalted to His throne—these are the
pictures which God would have us contemplate.
When we seem to doubt God's love and distrust
His promises we dishonor Him and grieve His Holy
Spirit. How would a mother feel if her children were
constantly complaining of her, just as though she did
not mean them well, when her whole life's effort had
been to forward their interests and to give them
comfort? Suppose they should doubt her love; it would
break her heart. How would any parent feel to be
thus treated by his children? And how can our heavenly
Father regard us when we distrust His love,
which has led Him to give His only-begotten Son that
we might have life? The apostle writes, "He that
spared not His own Son, but delivered Him up for us
all, how shall He not with Him also freely give us all
things?" Romans 8:32. And yet how many, by their
actions, if not in word, are saying, "The Lord does [p. 119] not mean this for me. Perhaps He loves others, but
He does not love me."
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