I am going to speak this
afternoon on the subject of evolution. I want you to pay close attention
and find out for yourselves whether or not you are evolutionists. First
of all, I will read to you what evolution is; then as we follow along,
you can see whether or not you are an evolutionist. These statements are
all copied from a treatise on evolution, written by one of the chief
evolutionists; therefore, they are all correct, so far as they go, as
definitions:
"Evolution is the theory that
represents the course of the world as a gradual transition from the
indeterminate to the determinate, from the uniform to the varied, and
which assumes the cause of these processes to be immanent in the world
itself that is to be thus transformed."
"Evolution is thus almost
synonymous with progress. It is a transition from the lower to the
higher, from the worse to the better. Thus progress points to an
increased value in existence, as judged by our feelings."
Now notice the particular points in
these three sentences: evolution represents the course of the world as a
gradual transition from the lower to the higher, from the worse to the
better; and assumes that this process is immanent in the world itself
thus to be transformed. That is to say, the thing gets better of itself;
and that which causes it to get better is itself. And this progress
marks "an increased value in existence, as judged by our
feelings." That is to say, you know you are better, because you
feel better. You know there has been progress, because you feel it. Your
feelings regulate your standing. Your knowledge of your feelings
regulates your progress from worse to better.
Now in this matter of progress from
worse to better, have your feelings anything to do with it? If they
have, what are you? Every one here this afternoon who measures his
progress, the value of his experience, by his feelings, is an
evolutionist: I care not if he has been a Seventh-day Adventist for
forty years, he is an evolutionist just the same. And all his
Christianity, all his religion, is a mere profession without the fact,
simply a form without the power.
Now I read what evolution is, in
another way; so that you can see that it is infidelity. Then, if you
find yourself an evolutionist, you know at once that you are an infidel:
"The hypothesis of evolution aims at answering a number of
questions respecting the beginning, or genesis, of things." It
"helps to restore the ancient sentiment toward nature as our parent
and the source of our life."
One of the branches of this sort of
science, that has come most toward the establishment of the doctrine of
evolution, is the new science of geology, which has instituted the
conception of vast and unimaginable periods of time in the past history
of our globe. These vast and unimaginable periods, as another one of the
chief writers on this subject— the author of it indeed— says,
"is the indispensable basis for understanding man’s origin"
in the process of evolution. So that the progress that has been made has
been through countless ages. Yet this progress has not been steady and
straight forward from its inception until its present condition. It has
been through many ups and downs. There have been many times of great
beauty and symmetry; then there would come a cataclysm or an eruption
and all would go to pieces, as it were. Again the process would start
from that condition of things and build up again. Many, many times this
process has been gone through, and that is the process of evolution--the
transition from the lower to a higher, from the worse to the better.
Now what has been the process of your
progress from the worse to the better? Has it been through "many
ups and downs?" Has your acquiring of the power to do the good—
the good works which are of God— been through a long process of ups
and downs from the time of your first profession of Christianity until
now? Has it appeared sometimes that you had apparently made great
progress, that you were doing well, and that everything was nice and
pleasant; and then, without a moment’s warning there would come a
cataclysm, or an eruption, and all be spoiled? Nevertheless, in spite of
all the ups and downs, you start in for another effort: and so through
this process, long-continued, you have come to where you are today, and
in "looking back" over it all, you can mark some progress, you
think, as judged by your feelings--is that your experience? Is that the
way you have made progress?
In other words, are you an
evolutionist? Don’t dodge; confess the honest truth, for I want to get
you out of evolutionist this afternoon. There is a way to get out of it,
and everyone who came into this house an evolutionist can go out a
Christian. So if, when I am describing an evolutionist, so plainly that
you see yourself, just say so, admit that it is yourself, and then
follow along the steps that God will give you, and that will bring you
out of it all. But I say plainly to you that, if that which I have
described has been your experience, if that has been the kind of
progress that you have made in your Christian life, then you are an
evolutionist, whether you admit it or not. The best way, however, is to
admit it, then quit it, and be a Christian.
Another phase of it: "Evolution,
so far as it goes, looks upon matter as eternal." And "by
assuming" this, "the notion of creation is eliminated from
those regions of existence to which it is applied." Now if you look
to yourself for the principle which would assure that progress that must
be made in you as certainly as ever you reach the kingdom of God; if you
suppose that that is immanent in yourself and that if you could get it
rightly to work, and superintend it properly when it had been thus got
to work, it would come out all right. if thus you have been expecting,
watching, and marking your progress, you are an evolutionist. For I read
further what evolution is: "It is clear that the doctrine of
evolution is directly antagonistic to that of creation. . . . The idea
of evolution, as applied to the formation of the world as a whole, is
opposed to that of a direct creative volition."
That is, evolution, as defined by those
who made it— that the world came, and all there is of it, of itself,
and that the principle that has brought it to the condition in which it
is, is immanent in itself, and is adequate to produce all that is. This
being so, in the nature of things "evolution is directly
antagonistic to creation."
Now as to the world and all there is of
it. You do not believe that it all came of itself. You know that you are
not an evolutionist as to that, because you believe that God created all
things. Every one of you here this afternoon would say that you believe
that God created all things--the world and all there is in it. Evolution
does not admit that; it has no place for creation.
There is, however, another phase of
evolution that professedly is not absolutely antagonistic to creation.
Those who made this evolution that I have read to you did not pretend to
be anything but infidels—men without faith—for an infidel simply is
a man without faith. Even though a person pretends to have faith and
does not actually have it, he is an infidel. Of course the word
"infidel" is more narrowly confined than that nowadays. The
men who made this evolution that I have read to you were that kind of
men, but when they spread that kind of doctrine abroad, there were a
great number of people who professed to be Christians, who professed to
be men of faith, who professed to believe the word of God, which teaches
creation. These men, not knowing the word of God for themselves, not
knowing it to be the word of God, but their faith being a mere form of
faith without the power—these men, I say, being charmed with this new
thing that had sprung up and wanting to be popular along with the new
science and really not wanting to forsake altogether the word of God and
the ways of faith, were not ready to say that they could get along
without God, without creation somewhere, so they formed a sort of
evolution with the Creator in it. That phase of it is called theistic
evolution; that is, God started the thing, whenever that was, but since
that it has been going on of itself. He started it and after that it was
able of itself to accomplish all that has been done. This, however, is
but a makeshift, a contrivance to save appearances, and is plainly
declared by the true evolutionists to be but "a phase of transition
from the creational to the evolutional hypothesis." It is evolution
only, because there is no half-way ground between creation and
evolution.
Whether you are one of this kind or
not, there are many of them, even among Seventh-day Adventists—not so
many as there used to be, thank the Lord!—who believe that we must
have God forgive our sins and so start us on the way all right, but
after that we are to work out our own salvation with fear and trembling.
Accordingly, they do fear, and they do tremble, all the time, but they
do not work out any salvation, because they do not have God constantly
working in them, "both to will and to do of his good
pleasure." Phil. 2:12, 13.
Now in Heb. 11:3 it is recorded that it
is through faith that we understand that the worlds were framed— put
together, arranged, built—"by the word of God: so that things
which are seen were not made of things which do appear." The earth
which we have was not made of rocks; men were not made of monkeys, apes,
and "the missing link," and apes and monkeys and "the
missing link" were not made of tadpoles, and tadpoles were not made
of protoplasm originally away back at the beginning. No! "The
worlds were framed by the word of God, so that things which are seen
were not made of things which do appear."
Now why is it that things which are
seen were not made of things which do appear? Simply because the things
of which these are made did not appear. And the reason those things did
not appear is because they were not at all. They did not exist. The
worlds were framed by the word of God, and the word of God is of that
quality, it has that property about it, which, when the word is spoken,
not only causes the thing to be, but causes to exist the material out of
which the thing is made and of which the thing consists.
You know also the other scripture, that
"by the word of the lord were the heavens made, and all the host of
them by the breath of his mouth . . . for he spake and it was." Ps.
33:6-9. Upon this I will ask you a question: How long after He spoke,
before the things were? How much time passed after He spoke, before the
thing was? [Voice: "No time."] Not a week? No. Not six long
periods of time? No. Evolution even that which recognizes a Creator,
holds that indefinite countless ages or "six long, indefinite
periods of time," passed in the formation of the things which are
seen, after he spoke. But that is evolution, not creation. Evolution is
by long processes. Creation is by the word spoken.
When God, by speaking the word, had
created the worlds, for this one He said, "Let there be
light." Now how much time passed between the words, "Let there
be light," and the time when the light came? I want you to
understand this matter aright so that you can find out whether you are
an evolutionist or a creationist. Let me ask this again. Were there not
six long periods of time between the time when the word was spoken and
the accomplishment of the fact? You say No. Was it not a week? No. Not a
day? No. Not an hour? No. Not a minute? No. Nor even a second? No,
indeed. There was not a second between the time when God said, "Let
there be light," and the existence of the light. [Voice: "Just
as soon as the word was spoken, the light was."] Yes, that is the
way it was. I go over it thus minutely, so as to get it firmly fixed in
your mind, for fear you will let it go presently when I ask you
something further. Now is it settled that when God said, "Let there
be light," there was not a second of time between that and the
shining of the light? [Voice: "Yes."] All right. Then the man
who allows that any time at all passed between God’s speaking and the
appearing of the thing, is an evolutionist. If he makes it countless
ages upon countless ages, he is simply more of an evolutionist than the
one who thinks it took a day; he is the same thing, but more of it.
Next, God said, "Let there be a
firmament." And what then? It was so. Then from the time that God
spoke, "Let there be a firmament . . . and let it divide the waters
from the waters," how long before a firmament was there? Was that
done instantly? Yes. Then the man who holds that there was an
indefinite, a very long, period of time between the speaking of the word
and the existence of the fact— what is he? An evolutionist. If he
allows that there was a day or an hour or a minute between the speaking
of the word and the existence of the thing itself, that man does not
recognize creation.
When the Lord said, "Let the
waters under the heaven be gathered together unto one place and let the
dry land appear," also when he said, "Let the earth bring
forth grass, the herb yielding seed, and the fruit-tree yielding fruit .
. . it was so." Then God set two great lights in the heavens and
made the stars also, and when He spoke the word, "it was so."
He said, "Let the waters bring forth abundantly the moving creature
that hath life, the fowl that may fly above the earth in the open
firmament," and it was so. When God said, "Let the earth bring
forth the living creature after his kind, cattle, and creeping thing,
the beast of the earth after his kind," it was so. When he spoke,
it was always so. That is creation.
You see, then, that it is perfectly
logical and reasonable enough too for the evolutionist to set aside the
word of God and have no faith in it, for evolution itself is
antagonistic to creation. When evolution is antagonistic to creation and
creation is by the word of God, then evolution is antagonistic to the
word of God. Of course the genuine or original, sound evolutionist did
not have any place for that word, nor for the half-and-half
evolutionists— those who bring in creation and the word of God to
start things. It takes so long a time, such indefinite and indeterminate
ages for evolution to accomplish anything that it does away with
creation.
The genuine evolutionist recognizes
that creation must be immediate, but he does not believe in immediate
action, and therefore does not believe in creation. Do not forget that
creation is immediate or else it is not creation, if not immediate, it
is evolution. So touching again the creation at the beginning, when God
speaks, there is in His word the creative energy to produce the thing
which that word pronounces. That is creation, and that word of God is
the same yesterday and today and forever; it lives and abides forever;
it has everlasting life in it. The word of God is a living thing. The
life that is in it is the life of God— eternal life. Therefore it is
the word of eternal life, as the Lord Jesus said, and in the nature of
things it abides and remains forever. Forever it is the word of God;
forever it has creative energy in it.
So when Jesus was here, He said,
"The words that I speak unto you, they are spirit and they are
life." The words that Jesus spoke are the words of God. They are
imbued with the life of God. They are eternal life, they abide forever,
and in them is the creative energy to produce the thing spoken.
This is illustrated by many incidents
in the life of Christ, as narrated in the New Testament. I do not need
to cite them all, but I will refer to one or two, so you can get hold of
this principle. You remember that after the sermon on the mount, Jesus
came down, and there met him a centurion, saying, "My servant lieth
at home sick of the palsy, grievously tormented. Jesus saith unto him, I
will come and heal him." The centurion said, "I am not worthy
that thou shouldest come under my roof, but speak the word only, and my
servant shall be healed." Jesus turned to those standing about and
said, "I have not found so great faith, no not in Israel."
Israel had the Bible; they knew the
word of God. They boasted of being the people of the Book, the people of
God. They read it; they preached in their synagogues, "My word . .
. shall accomplish that which I please." They said, when they read
that word, That is all right, the thing ought to be done. We see the
necessity of it and will do it. We will accomplish what it says. Then
they did their best to accomplish it. It took them a long while, so long
indeed, that they never did it. Their real doing of the word was so far
away that the greatest of them were led to exclaim, "If but one
person could only for one day keep the whole law and not offend in one
point— nay, if but one person could but keep that one point of the law
which affected the due observance of the Sabbath--then the troubles of
Israel would be ended, and the Messiah at last would come." So,
though they started in to do what the word said, it took them so long
that they never got to it. What were they?
There was the word of God, which said,
"It shall accomplish that which I please." It was spoken thus
of the creative power. And though they professed to recognize the
creative energy of the word of God, yet in their own lives they left
that all out, and said, We will do it. They looked to themselves for the
process which would bring themselves to the point where that word and
themselves would agree. What were they? Are you afraid to say, for fear
you have been there yourself? Do not be afraid to say that they were
evolutionists, for that is what they were, and that is what a good many
of you are. Their course was antagonistic to creation; there was no
creation about it. They were not made new creatures; no new life was
formed within them; the thing was not accomplished by the power of God;
it was all of themselves; and so far were they from believing in
creation that they rejected the Creator and crucified Him out of the
world. That is what evolution always does, for do not forget that
"evolution is directly antagonistic to creation."
Now these were the people upon whom
Jesus looked when He made this statement about faith in Israel. Here was
a man who was a Roman, who had grown up among the people who were Jews,
and who set at naught the teachings of Jesus. That centurion had been
around where Jesus was, and seen him talking, had heard His words and
had seen the effect of them, until he himself said, Whatever that man
speaks is so; when He says a thing, it is done. Now I am going to have
the advantage of it. So he went to Jesus and said what is written. Jesus
knew perfectly well that the man had his mind upon the power of His word
to do that thing, and He replied, Very well, I will come and heal your
servant. O no, my Lord, you do not need to come. You see this man was
testing the matter to see whether or not there was any power in the
word. Therefore he said, "Speak the word only, and my servant shall
be healed." Jesus replied, "As thou hast believed, so be it
done unto thee. And his servant was healed." When that word went
forth, "so be it done unto thee," how long before their man
was healed? Twenty years? No. Didn’t he have to go through many ups
and downs before he was certainly healed? Honest, now? No, no! When the
word was spoken, the word did the thing that was spoken, and it did it
at once.
Another day Jesus was walking along and
a leper some distance from Him saw and recognized Him. He, too, had got
hold of the blessed truth of the creative energy of the word of God. He
said to Jesus, "If thou wilt, thou canst make me clean." Jesus
stopped and said, "I will; be thou clean. And as soon as He had
spoken, immediately the leprosy departed from him, and he was
cleansed." Mark 1:41, 42. We are not allowed to put a moment of
time between speaking of the word and the accomplished fact:
"Immediately" the leper was cleansed.
Now you see that the word of God at the
beginning of creation had in it the creative energy to produce that
thing which the word pronounced. you see that when Jesus came into the
world to show men the way of life, to save them from their sins, He
demonstrated, over and over again, here and there and everywhere, to all
people and for all time, that that same word of God has that same
creative energy in it yet; so that when that word is spoken, the
creative energy is there to produce the thing.
Now are you an evolutionist or are you
a creationist? That word speaks to you. You have read it; you profess to
believe it. You believe in creation, as against the other evolutionists;
now will you believe in creation as against yourself? Will you put
yourself upon that platform today where you will allow nothing to come
between you and the creative energy of that word— no period of time
whatever?
Jesus said to a certain person,
"Thy sins are forgiven." How long before it was so? There was
no length of time whatever between the word "forgiven" and the
thing. That same word, "Thy sins are forgiven," is spoken to
you today. Why do you let any time pass between this word, which is
spoken to you and the accomplishment of the thing? You said a while ago
that anybody who let a minute, or even a second, pass between the
speaking of the word of God and the production of the thing is an
evolutionist. Very good; that is so. Stick to it. Now I ask you, Why is
it that when He speaks forgiveness to you, you let whole days pass
before forgiveness gets to you, before it is true in you? You said the
other man is an evolutionist. What are you, I want to know? Are you
going to stop being evolutionists and become creationists?
This day will be one of special
importance to many here, because it is a time when many will decide this
question one way or the other. If you go out of this house an
evolutionist, you are in danger. It is to you a matter of life or death
just now. You said that evolution is infidelity and that is so;
therefore, if you go out of this house an evolutionist, where do you
stand? What is your choice? And if you go out of this house without the
forgiveness of sins, you are an evolutionist, because you allow time to
pass between the speaking of the word and the accomplishment of the
fact.
From what I have read, you see that
whoever lets any time pass between the word spoken and the thing done,
is an evolutionist. The word of God to you is, Man, "thy sins are
forgiven thee." Woman, "thy sins are forgiven thee."
[Elder Corliss: "Didn’t it say, Thy sins shall be
forgiven?"] No, sir. "Thy sins are forgiven thee"—present
tense, with an emphasis. "Thy sins are forgiven." I thank God
this is so, because the creative energy is in that word
"forgiven" to take away all sin and create the man a new
creature. I believe in creation. Do you? Do you believe in the creative
energy that is in the word "forgiven" spoken to you? Or are
you an evolutionist and do you say, I cannot see how that can be,
because I am so bad? I have been trying to do right, but I have made
many failures. I have had many ups and downs and have been down a good
many more times than up. If that is what you say, you are an
evolutionist, for that is evolution.
Many people have been longing and
longing for a clean heart. They say, "I believe in the forgiveness
of sin and all that and I would take it all, if I was sure that I could
hold out, but there is so much evil in my heart and so many things to
overcome that I do not have any confidence." But there stands the
word, "Create in me a clean heart." A clean heart comes by
creation and by no other means; and that creation is wrought by the word
of God. For He says, "A new heart also will I give you and a new
spirit will I put within you." Are you a creationist now or are you
an evolutionist? Will you go out of this house with an evil heart or
with a new heart created by the word of God, which has in it creative
energy to produce a new heart? It speaks to you a new heart. To every
one it speaks just that way, and if you allow a moment to pass between
the speaking of the word and the new heart, you are an evolutionist.
When you allow any time to pass between the word spoken and the
fulfillment of that thing in your experience, then you are an
evolutionist.
There are those in this house who have
said, "Yes, I want it. I am going to have it. I believe the word
will accomplish it," but they have lengthened out the time until
the next meeting and on and on, passing over years, and so they are just
this much evolutionists. While so many are hovering about the mystery of
faith and godliness, they could have solved the matter by proclaiming
[speaking abroad, telling it out], "I know that Jesus Christ is my
portion forever." The power to produce this is in the word of God,
and when this is accepted, the creative energy is there producing the
thing that is spoken. So you can settle the whole matter of the mystery
of faith and godliness by proclaiming that you know that Christ is your
portion forever.
There is a mystery in how God can be
manifest in such sinful flesh as yours. But, mind you, the question is
not now about the mystery; the question is, Is there such a thing as
creation? Is there such a thing as a Creator, who can create in you a
clean heart? Or is the whole thing simply evolution? Just now and among
Seventh-day Adventists, the question from this day until the end of the
world must be, Do you believe in the Creator? And when you believe in
the Creator, how is it that He creates? Of course you say, it is by the
word of God. Very good. Now does He create things for you by His word?
Are you a creationist for the other evolutionists and then an
evolutionist for the other creationists? How is it?
Another thing. The word says, "Be
ye clean." He said, back yonder, "Let there be light, and
there was light." He said to the leper, "Be thou clean,"
and "immediately" he was clean. He says now to you, "Be
ye clean," and what now? Every one of you— what do you say?
[Voice: "It is so."] Then for your soul’s sake put yourself
upon that creative word. Recognize the creative energy in the word of
God which comes to you in the Bible, for this word of God in the Bible
is the same here to you today that it was when it spoke into space the
worlds on high and brought light out of darkness and cleansing to the
leper. That word spoken to you today, if received, creates you new in
Christ Jesus. That word, spoken in the dark waste and voice space of
your heart, if received, produces there the light of God; that word
spoken today to you afflicted with the leprosy of sin, if received,
immediately cleanses you. Let it. Let it.
How shall I be clean? By the creative
energy of that word, "Be ye clean." Therefore it is written,
"Now ye are clean through the word which I have spoken unto
you." John 15:3. Are you? Will you from this moment be a
creationist? Or will you go on being an evolutionist?
See what a blessed thing this is. When
you read the word, receive the word, and think upon the word, what is it
to you all the time? O, it is creation! The creative energy is in you
producing the things which the word speaks, and you are living in the
very presence of the power of creation. Creation is going on in your
life. God is creating in you righteousness, holiness, truth,
faithfulness— every good and gracious thing.
And when this is so, your
Sabbath-keeping will amount to something, because the Sabbath is a
memorial of creation— the sign that He who observes it knows the
Creator and is acquainted with the process of creation. But as certainly
as you are an evolutionist, your Sabbath-keeping is a fraud.
Unless you recognize the word of God
day by day as a creative energy in your life, your Sabbath-keeping is a
fraud, because the Sabbath is a memorial of creation. It is "a sign
between me and you, that [by which] ye may know that I am the Lord your
God," the Creator of all things.
In the second chapter of Ephesians,
eighth to tenth verses, we read, "For by grace are ye saved through
faith, and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God; not of works
lest any man should boast. For we are his workmanship, created in Christ
Jesus unto good works, which God hath before ordained that we should
walk in them."
You need not expect to get any good
works out of yourself. You have been trying. The evolutionist tries and
is always trying without accomplishing it. Why go about trying to do
good works, when you know you fail? Listen. There will never be any good
thing in you of any kind whatever from now till the world’s end,
except it is created there by the Creator Himself, by His word, which
has in it the creative energy. Do not forget that. Do you want to walk
in good works when you go out of this house? It can be done only by
being created in Jesus Christ unto those good works. Stop trying. Look
to the Creator and receive His creative word. "Let the word of God
dwell in you richly," then those good works will appear; you will
be a Christian. Then, because you live with the Creator and are in the
presence of the creative energy, you will have that pleasant, quiet
peace and genuine strength and building up that belong to a Christian.
When He tells you that "we are his
workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto good works, which God hath
before ordained that we should walk in them," then recognize the
Creator, recognize only the good works that are created in you, paying
no attention whatever to any work that is not crated there, because
there is nothing good but what is created by the Lord.
Now you are created new in Christ
Jesus. He says so. Thank Him that it is so. What! Will you be an
evolutionist on that verse? That is the present tense, "We are his
workmanship." We are created in Christ Jesus unto good works. Are
you? The word is spoken. It is the creative word. How much time are you
going to allow between that word of God and your being created new? Of
the creation in the beginning, you said that any man who allows even a
minute to pass between the word and the thing is an evolutionist. What
are you now as to this word of God, which creates men in Christ Jesus
unto good works? Are you an evolutionist here? Come, let us all be
creationists.
Do you not see that in this way it will
not require a long, tedious wearing process to be made ready to meet the
Lord in glory? So many people are looking at themselves. They know that,
in the nature of things it must take them an exceedingly long time to
get fully ready to meet Him. If it is done by evolution, it will never
be done. But when it is done by creation, it will be both surely and
quickly done. That word I have before referred to is the word everyone
here may take to himself. "While so many are hovering about the
mystery of faith and godliness, they could solve the matter by
proclaiming abroad [by telling it out], ‘Jesus Christ is my portion
forever.’"
Do you see how much we have been
evolutionists? shall we quit? Come now, let us be creationists and be
done with it. Let us be Sabbath-keepers truly. Let us believe the Lord.
He speaks forgiveness. He speaks a clean heart. He speaks holiness; He
creates it. Let Him create it in you. Stop being an evolutionist and let
that creative word work for you, let that creative energy work in you,
that which the word pronounces, and before you leave this house, God can
get you ready to meet Him. Indeed, in that very thing you do meet Him.
And when you have thus met Him and do thus meet Him every day, are you
not then ready to meet Him? Do you believe that? You believe He made the
worlds when He spoke, that light came by His word when He spoke, and
that the leper was "immediately" cleansed when he spoke, but
with yourself you think considerable time must elapse between the time
when the word is spoken and the fact is accomplished. O, why will you be
an evolutionist? Creation, creation— that is the thing.
You and I are to call people to the
supper; we are to say to all people, "Come, for all things are now
ready." How can I call to a man that all things are now ready, when
I myself am not ready? It is a falsehood to start with. My words will
not reach him. They are but an empty sound. But O, when there is in that
call the creative energy of the word that has made us ready, that has
cleansed us from sin, that has created us unto good works, that holds us
as the sun is held in the course which God has marked out— then when
we go forth and say to the world lying in wickedness, "Come, for
all things are now ready," they will hear. They will hear in the
call the tones of the voice of the Good Shepherd, and will be cheered to
come to Him for creative energy for themselves, to make them new
creatures and prepare them for the supper to which they have been
called.
This is where we are in this world’s
history. God’s mark is being set upon the people. But remember, He
will never set His mark upon one who is not cleansed from every
defilement. God will not set His seal to something that is not true,
that is not good. Would you ask Him to set His seal to righteousness
that is altogether unrighteousness? You would not have the face to do
that. You know that He is too righteous to do such a thing. Then He must
cleanse you so that He can put His seal to His own work. He cannot put
His seal to your work. His seal belongs only to a document which He
Himself has approved. Let Him write His character upon your heart and
then He can set His seal there. He can write His seal of approval upon
your heart, only when His creative word has accomplished its purpose in
your heart.
You can see in what a Presence we are;
you can see in a measure how long it would take half to exhaust such a
subject as this. But, brethren, when we do stop, let us stop in the
presence of creation. Let us be no more evolutionists. Let not a moment
pass between the word of God spoken to you and the accomplishment of the
thing in you. Thus, living in the presence of creation, walking with the
Creator, upheld by creative power, inspired by the creative energy—
why, with a people such as that, God can move the world in a little
while.
If at the beginning you thought this
was a queer subject for such an occasion as today [it was the closing
service of the week of prayer] you can now see that it is a strictly
present truth. There are only the two ways. There is no halfway ground.
Every man and woman in the world is either a creationist or an
evolutionist. Evolution is infidelity; it is death. Creation is
Christianity; it is life. Choose Creation, Christianity, and Life, that
you may live. Let us be creationists only and creationists forever. And
let all the people say, Amen
Review and Herald,
2/21/1899
Sermon by A. T. Jones |