An Appeal to Ministers, Physicians, and Teachers in Southern California
The men who stand as leaders in any part of the solemn work of the last gospel message
must cultivate and cherish broad views and ideas. It is the privilege of all who bear
responsibilities in the work of the gospel to be apt learners in the school of Christ. The professed
follower of Christ must not be led by the dictates of his own will; his mind must be trained to
think Christ's thoughts, and enlightened to comprehend the will and way of God. Such a believer
will be a follower of Christ's methods of work.
Our brethren should not forget that the wisdom of God has made provision for our schools in
a way that will bring blessing to all who participate in the enterprise. The book, "Christ's Object
Lessons," was donated to the educational work, that the students and other friends of the schools
might handle these books, and by their sale raise much of the means needed to lift the school
indebtedness. But this plan has not been presented to our schools as it should have been; the
teachers and students have not been educated to take hold of this book and courageously push its
sale for the benefit of the educational work.
Long ago the teachers and students in our schools should have learned to take advantage of
the opportunity to raise means by the sale of "Christ's Object Lessons." In selling these books the
students will serve the cause of God, and, while doing this, by the dissemination of precious
light, they will learn invaluable lessons in Christian experience. All our schools should now
come into line, and earnestly endeavor to carry out the plan presented to us for the education of
the workers, for the relief of the schools, and for the winning of souls to the cause of Christ.
In the cities of Riverside, Redlands, and San Bernardino a mission field is open to us that we
have as yet only touched
with the tips of our fingers. A good work has been done there as far as our workers have had
encouragement to do it; but there is need of means to carry the work forward successfully. It was
God's purpose that by the sale of "Ministry of Healing" and "Christ's Object Lessons" much
means should be raised for the work of our sanitariums and schools, and that our people would
thereby be left more free to donate of their means for the opening of the work in new missionary
fields. If our people will now engage in the sale of these books as they ought, we shall have much
more means to carry the work in the way the Lord designed.
Wherever the work of selling "Christ's Object Lessons" has been taken hold of in earnest, the
book has done good. And the lessons that have been learned by those who have engaged in this
work, have well repaid their efforts. And now our people should all be encouraged to take part in
this special missionary effort. Light has been given me that in every possible way instruction
should be given to our people as to the best methods of presenting these books to the people.
I have been instructed that at our large gatherings, workers should be present who will teach
our people how to sow the seeds of truth. This means more than instructing them how to sell the
Signs of the Times and other periodicals. It includes thorough instruction in how to handle such
books as "Christ's Object Lessons" and "Ministry of Healing." These are books which contain
precious truths, and from which the reader can draw lessons of highest value.
Why was not some one appointed at your camp-meeting [in 1907] to present the interests of
this line of work to our people? In your failure to do this, you lost a precious opportunity to place
large blessings within the reach of the people, and you also lost an opportunity of raising means
for the relief of our institutions. My brethren, let us encourage our people to take up this work
without further delay.
There are some who have had experience in the sale of health
foods who should now interest themselves in the sale of our precious books; for in them is food
unto eternal life. Los Angeles has been presented to me as a very fruitful field for the sale of
"Christ's Object Lessons" and "Ministry of Healing." The thousands of transient residents and
visitors would be benefited by the lessons they contain, and those who bear responsibilities in our
sanitariums should act wisely in this matter, encouraging all, nurses, helpers, and students, to
gather by this means as much as possible of the money required to meet the expenses of the
different institutions.
Why are our people so slow to understand what the Lord would have them do? Our leading
workers should prepare beforehand to use their opportunities at our large and small gatherings to
present these books to our people, and call for volunteers who will engage in their sale. When
this work is entered into with the earnestness which our times demand, the indebtedness which
now rests upon our schools will be greatly lessened. And then the people who are now being
called upon to give largely of their means to support these institutions, will be free to turn a
larger part of their offerings to missionary work in other needy places, where special efforts have
not yet been made.
Great good will result from bringing these books to the attention of the leaders in the
Woman's Christian Temperance Union. We should invite these workers to our meetings, and
give them an opportunity to become acquainted with our people. Place these precious books in
their hands, and tell them the story of their gift to the cause, and its results. Explain how, by the
sale of "Ministry of Healing," patients may be brought to the sanitarium for healing who could
never get there unaided; and how through this means assistance will be rendered in the
establishment of sanitariums in places where they are greatly needed. If our sanitariums are
wisely managed by men and women who have the fear of God before them, they will be a means
of bringing us in connection with
workers in the Woman's Christian Temperance Union, and these workers will not be slow to see
the advantage of the medical branch of our work. As a result of their contact with our medical
work, some of them will learn truths that they need to know for the perfection of Christian
character.
One point that should never be forgotten by our workers is that the Lord Jesus Christ is our
chief director. He has outlined a plan by which the schools may be relieved of their indebtedness;
and He will not vindicate the course of those who lay this plan aside for lack of confidence in its
success. When His people will come up unitedly to the help of His cause in the earth, no good
thing that God has promised will be withheld from them.
In places like Los Angeles, where the population is constantly changing, wonderful
opportunities are presented for the sale of our books. A great loss has been sustained because our
people have not more fully embraced this opportunity. Why should not the teachers and students
from the San Fernando School make Los Angeles a special field for the sale of "Object
Lessons"? If with earnestness and faith they will work out the plan that has been given us for the
use of this book, angels of God will attend their steps, and the blessing of heaven will be upon
their efforts.
It would have been an excellent thing if the teachers of the San Fernando School had, during
the vacation, availed themselves of this opportunity to push the work with "Christ's Object
Lessons." They would have found a blessing in going out with the students and teaching them
how to meet the people, and how to introduce the book. The story of the gift of the book and its
object would lead some to have a special interest in the book and in the school for which it is
sold.
Why have not the teachers in our schools done more of this work? If our people would only
realize it, there is no more acceptable work to be done in the home field than to engage in the sale
of "Object Lessons"; for while they are thus helping
to carry out the Lord's plan for the relief of our schools, they are also bringing the precious truths
of the word of God to the attention of the people.
The indifference that has been manifested by some toward this enterprise is displeasing to
God. He desires that it shall be recognized by all our people as His method of relieving our
schools from debt. It is because this plan has been neglected that we now feel so keenly our lack
of means for the advancing work. Had the schools availed themselves of the provision thus made
for them, there would be more money in the school treasury, and more money in the hands of His
people, to relieve the necessities of other needy departments of the cause, and, best of all,
teachers and students would have received the very lessons that they needed to learn in the
Master's service.
I send you these lines because I see that there is need of a deeper intuition, a wider perception,
on the part of our medical and educational workers, if they would get all the benefit that God
intends shall come to them through the use of "Object Lessons" and "Ministry of Healing." I ask
you, my brethren, to read these words to our people, that they may learn to show the spirit of
wisdom, and of power, and of a sound mind.--Review and Herald, September 3, 1908.