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Text: "And the very Yahuwah of peace sanctify you wholly; and I pray Yahuwah your whole spirit, and soul, and body be preserved blameless unto the coming of our Master Yahushua." 1 Thessalonians 5:23. After the ascension of Yahuhsua, John stands forth a faithful, ardent laborer for the Master. With others, he enjoyed the outpouring of the Spirit on the day of Pentecost, and with fresh zeal and power he continued to speak to the people the words of life. He was threatened with imprisonment and death, but he would not be intimidated.
With fidelity and earnestness, John bore testimony for his Master upon every suitable occasion. He saw that the times were full of peril for the church. Satanic delusions were existing everywhere. The minds of the people were wandering through the mazes of skepticism and deceptive doctrines. Some who pretended to be true to the cause of Yahuwah were deceivers; they denied Yahuhsua and his gospel, and were bringing in damnable heresies and living in transgression of the divine law.
The faithful apostle saw that their blindness, their pride, superstition, and ignorance of the Scriptures, were riveting upon their souls fetters which would never be broken. The prejudice and hatred against Yahuhsua which they obstinately cherished, was bringing ruin upon them as a nation, and destroying their hopes of everlasting life. But John continued to present Yahuhsua to them as the only way of salvation. The evidence that Yahuhsua of Nazareth was the Messiah was so clear, that John declares no man need to walk in the darkness of error while such a light is proffered him. John lived to see the gospel of Yahuhsua preached far and near, and thousands eagerly accepting its teachings. But he was filled with sadness as he perceived poisonous errors creeping into the church. Some who accepted Yahuhsua claimed that his love released them from obedience to the law of Yahuwah. On the other hand, many taught that the letter of the law should be kept, also all the Jewish customs and ceremonies, and that this was sufficient for salvation, without the blood of Yahuhsua. They held that Yahuhsua was a good man, like the apostles, but denied his divinity. John saw the dangers to which the church would be exposed, should they receive these ideas, and he met them with promptness and decision. He wrote to a most honorable helper in the gospel, a lady of good repute and extensive influence:-- "For many deceivers are entered into the world, who confess not that Yahushua is come in the flesh. This is a deceiver and an antiYahuhsua. Look to yourselves, that we lose not those things which we have wrought, but that we receive a full reward. Whosoever transgresseth, and abideth not in the doctrine of Yahuhsua, hath not Yahuwah. He that abideth in the doctrine of Yahuhsua, he hath both the Father and the Son. If there come any unto you, and bring not this doctrine, receive him not into your house, neither bid him Yahuwah speed; for he that biddeth him Yahuwah speed is a partaker of his evil deeds." 2 John 1:7-11. John was not to prosecute his work without great hindrances, Satan was not idle. He instigated evil men to cut short the useful life of this man of Yahuwah; but holy angels protected him from their assaults. John must stand as a faithful witness for Yahuhsua. The church in its peril needed his testimony. By falsehood and misrepresentation the emissaries of Satan had sought to stir up opposition against John, and against the doctrine of Yahuhsua. In consequence, dissensions and heresies were imperiling the church. John met these errors unflinchingly. He hedged up the way of the adversaries of truth. He wrote and exhorted that the leaders in these heresies should not have the least encouragement. There are at the present day evils similar to those that threatened the prosperity of the early church, and the teachings of the apostle upon these points should be carefully heeded. "You must have charity," is the cry to be heard everywhere, especially from those who profess sanctification. But charity is too pure to cover an unconfessed sin. John's teachings are important for those who are living amid the perils of the last days. He had been intimately associated with Yahuhsua, he had listened to his teachings, and had witnessed his mighty miracles. He bore a convincing testimony, which made the falsehoods of his enemies of none effect.
I have met many who claimed to live without sin. But when tested by Yahuwah's word, these persons were found to be open transgressors of his holy law. The clearest evidences of the perpetuity and binding force of the fourth commandment, failed to arouse the conscience. They could not deny the claims of Yahuwah, but ventured to excuse themselves in breaking the Sabbath. They claimed to be sanctified, and to serve Yahuwah on all days of the week. Many good people, they said, did not keep the Sabbath. As they were sanctified, no condemnation would rest upon them if they did not observe it. Yahuwah was too merciful to punish us for not keeping the seventh day. They would be counted odd and singular in community, should they observe the Sabbath, and would have no influence in the world. We must be subject to the powers that be. A lady in New Hampshire bore her testimony in a public meeting, that the grace of Yahuwah was ruling in her heart, and that she was wholly the Master's. She then expressed her belief that this people were doing much good in arousing sinners to see their danger. She said, "The Sabbath that this people present to us, is the only Sabbath of the Bible;" and then stated that her mind had been very much exercised upon the subject. She saw great trials before her, which she must meet if she kept the seventh day. The next day, she came to meeting, and again bore her testimony, saying she had asked the Master if she must keep the Sabbath, and he had told her she need not keep it. Her mind was now at rest upon that subject. She then gave a most stirring exhortation for all to come to the perfect love of Yahuhsua, where there was no condemnation to the soul.
Yahuwah's character has not changed. He is the same jealous Yahuwah today as when he gave his law upon Sinai, and wrote it with his own finger on the tables of stone. Those who trample upon Yahuwah's holy law may say, "I am sanctified;" but to be indeed sanctified, and to claim sanctification, are two different things.
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| By: Ellen White February 22, 1881 Review & Herald |