Ms 106, 1899
Remarks/Report of Committee Meeting
NP
July 26, 1899
Portions of this manuscript are published in CS 275-276. +
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I wish I had what I have written to the General Conference in regard to this matter. When they began swerving matters in objectionable lines, light was given me. Elder Butler was told decidedly that he should have a strong man to stand by his side, not to voice his words, not to feel that he must do what Elder Butler said because he was president. That would be an entirely wrong thing to do. A man must be chosen to stand as Elder Butler’s helper, every one understanding that he was business manager.14LtMs, Ms 106, 1899, par. 12
Before I left the meeting Tuesday evening, the question was asked whether a medical man or a businessman should stand at the head of the board. I began to search for something I had written on this point, and I found it. This was written in regard to some difficulties that had come up.14LtMs, Ms 106, 1899, par. 13
But there was a great burden resting upon me. I felt like a cart pressed beneath sheaves. I did not close my eyes till half past eleven. I thought, I ought not to have gone to that meeting. I have my work, and I ought to attend to it.14LtMs, Ms 106, 1899, par. 14
After a while I fell asleep. Then I seemed to be in a meeting, and those present were in conversation regarding the question we had been discussing that afternoon. One of dignity and authority stood before us, and all present listened attentively to what he said. “The question was asked,” he said, “whether the business agent stands lower than the president.14LtMs, Ms 106, 1899, par. 15
“Upon a business manager rests great responsibility. He should take charge of the finances, and stand by the president’s side. He has charge of all business arrangements. The president will not then be left to follow his own judgment, his own ideas, as a president might be supposed to do, because another man has the responsibility of financial arrangements. The position of business manager is, if anything, a more responsible one than that of the president. The business manager has a connection with the work that it is not possible for the president to have. His work is as deserving of honor and respect as the work of the president.”14LtMs, Ms 106, 1899, par. 16
These are the words that were spoken. In the past, careless work has been done in putting men into positions who did not know anything about the work. They were unproved. From the instruction given in God’s Word, we see that the men chosen to fill places on boards are to be men who will not tie themselves to any man, to be molded and fashioned after his ideas, because when men do this, the whole work is injured. Men must stand in their own individuality.14LtMs, Ms 106, 1899, par. 17
The president and the business manager are to work unitedly together. The business manager is to see that the expenditure does not exceed the income. He is to know what there is to depend on, so that the work here shall not be burdened with debt as it is in Battle Creek. The condition of things there need never have existed. It is the result of men not being under God’s rule. When men are under God’s rule, the work moves harmoniously; but when men of strong temperament, who are not controlled by God, are placed in responsible positions in the work, the cause is imperilled, for their strong temperaments lead them to use money which is only in prospect.14LtMs, Ms 106, 1899, par. 18
The enemy is working in every possible way to bring embarrassment upon our people. The Medical Board should be composed of picked men, and when the president sees an opening which should be improved, let him counsel with the one who has charge of the finances. He knows where the money has come from and should know just how it should be appropriated.14LtMs, Ms 106, 1899, par. 19
There is to be perfect unity and harmony among the members of the board, but the members are not to take the mold of the president, whoever he may be. His independent judgment is not to be followed before the matter has been brought before the board. Everything is to be laid before the board, and the decision of the members is to control the matter. The business manager carries heavy responsibilities, but he has no moral right to say to the president, “You can go ahead, and do what you propose. It is according to my mind.” The judgment of the board is to control in all matters.14LtMs, Ms 106, 1899, par. 20
As this was laid before me, the burden that has rested on me rolled away. I felt that my feet were upon the sure foundation.14LtMs, Ms 106, 1899, par. 21
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That is what I have been trying to express. As for Dr. Caro trying to exalt himself, I do not think that at all. When the question was asked the other afternoon, I did not answer as thoughtfully as I should have done. When I went home, the burden upon me was so great that I cried to the Lord earnestly. I was shown that individual work must be done in our associations. The members of the board are to work together in harmony, but they are to be no more blended than the branches of a vine are blended. Yet the branches are supported by one parent stock. They draw their sustenance from the parent vine.14LtMs, Ms 106, 1899, par. 23
In all the associations we have, this principle must be recognized. God never designed that the presidents of our conferences should take upon themselves the responsibility of managing and carrying things according to their own judgment. This will not answer. They should have associated with them men who have a sense of the fitness of things. Then if the president should propose a wrong move, his fellow-worker can correct him.14LtMs, Ms 106, 1899, par. 24
When new enterprises are to be started, the plans should be submitted to the board, and those who start the enterprise should carry with the approval of the board. If means are to be invested, the board should know of it, so that it will be responsible for the financial success of the work. Had this always been done, the state of things now existing in Battle Creek would never have existed.14LtMs, Ms 106, 1899, par. 25
When Elder Butler was president of the General Conference Association, the people thought they must bring all their troubles directly to him, and that all their help must come through him. But this is not God’s design. A man in such a position should have as a helper a man of business ability, who can take the management of the finances, with whom the president can counsel. These men are to hold nothing back from each other. When difficulty arises, let them both take time to think and pray, and if together they can see a way to success, let them lay their plans before the board. They are not to act on their own responsibility. They may think the way is perfectly clear, but even if they do, they have no right to go ahead in their own judgment. The matter is to be laid before the board for the decision of the members.14LtMs, Ms 106, 1899, par. 26
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I would not allow it to be left. You have your line of work. Again and again I have been instructed that one man’s mind and one man’s judgment is not to decide everything. One man is not to take the responsibility of saying to the different laborers, You go to that field, and, You leave this field. This is work of grave responsibility, and one man alone cannot do it. Brother Daniells, it is not best for you to try to do it, because it brings on you a heavy burden. If the men prove treacherous, this burden falls on you. You should have a man who can stand by you, who can help you where you need help.14LtMs, Ms 106, 1899, par. 28
Men’s minds are not cast in the same mold, any more than the branches of a vine are alike. Yet each man has his office, and each is to be related to the other, because they are related to the True Vine. The way in which things have gone in the past has not been just to you, Brother Daniells, because a man is wearing when he does not know it. He comes into a pressure when his energies are called out, and he throws himself into the work, using more vitality than is required.14LtMs, Ms 106, 1899, par. 29
Every man needs rest. Dr. Caro must have a time of repose. He is not treating himself justly when he allows himself to be broken up in his habits of sleep and eating. If his usefulness is preserved, he must not use all his strength up because he sees so much work to be done.14LtMs, Ms 106, 1899, par. 30
Great care should be taken in choosing the men to stand by the presidents of the various associations. When I wrote to Brother Butler that he must have a helper, he wrote back that he had secured his son. This was not the right thing to do. When I spoke to Brother Olsen about the same thing, he too got his son, who would not say a word if he saw his father making mistakes. What boy could see anything to correct in his father?14LtMs, Ms 106, 1899, par. 31
We are not to feel that our brethren have no right to speak to us in regard to a wrong course we are taking, because we are workers together with God. We must think over what they have said, and see where we can reform. We must take hold of the hand of God, saying, Do not let me go until I do reform. We must do this in order to perfect a Christian character. We are not to make a confederacy with our fellow workers, saying, “I will not say anything of your faults if you will not of mine.”14LtMs, Ms 106, 1899, par. 32
We are to work together, in accordance with the words, “All ye are brethren.” [Matthew 23:8.] We are to try to bring all the perfection possible into our own characters and into the characters of those connected with us. We are not to act as though we were better than those around us. If we have the sunshine of Christ’s righteousness in our hearts, if Christ is abiding in us, we will recognize Christ in our brethren, and therefore we shall work together harmoniously.14LtMs, Ms 106, 1899, par. 33