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THE State is political; Christianity is not and cannot be, political. AMS September 2, 1897, page 529.1
CHRISTIANITY knows but one creed, and that is, “I believe the word of the Lord.” AMS September 2, 1897, page 529.2
IT is not possible that “civil righteousness” should be either civil or righteous. AMS September 2, 1897, page 529.3
THE aim of the SENTINEL is to be intolerant of no man, and tolerant of no wrong principle. AMS September 2, 1897, page 529.4
THERE can never be any permanent national prosperity which does not go hand in hand with justice. AMS September 2, 1897, page 529.5
FROM a political point of view, there is no subject more important, or one less understood, than that of natural rights. AMS September 2, 1897, page 529.6
LOOKING towards the Christian’s country, the view is the same in all countries. Hence the Christian can feel as much at home in one part of the earth as in another. AMS September 2, 1897, page 529.7
THE man who asks people to believe that the first day, or any day, is as good as the seventh day which God sanctified, asks them to put no difference between a holy thing and that which is common. AMS September 2, 1897, page 529.8
Fashion in religion, like fashion in anything else, is of the devil. Religious legislation is always an effort to force people to follow the religious fashions of the times. AMS September 2, 1897, page 529.9
IN secular matters the minority can properly acquiesce in the decision of the majority; but in religious matters this cannot be. In religion no man can determine duty for his neighbor; the majority cannot decide for the minority. Hence a civil government cannot justly undertake to be religious. AMS September 2, 1897, page 529.10
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SALVATION is the one great subject of the Bible. AMS September 2, 1897, page 529.1
Other things are referred to, and to some extent discussed in the Bible; but always in subordination to the one great and only subject, which is Salvation. AMS September 2, 1897, page 529.2
Salvation itself is science, and while this is treated in the Bible as the one great science—the science of sciences—yet other sciences are not ignored, but are often referred to. AMS September 2, 1897, page 529.3
It is true that in the Bible no science is considered without God; yet this is nothing against its being science. The idea of science without God is a vain and fallacious thing, infinitely more incongruous than the drama of Hamlet with Hamlet left out. It is a palpable contradiction, for how can there be true knowledge where the very Source of knowledge is ignored? AMS September 2, 1897, page 529.4
In all science without God, “There is a painful uncertainty, a constant searching and reaching for assurances that can be found only in God.” In all the discussions of such science there is betrayed a conscious inability, sometimes acknowledged, to trace things back to the first great principle, to that which is fixed and final, and where the mind can rest in assured certainty. AMS September 2, 1897, page 529.5
In the Bible, however, that is, in science with God, there is none of this uncertainty. In that there is no feeling about for a standing place; there are no proffers of “a working hypothesis;” but everything is placed at once upon God as the origin and ultimate of every phenomenon, the sure resting-place of the mind after every “last analysis.” AMS September 2, 1897, page 529.6
In science without the Bible, that by which things are held together is Cohesion. But when it is asked, What is Cohesion? the only answer is “That by which things are held together.” In science without the Bible, that by which all things are held up or held in place, is Gravitation. But when it is asked, “What is Gravitation?” the only answer is, “That by which all things are held up or held in place.” But such answers as these are not answers at all: they are simply the saying of the same thing in another way. AMS September 2, 1897, page 530.1
Yet it is a fact that such is just the instruction that is given in the books, and such is the teaching that is given to students. But by it the mind of the student is caused to travel in a circle, and is left wandering there, ever inquiring and finding no certain or satisfactory answer. It is proper for a student to ask, “What holds, in their places, the worlds and all things?” And it is proper enough that the answer should be, “Gravitation.” It is then proper for him to ask, “What is Gravitation?” But it is not in any sense proper to answer that, “Gravitation is that by which all things are held in their places.” It is proper for the student to ask, “What is it that holds things together?” And it is proper enough that the answer should be, “Cohesion.” It is then proper that he should ask, “What is Cohesion?” But it is not in any sense proper, nor is it at all sensible, to answer this question by saying that “Cohesion is what holds things together.” AMS September 2, 1897, page 530.2
Yet that and such as that throughout the curriculum, is what is offered as science. It is science without God, science without the Bible; but it is not genuine science. By it, all that any person can ever know is merely something about things; he cannot know the reality of the things themselves. AMS September 2, 1897, page 530.3
In science with the Bible, it is altogether different. In that, when a child or a student asks, “What holds all things in their places?” he can be told that it is Gravitation. And when he asks, “What is Gravitation?” he can be answered, “God made the worlds by his Son, who, being the brightness of his glory, and the express image of his person, and upholding all things by the word of his power.” Hebrews 1:1-3. Thus, gravitation is the power of God manifested in his word through Jesus Christ. When it is asked, “What holds all things together?” and it is answered, “Cohesion;” and when it is asked, “What is Cohesion?” the true answer is, “God hath translated us into the kingdom of his dear Son, ... by whom all things were created, visible and invisible, whether they be thrones or dominions or principalities or powers, all things were made by him and for him; and he is before all things and by him all things consist”—[hold together]. Thus Cohesion is the power of God manifested through Jesus Christ our Lord. AMS September 2, 1897, page 530.4
All things came neither by evolution, nor by the “nebular hypothesis,” but by the word of God. For “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.” And “Through faith we understand that the worlds were framed by the word of God, so that things that are seen were not made of things which do appear.” AMS September 2, 1897, page 530.5
Gravitation was taught in the Bible more than twenty-three hundred years before it was discovered by Newton. That the air has weight and that dew is formed by distillation, was taught in the Bible more than twenty-five hundred years before science without the bible had “discovered” it. That there is a difference in the ... ance of the stars, and not simply a difference in their distance, was declared in the Bible more than fifteen hundred years before modern science had learned it. That there is healing in the sunshine was taught in the bible twenty-three hundred years ago, and medical science has only lately “discovered” it. The science of meteorology—the sources of the wind and the rain, the circulation of the waters and of the atmosphere—was revealed in the Bible more than twenty-five hundred years before science without the Bible had become at all acquainted with it. AMS September 2, 1897, page 530.6
The world of science and philosophy to-day is going farther and farther astray, “in wandering mazes lost,” because of its persistent ignoring of God in the Bible. By such pretended knowledge and wisdom the world is just coming to the point where again it does not know God. And through the glamour of this so-called science and philosophy, even the professed Church of Christ is fast forgetting God. AMS September 2, 1897, page 530.7
He who believes the Bible and thus becomes so acquainted with God and the power of his word, that he knows and rests with perfect confidence in the knowledge that God possesses and has revealed in the Bible a philosophy and a science that is as far beyond any that this world ever knew, as heaven is higher than the earth, is counted as fairly beyond the pale of respectability. But all that makes no difference with the truth. And it is the everlasting truth that in the Bible there is more and better science, truer and more profound philosophy, than this world ever knew or ever can know without this book. AMS September 2, 1897, page 530.8
God is. He is the former of all things. He is the only true teacher. He is ever ready and is waiting to be the teacher of all. He will willingly teach all who will be taught by him. And to all such he will teach all knowledge and all wisdom, all science and all philosophy. For in him are hid all the treasures of philosophy and science, and ye are complete in him who is the head of all principality and power. AMS September 2, 1897, page 530.9
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THE Martinsburg, Pa., Weekly Herald, of August 12, makes this allusion to the recent arrest of W. H. Armstrong, in that State, for “Sunday desecration“:— AMS September 2, 1897, page 533.1
“The evil power of ‘civil righteousness’ and the religious prejudice of a lot of ‘good’ church people is in sad evidence at Washington, Pa. Rev. W. H. Armstrong, a devout minister of the church of the Seventh-day Adventists, was last week fined and imprisoned in the Washington county jail, for serving God according to the way he believes. His arrest was due to a number of ‘zealous’ church people, who charged him with ‘Sunday desecration.’ The first words of the justice of the peace before whom Rev. Armstrong was brought, were: ‘There is a nest of Adventists in town that will have to be cleaned out.’ Thus religious jealousy and prejudice was allowed to prejudge his case. Religious persecution and not the evidence, decided. AMS September 2, 1897, page 533.2
“The same forces are organizing for an aggressive campaign against ‘sabbath desecration’ as they term it, in Redford County and similar persecutions are bound to follow. How rapidly the events are leading us up to a closer union of Church and State. Reader, if you are in favor of complete religious freedom, express your sentiments without fear of preacher or people, and help stay the tide that is trying to sweep away our civil and religious liberties.” AMS September 2, 1897, page 533.3
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Religious liberty is simply the liberty to worship or not to worship God, unmolested by the State, whose province it is to control men’s actions by physical force. AMS September 2, 1897, page 541.1
Religious liberty, in its accepted sense, is an inherent right to every man, and is not transferable. AMS September 2, 1897, page 541.2
Every man is possessed of a will and the power to exercise it. In religious matters there is, in the economy of God, no such thing as compulsion. Every individual is left free to obey or not to obey, just as he sees fit. Christ himself declares, “If any man hear my words and believe not, I judge [condemn] him not.” John 12:47. One man may consider it his duty to obey the word of God, another may not so regard it. It is the right of all men to follow the dictates of conscience, no matter what their opinions on the subject may be, unmolested by police authority, so long as in its exercise they do not deprive anyone else of an equal right. AMS September 2, 1897, page 541.3