"The very atmosphere is [today] polluted with sin.
Soon God’s people will be tested by fiery trials, and the great
proportion of those who now appear to be genuine and true will prove to
be base metal. Instead of being strengthened and confirmed by
opposition, threats, and abuse, they will cowardly take the side of the
opposers. The promise is: ‘Them that honor Me I will honor.’ Shall we be
less firmly attached to God’s law because the world at large have
attempted to make it void?
"Already the judgments of God are abroad in the land,
as seen in storms, in floods, in tempests, in earthquakes, in peril by
land and by sea. The great I AM is speaking to those who make void His
law. When God’s wrath is poured out upon the earth, who will then be
able to stand? Now is the time for God’s people to show themselves true
to principle. When the religion of Christ is most held in contempt, when
His law is most despised, then should our zeal be the warmest and our
courage and firmness the most unflinching. To stand in defense of truth
and righteousness when the majority forsake us, to fight the battles of
the Lord when champions are few—this will be our test. At this time we
must gather warmth from the coldness of others, courage from their
cowardice, and loyalty from their treason . .
"The test will surely come . . The Captain of our
salvation will strengthen His people for the conflict in which they must
engage. How often when Satan has brought all his forces to bear against
the followers of Christ, and death stares them in the face, have earnest
prayers put up in faith brought the Captain of the Lord’s host upon the
field of action and turned the tide of battle and delivered the
oppressed.
"Now is the time when we should closely connect with
God, that we may be hid when the fierceness of His wrath is poured upon
the sons of men. We have wandered away from the old landmarks. Let us
return. If the Lord be God, serve Him; if Baal, serve him. Which side
will you be on?"—5 Testimonies, pp. 136:1-137:3.
It is only as we draw near to God and study His Word
and the lives of Jesus and holy men of old that we shall be strengthened
to have warmth amid the coldness and apostasy around us. It was for this
reason that we prepared this compilation on the life of Enoch.
"We are to obey the laws of His kingdom, making
ourselves all that it is possible for us to be. Earnestly we are to
cultivate the highest powers of our being, remembering that we are God’s
property, God’s building. We are required to improve every day. Even in
this world of sin and sorrow, we may, by earnest, persevering effort,
rise to the highest spiritual efficiency . . We are to please God. This
we may do; for Enoch pleased God, though living in a degenerate age. And
there are Enochs in this our day."—Sons and Daughters, p. 314:1.
"How little is said of Enoch; how brief is his
biography! Many volumes are written of Napoleon; much is said of Caesar
and other great men of the world. Their exploits are recorded and sent
through the length and breadth of the land; yet we have no evidence that
these men honored God, or that God honored them. Of Enoch it is
recorded, ‘Enoch walked with God: and he was not; for God took him.’ "—Review
and Herald, April 15, 1909, para. 3.
"I am comforted with the conviction that the Lord has
made me His humble instrument in shedding some rays of precious light
upon the past. Sacred History, relating to holy men of old, is brief.
Inspiration has dealt sparingly in praise of the noble deeds and holy
lives of the faithful. For example, the life of righteous Enoch is
summed up in these words: ‘And Enoch walked with God, and he was not,
for God took him.’ "—Spiritual Gifts, Vol. 3, p. v:1.
"That God who walked with Enoch was our Lord and
Saviour Jesus Christ. He was the light of the world then just as He is
now. Those who lived then were not without teachers to instruct them in
the path of life; for Noah and Enoch were Christians. The gospel is
given in precept in Leviticus. Implicit obedience is required now, as
then. How essential it is that we understand the importance of this
word!"—6 Testimonies, p. 392:2.
"The Old Testament is as verily the gospel in types
and shadows as the New Testament is in its unfolding power. The New
Testament does not present a new religion; the Old Testament does not
present a religion to be superseded by the New. The New Testament is
only the advancement and unfolding of the Old. Abel was a believer in
Christ and was as verily saved by His power as was Peter or Paul. Enoch
was a representative of Christ as surely as was the beloved disciple
John . . That God who walked with Enoch was our Lord and Saviour, Jesus
Christ. He was the light of the world then, just as He is now."—That
I May Know Him, p. 208:3.
"This hope of redemption through the advent of the
Son of God as Saviour and King, has never become extinct in the hearts
of men. From the beginning there have been some whose faith has reached
out beyond the shadows of the present to the realities of the future.
Adam, Seth, Enoch, Methuselah, Noah, Shem, Abraham, Isaac, and
Jacob—through these and other worthies the Lord has preserved the
precious revealings of His will. And it was thus that to the children of
Israel, the chosen people through whom was to be given to the world the
promised Messiah, God imparted a knowledge of the requirements of His
law, and of the salvation to be accomplished through the atoning
sacrifice of His beloved Son."—Prophets and Kings, pp. 682:2-683:0.
"The many prophecies concerning the Saviour’s advent
led the Hebrews to live in an attitude of constant expectancy. Many died
in the faith, not having received the promises. But having seen them
afar off, they believed and confessed that they were strangers and
pilgrims on the earth. From the days of Enoch the promises repeated
through patriarchs and prophets had kept alive the hope of His
appearing."—Prophets and Kings, pp. 699:3-700:0.
"How selfish was the expression that he would live a
different life if he knew his Lord was to come in ten years! Why, Enoch
walked with God 300 years. This is a lesson for us that we should walk
with God every day, and we are not safe unless we are waiting and
watching."—Last Day Events, p. 42:5.
"The sacrificial offerings, and the priesthood of the
Jewish system, were instituted to represent the death and mediatorial
work of Christ. All those ceremonies had no meaning, and no virtue, only
as they related to Christ, who was Himself the foundation of, and who
brought into existence, the entire system. The Lord had made known to
Adam, Abel, Seth, Enoch, Noah, Abraham, and the ancient worthies,
especially Moses, that the ceremonial system of sacrifices and
priesthood, of themselves, were not sufficient to secure the salvation
of one soul."—Spirit of Prophecy, Vol. 2, p. 10:3.
" ‘When men shall revile you and persecute you,’ said
Jesus, ‘rejoice, and be exceeding glad.’ And He pointed His hearers to
the prophets who had spoken in the name of the Lord, as ‘an example of
suffering affliction, and of patience.’ James 5:10. Abel, the very first
Christian of Adam’s children, died a martyr. Enoch walked with God, and
the world knew him not. Noah was mocked as a fanatic and an alarmist.
‘Others had trial of cruel mockings and scourgings, yea, moreover of
bonds and imprisonment.’ ‘Others were tortured, not accepting
deliverance; that they might obtain a better resurrection.’ Hebrews
11:36, 35."—Thoughts From the Mount of Blessing, p. 33:1.
"Yet the whole world was not corrupt. There were a
few faithful witnesses for God. Methuselah, Enoch, Noah, and many others
labored to keep alive on the earth the knowledge of the true God, and to
stay the tide of moral evil. God declared that His Spirit should not
always strive with guilty men, but that their probation should be a
hundred and twenty years; if they did not then cease to pollute with
their sins the world and its rich treasures, he would blot them from His
creation; and these faithful ministers of righteousness gave the warning
message. But the light was not heeded, and the preaching of Noah and his
co-laborers impressed hearts less and less. Many, even of the worshipers
of God, had not sufficient moral power to stand against the corrupting
influences of the age, and were beguiled into sin by them."—Bible
Echo and Signs of the Times, July 1, 1887, para. 7.
"In every period of this earth’s history, God has had
His men of opportunity, to whom He has said, ‘Ye are My witnesses.’ In
every age there have been devout men, who gathered up the rays of light
as they flashed upon their pathway, and spoke to the people the words of
God. Enoch, Noah, Moses, Daniel, and the long roll of patriarchs and
prophets,—these were ministers of righteousness. They were not
infallible; they were weak, erring men; but the Lord wrought through
them as they gave themselves to His service."—Gospel Workers, 1915,
p. 13:1.
"Christ looked forward to the day of Pentecost, when
the Holy Ghost should descend upon His disciples. He would teach them
that they were not to look upon this as the result of their own labor.
They were not to lose sight of the fact that patriarchs, prophets, and
holy men had been sowing seeds of truth. God’s ancient chosen people had
been enriched with precious truth, which was to them as the river of
God. Christ had been their invisible leader through all their travels in
the wilderness. Gracious illustrations of His love were given them in
the covenant signed by God in the rainbow of promise, which was ever to
be an assurance that seed-time and harvest time should remain, and that
the world should never again be destroyed by a flood. Christ was just as
truly the water of life to Abel, Seth, Enoch, Noah, and all who received
His instruction then, as He is at the present time to those who ask of
Him the refreshing drought. God has given His Word to His chosen ones,
and made known His way. Through His Son He has been supplying them with
the dews and showers of His grace. But His blessings are often
overlooked, and men take the glory to themselves."—Signs, April 22,
1897, para. 17.
"The patriarchs and prophets were representative men,
and through them, from century to century, a flood of knowledge was
poured into the world. Adam, repentant and converted, was a Christian;
Abel was a Christian; Enoch was a Christian; Noah was a Christian;
Abraham was a Christian. In types and symbols the Gospel was revealed to
those of former dispensations. The Old Testament Scriptures show us the
power possessed by those who looked to Christ. The glorious beams of
continually increasing light are all concentrated in our time. All
testify of Christ, ‘the Way, the Truth, and the Life.’ But never was
this truth so clearly defined as in Christ’s answer to the words, ‘Lord,
we know not whither Thou goest, and how can we know the way?’ Christ is
revealed to us in His first advent. We see Him sacrificing riches,
power, and glory for poverty, temptation, privation, and suffering."—Signs,
January 13, 1898, para. 10.
"In the schools established under God’s direction,
the fear of the Lord was the foundation of all true education. The
knowledge of God had been handed down from generation to generation. In
Abel, whom Cain killed, and afterward in Enoch, Seth, Methuselah, Noah,
and many others, the Lord had faithful witnesses, just men, who kept His
fear before their generation. Their memories were not feeble and
treacherous. They had received the words of instruction from Adam, and
these they repeated to their children and their children’s children.
Much important history and truth were expressed in song."—Youth’s
Instructor, May 21, 1903, para. 8.
"In that time, as in this, there were two classes,
the righteous and the wicked. Enoch and others walked with God in
uprightness. But the great majority of the inhabitants of the earth were
given over to iniquity, and their wickedness rose before God. The earth
‘was corrupt before God, and the earth was filled with violence.’ ‘The
wickedness of man was great in the earth, and . . every imagination of
the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually.’ ‘And God looked
upon the earth, and behold, it was corrupt; for all flesh had corrupted
his way upon the earth.’ ‘And it repented the Lord that He had made man
on the earth, and it grieved Him at His heart. And the Lord said, I will
destroy man whom I have created from the face of the earth; both man and
beast, and creeping things, and the fowls of the air; for it repenteth
Me that I have made them.’ ‘And God said unto Noah, The end of all flesh
is come before Me; for the earth is filled with violence through them;
and, behold, I will destroy them with the earth’ [Gen 6:5-13]."—Manuscript
Releases, Vol. Eighteen, pp. 92:2-93:0.