The Accuser of the
Brethren
By: David M. Curtis
"There is but one church
in the world who are at the present time standing in the breach,
and making up the hedge, building up the old waste places; and
for any man to call the attention of the world and other
churches to this church, denouncing her as Babylon, is to do a
work in harmony with him who is the accuser of the brethren.
Is it possible that men will
arise from among us, who speak perverse things, and give voice
to the very sentiments that Satan would have disseminated in the
world in regard to those who keep the commandments of God,
and have the faith of Jesus? Is there not work enough to satisfy
your zeal in presenting the truth to those who are in the
darkness of error? . . .The whole world is filled with hatred of
those who proclaim the binding claims of the law of God, and the
church who are loyal to Jehovah must engage in no ordinary
conflict." The Faith I live by p. 305.
"For years I have borne my testimony to the effect that when any
arise claiming to have great light, and yet advocating the
tearing down of that which the Lord through His human agents has
been building up, they are greatly deceived, and are not working
along the lines where Christ is working. Those who assert that
the Seventh-day Adventist churches constitute Babylon, or any
part of Babylon, might better stay at home. Let them stop and
consider what is the message to be proclaimed at this time. In
place of working with divine agencies to prepare a people to
stand in the day of the Lord,
they have taken their stand with him who is an accuser of the
brethren, who accuses them before God day and night.
Satanic agencies have been moved from beneath, and they have
inspired men to unite in a confederacy of evil, that they may
perplex, harass, and cause of the people of God great distress.
The whole world is to be stirred with enmity against Seventh-day
Adventists, because they will not yield homage to the papacy, by
honoring Sunday, the institution of this antichristian power. It
is the purpose of Satan to cause them to be blotted from the
earth, in order that his supremacy of the world may not be
disputed." Testimonies to Ministers p. 36.
"To claim that the Seventh-day
Adventist Church is Babylon, is to make the same claim as does
Satan, who is an accuser of the brethren, who accuses them
before God night and day. By this misusing of the
Testimonies, souls are placed in perplexity, because they cannot
understand the relation of the Testimonies to such a position as
is taken by those in error; for God intended that the
Testimonies should always have a setting in the framework of
truth." Testimonies to Ministers p. 42.
"Now I beseech you, brethren, mark them which cause divisions
and offences contrary to the doctrine which ye have learned; and
avoid them. Rom. 16:17. In all ages of the world there have been
men who think they have a work to do for the Lord, and show no
respect for those whom the Lord has been using.
They do not make right
applications of Scripture, they wrest the Scriptures to sustain
their own ideas. Whatever may be the claims of those who draw
away from the body to proclaim theories of their own invention,
they are in Satan's
service, to get up some new device to divert souls
from the truth for this time.
Beware of those who arise
with a great burden to denounce the church. The chosen
ones who are standing and breasting the storm of opposition from
the world, and are uplifting the downtrodden commandments of God
to exalt them as holy and honorable, are indeed the light of the
world. How dare mortal man pass his judgment upon them, and call
the church a harlot, Babylon, a den of thieves, a cage of every
unclean and hateful bird, the habitation of devils, making the
nations drunk with the wine of her fornication, confederating
with the kings and great men of the earth, waxing rich through
the abundance of her delicacies, and proclaiming that her sins
have reached unto heaven and God hath remembered her iniquities?
Is this the message we have to
bear to Seventh-day Adventists? I tell you, no! God has given no
man any such message. Let these men humble their hearts
before God, and in true
contrition repent that they have even for a time stood by the
side of the accuser of the brethren who accused them before God
day and night. . . .
Supposing this spurious message is the one everyone must
hear for this time, "Come out of her, my people,"
where shall we go? . . ."
This Day With God p. 172.
"Today, as in the days of Babylon,
the accuser of the brethren is
working through human agencies to hurt and destroy those who are
dear to the Lord." Signs of the Times, May 13, 1897