A Look into the Church of God
culled from Life And Labors Of D. S. WARNER ByAndrew L. Byers1920
The life and labors of D. S. Warner are so closely
associated with a religious movement that any attempt at his biography becomes
in part necessarily a history of that movement. I have therefore chosen the
term, Birth of a Reformation, as a part of the title of this book. Brother
Warner (to use an appellation in keeping with the idea of universal Christian
brotherhood) was doubtless chosen of God as an instrument for accomplishing a
particular work. What that work was, why it may be called a reformation, and
why, in particular, it may be considered the last reformation, a few words of
explanation by way of introduction are offered the inquiring reader. It will be necessary to take a brief glance over the
Christian era and review some of the important events and conditions. We note
the characteristics of the church in the days of the apostles, which, by reason
of its recent founding and organization by the Holy Spirit, is naturally
regarded as exemplary and ideal. It had no creed but the Scriptures and no
governance but that administered by the Holy Spirit, who 'set the members in
the body as it pleased him'- apostles, prophets, teachers, evangelists,
pastors, etc. Thus subject to the Spirit, the early church was flexible, capable
of expansion and of walking in all the truth and of adjusting itself to all
conditions. It was in very essence the church, the whole, and not a section or
part. The apostles and early believers did not restrict themselves and become a
Jewish Christian sect or any other kind of sect. Peter's way of thinking would
have thus limited him, for as a Jew he declined any particular interest in
Gentile converts; but the Lord through a vision changed his mind and advanced
his understanding to include the universality of the Christian kingdom. The
Holy Spirit in the heart was necessary, of course, to the successful government
of the church by the Spirit, otherwise he could not have been understood. There
were no dividing lines, for it was the will of the Lord particularly that there
be "one fold and one shepherd." Jesus had prayed in behalf of the
disciples "that they all may be one; as thou, Father, art in me, and I in
thee, that they also may be one in us: that the world may believe that thou hast
sent me" (John 17:21). These conditions of being subject to the Word and
Spirit, of leaving an open door through which greater light and truth might
enter as was necessary, and of possessing the love and unity of spirit that
cemented the believers together and carried them through all their persecution,
constituted the ideal and normal status of God's church on earth as he gave it
beginning, of which it was ordained that there should be but one, only one, as
long as the world should endure. "There is one body, and one Spirit, even
as ye are called in one hope of your calling" (Ephesians 4:4). SPIRITUAL DECLINE It was possible, of course, for the church to decline from
her state of purity and thereby to forfeit her standing as the church. So long
as her conflict with paganism lasted and the various forms of persecution
tended to bring into exercise those principles and qualities which
distinguished her from the world, she practically kept her first estate. When,
however, the tide turned, persecutions ceased and Christianity came into favor
and to be made the state religion of the Roman Empire, there were presented
conditions favorable to every form of spiritual decline. Christians, instead of
being longer persecuted, were protected, and to profess Christianity became popular
and easy. The divine features of the church, by which she had been known for
more than two hundred years, were lost. Every form of corruption came in. Human
rule supplanted the divine, Holy Spirit rule almost universally, both in the
East and the West. The bishop of Rome, in particular, rose in prominence until
he was made supreme head-pope--of the Holy Roman church. The reader of church
history knows of the long eclipse of Christianity that followed, of the
darkness and ignorance that reigned and gave to that period the name, Dark
Ages. The true church, impossible of representation by such a colossal
counterfeit as then appeared in her place and became in turn a persecuting
power, could continue only in fragmentary form, in obscure places in the wilderness
of the Roman Empire. She could not be manifest in her evangelizing capacity,
but was persecuted. Millions of God's people, who refused allegiance to this
false system of Christianity, were slain as heretics during this period. Thus,
in the historical foreground we see, not the pure woman representing the church
of God, but we see an apostate woman seated “upon a scarlet-colored beast,” the
Roman state. "And the woman was arrayed in purple and scarlet color,
and decked with gold and precious stones and pearls, having a golden cup in her
hand full of abominations and filthiness of her fornication: and upon her
forehead was a name written, Mystery, Babylon the Great, the Mother of Harlots
and Abominations of the Earth. And I saw the woman drunken with the blood of
the saints, and with the blood of the martyrs of Jesus" (Revelation
17:4-6). The Word and the Spirit, the two divine authorities, were
set aside. In the place of the former were the traditions of the Roman Church,
and for the latter was substituted human rule and authority. These two divine
witnesses prophesied in sackcloth during those long centuries, until such time
as they should again function in their proper sphere in the church--I say until
such time: for we are not to assume that in the design of God this state of
affairs should always continue. True Christianity was not to perish from the
earth. The book of Daniel prophesies of the papacy. "And he shall speak
great words against the Most High, and shall wear out the saints of the Most
High, and think to change times and laws: and they shall be given into his hand
until a time and times and the dividing of time" (Daniel 7:25). (See the
time-periods of the various epochs of the Christian era in our chapter A
Prophetic Time.) For this vast agency of unrighteousness the time should come
when the cup of iniquity should be full and the judgments of God should be
executed and his people delivered. When Christ comes, his bride will have made
herself ready, which implies that God's people will have been gathered out of
spiritual captivity and brought again to Zion. Light and truth and the Holy
Spirit rule will have been restored as at the beginning. REFORMATIONS Now the rise out of apostasy was expressed by a series of
reformations, not by gradual ascent corresponding to the decline. The
"mystery of iniquity," which crystallized in the blasphemous
"man of sin," had already begun to work in Paul's day, and the drift
into spiritual darkness on the part of the professing church was without
specific opposition. But, on the other hand, to break away from conditions
apostate always means war with infernal powers. The wrong is endured until a
rising sentiment of protest breaks out with stern denunciation. God raises up
instruments for this purpose. John Wyclif, in the fourteenth century, denounced
the errors of the so-called church and the conduct of the monks and also had
sufficient light to see the papacy as the "man of sin" foretold by
the apostle Paul. His reform efforts, however, centered mostly in the
translation of the Bible into English, which work, in spite of the attempt by
Rome to destroy it, God graciously caused to be preserved. John Huss, a little later, took Wyclif's attitude against
the corruptions of the church and was burned at the stake as a heretic. His
martyrdom furnished the occasion for him to utter this prophecy: "You are
now going to burn a goose (Huss meaning goose in the Bohemian language), but in
one hundred years there will arise a swan whom you can neither roast nor boil."
True to this prophecy, in one hundred years came the intrepid Luther, under
whose leadership history records the great reformation of the sixteenth
century. Church and state were at this time united, which gave this reformation
a political prominence, as it resulted in the change to Protestantism of two
strong nations, Germany and England. What the sixteenth century reformation
accomplished spiritually was, among other things, the bringing to light of the
Scriptural doctrine of justification by faith in Christ instead of by priestly
absolution. It could not have been expected that all the Scriptural
truths and principles should at any time or by any one reformer be recovered
from the rubbish under which they had been buried for a thousand years. There
have been numerous reforms, bringing out various truths that had been obscured
by the apostasy. Thus Truth in her progress upward to the Scriptural level has
arisen only by successive steps, God having to use human instrumentalities that
were limited by the prevailing tendencies and beliefs of the times. Each
reformer naturally dealt with conditions that were most conspicuous from his
viewpoint and was exercised in questions of truth that applied only to such
conditions. His reform work was not final in character, inasmuch as it left
some errors still uncorrected. Hence the progress upward was by a succession of
reforms, each, as a general thing, springing from a higher level of truth and
spiritual attainment than those preceding. With the great decline into apostasy
now in the past, the church of God was disposed to rise out of confusion, her
destiny being the attainment of her original standing, when it could be said
that her sun should no more go down." HUMAN RULE INSTEAD OF DIVINE The apostasy of the church, as one writer has expressed it,
came by "ecclesiastical ambition and degeneracy." The human element
got in the way where there should have been only the divine. There is
necessarily the human element in the work of God, for Christian work is God and
man working together; but in the true relation man is God's instrumentality and
is altogether in subjection to the divine Head, who rules over all. When the
human element supplants, gets in the way of, or acts in the place of, the
divine, we have a fundamental error that always results in apostasy. This human
ecclesiasticism, always more or less intolerant, reached its autocratic
perfection in the hierarchy of the Roman Catholic Church and constituted the
"man of sin" who opposeth and exalteth himself above all that is
called God, or that is worshiped; so that he as God sitteth in the temple of
God, showing himself that he is God" (2 Thessalonians 2:3-4). The spirit of human government in church affairs has shown
itself in, or has followed in the wake of, every reform movement of the past.
The Spirit of God worked in the movement to accomplish good, but was always
checked by this baleful element. Luther meant well but was himself dogmatic and
intolerant. He held to many doctrines of Catholicism whose wrongs he could not
see. He did not make proper allowance that others besides himself might be
right, or at least have some truth. Neither did he or his associates or
followers leave the way open for God to lead into more truth, much less the
whole truth. Thus the reformation of the Sixteenth Century, while it recovered
from the debris of apostasy the doctrine of justification by faith, became the
occasion for Protestant sects, human-ruled institutions, and these were
succeeded by other sects. Some of these have been as intolerant, inflexible,
and as unlike primitive Christianity as the Roman Catholic Church itself. Church government, as humanized in the sects, has taken
forms other than the hierarchic. We have the episcopal, or rule by bishops; the
presbyterian, or rule by presbyters; the congregational, or rule by the local
brotherhood. Our object here is, not to discuss which of these forms most
nearly resembles or is most different from the Scriptural, but merely to show
that man rule has manifested itself in various ways. CHARACTERISTICS OF TRUE CHURCH The true church of God, comprising all Christians, has in
her normal state under her divine head certain essential characteristics which
make her exclusively the church, the whole and not a part. These might be
expressed as follows: 1. Possession of divine spiritual life. If the church does
not possess this she is not Christ's body and therefore not the church. She
must know the Spirit of God. 2. Disposition to obey all Scripture and to let the Spirit
have his way and rule. This constitutes her safety in matters of doctrine and
government. 3. An attitude receptive to any further truth and light.
This safeguards against dogmatism and a spirit of infallibility and
intolerance, against interpreting Christianity in the light of traditions and
old ideas. 4. Acknowledgment of good wherever found and the placing of
no barrier that would exclude any who might be Christians. This makes
salvation, a holy life, and a Christian spirit the only test of fellowship, and
disapproves all human standards of church membership and fellowship. We repeat that these constitute the Scriptural standard of
the church and characterize her in her unity and integrity. It is by lacking in
one or more of these essentials that a sect is a sect. In the rise of the
church out of apostasy any reformation that does not develop to the full the
essentials that characterize the church in her wholeness and completeness must
necessarily fall short of being the final reformation and must leave a cause
for further reformation. This is the explanation of the existence of the
so-called Christian sects, viewing them in the most charitable light. The
Wesleys and their early associates sought for deeper personal spirituality as
well as better spiritual association than was afforded in the state church of
England. They brought to light and gave particular prominence to the doctrine
of sanctification by faith and the witness of the Holy Spirit. Their work was a
reform; but as in that day the question of division among Christians was not
prominent, nor was the question of the one true church understood or
appreciated, their work took definite form in a body humanly organized and
called Methodist. The Campbells had considerable light on the unity of the church,
and proposed the Scriptures alone as a basis on which all Christians could
unite. But they blindly shut themselves in on a point of doctrine by
associating entrance into the kingdom or church with the act of immersion in
such manner as to make a wall between them and other Christians who should give
evidence of having received salvation and therefore church membership,
otherwise than through baptism. Thus they made themselves a sect. John
Winebrenner had the correct idea of the church as comprising all the saved, and
his work was on an un-sectarian basis. Lacking, however, in the quality of
letting the Spirit of God rule, eldership organizations were soon set up, a man
rule came in, and they also became a sect. Inflexible as to doctrine, they
closed the door of progress on themselves, rejected the truth on holiness, and
became one of the most narrow of sects, though bearing the Scriptural name,
Church of God. A FINAL REFORMATION It must follow, and the assumption is already established,
that a reformation which takes in full the characteristics defining the church
in her wholeness must thereby reach the New Testament standard and therefore be
the last, or final, reformation. No reformation can make good such claim if it
does not proceed on whole-church lines or principles. If a reform does progress
on those universal principles, we need look no farther for, nor await future
years to reveal, the final reformation resulting in the restoration of all
things to the Scriptural ideal. The errors of the religious world are, and have been, the
failure to so preach salvation truth that people may obtain and enjoy full
deliverance from sin; failure to conform to the divine standard on all lines;
the human ecclesiastical system, which hinders Holy Spirit organization and
government; and separation of God's people into parties, thus making true
church relation impossible. A movement that comprehends a correction of all
these, and meets the Scriptural standard, must therefore fill the measure of
reform. Reader, it is claimed for the movement represented in the
teaching and labors of D. S. Warner, that it possesses these elements of
finality, that by it God is bringing his people "out of all places where
they have been scattered in the cloudy and dark day" of Protestant
sectism, and is restoring Zion as at first. It is not assumed that Brother
Warner was right on every point of doctrine or in every application of a
Scriptural text, but that the movement, in addition to being based on correct
Scriptural principles otherwise, possesses that flexibility and spirit of
progress by which it adjusts itself as God gives light. 1. It teaches the Scriptural process of salvation, by which
people may obtain a real deliverance from sin and have the Holy Spirit as a
witness to their salvation. 2. The truth only, and obedience thereto, is its motto; and
it recognizes the rule of the Holy Spirit in the organization and government of
the church. 3. It does not assume to possess all the truth, but stands
committed thereto, holding an open door to the entrance of any further light
and truth. 4. The spirit of the movement is to acknowledge good
wherever found and to regard no door into the church other than salvation and
no test of fellowship other than true Christianity possessed within the
heart. Thus its basis is as narrow as the New Testament on the one
hand, and as broad as the New Testament on the other. May it ever go forward on
this line in the spread of the truth to all the world. ANOTHER VIEW OF SECTS In order to a clearer understanding of the reformation which
took definite form in the work of D. S. Warner, as well as why he denounced the
sectarian spirit in such scathing terms, let us take further notice of the evil
of sect institutions. In the first place, sects are confusing in that, while
necessarily bad as factions, they are associated more or less with good. Many
of them in their origin followed reform movements which apparently had divine
sanction and were progressive in Christianity, and many of them have upheld
truth which when preached was productive of good and brought salvation results.
But here it should be noted, that whatever of salvation work has been
accomplished has been directly by the Spirit of God in individuals, quite apart
from any sectarian agency. It must be said, too, that whatever has resulted
from Christian endeavor or influence and expenditure of means, whether in home
or foreign lands, would have been in greater degree had the church back of
these efforts been one spiritual whole instead of many sectarian divisions. So,
when we come to apply analysis to this question of sects, we find that they are
in no sense good. That they are called churches is but the part of confusion,
for in the popular mind and in actual practice it tends to identify sects with
the divine church, whereas in Scripture church always means something other
than sects. Bodies that are differentiated by the isms of men are not, and
never can be, Scripturally churches, for except in the local geographical sense
the church takes no plural form. There is a distinction between the true people
of God as constituting the divine church and the human institutions called
churches that have divided them and placed them in unnatural and unscriptural
relations. The true church of God, by virtue of comprising all the saved and
therefore being a unit, places sects in comparison only as false churches. A
commentator truthfully remarks, "False Christendom divided into very many
sects is truly Babylon, that is, confusion." (Jamieson, Fausset, and
Brown's Commentary.) Thus sects, because they are a hindrance to proper
Christian activity and because they present a spectacle of religious confusion,
professing to be churches when they can only be false, are bad. This is no disparagement of the many noble men and women of
God who have been connected with sects and have gone on to their heavenly
reward, whose accomplished good was from the divine source and not from the
sectarian. They may have honestly loved their sect, but in this they were honestly
misplacing their love. It was the religious association with their fellow
Christians that they loved, and this, had they only known it, was not enhanced
but rather hindered by the sectarian distinction. They will not find these
distinctions in heaven. If they really loved the sect, they had to leave that
love behind, for it could not be included with such Christian excellence as
entitled them to heaven. Thus our good parents and grandparents and the long
line of reformers and Christian worthies receive their heavenly reward quite
independent of the sectarian institutions that divided them here. EVIL OF SECTS IN POSITIVE LIGHT We have shown why sects are bad in rather a negative light,
as being confusion and therefore a hindrance to proper Christian representation
in the world. They are evil in a more positive sense, and it was because of
this that God prompted Brother Warner and others in the reform to utter such
sharp judgment against them. Any body of Christian people that arises and fails
to qualify on all principles that mark the church of God as a whole, that
proceeds to human organization and rule instead of recognizing only Holy Spirit
organization and government, at once limits itself and becomes thereby a sect,
a false representation of the church. As a false church it is soon a corrupt
institution in which human pride and every element contrary to God may exist
and become active. The human will, intended for the rule of our bodies and
things terrestrial, things which belong to man's province, becomes sadly out of
place when exercised in any sphere or capacity that belongs to God. In such
sphere it becomes a rival of God, a monster evil of great proportions, a
distinctive satanic spirit, always opposing the true work of God. BEASTLY CHARACTER IN PROPHECY This man rule in a province to which God alone has rightful
claim (for indeed it exercises the prerogative of God when it presumes to
direct God's work and people) has characterized all Protestant sectism just as
it did Roman Catholicism, only in milder aspect. Man rule is represented in
prophetic symbols by beastly character, whether it applies to political or
ecclesiastical government. Thus in the 7th chapter of Daniel we have the
symbols of four great beasts, representing in their respective order four
universal kingdoms, as follows: Babylonia, Medo-Persia, Greece, and Rome. These
were temporal powers that ruled the world. When a mere temporal power is
indicated the prophetic symbol used is a dumb beast. If a beast or any part of
such symbol is represented as speaking or exercising human propensities, then
the thing indicated is also an ecclesiastical power. Thus the fourth beast in
Daniel 7, which represents the Roman Empire, exercises first as a dumb animal;
but directly a particular horn appears among the horns of this beast, and is
given eyes to see and a mouth to speak great things, which indicates
ecclesiastical exercise, so that we have here Rome first as a heathen power,
and then as a so-called Christian power speaking great things, making war
against the saints, etc. In Revelation 13 we find this same Roman Catholic power
represented by a beast to whom was given "a mouth speaking great things
and blasphemies" and power "to make war with the saints and to
overcome them." These anthropomorphic qualities given to a beast indicate
man rule in ecclesiastical matters, a thing which is at once blasphemy in God's
sight, utterly obnoxious and foreign to him. PROTESTANTISM IN REVELATION 13 Beginning with the 11th verse of Revelations 13, directly
after the prophecy of the Roman Catholic hierarchic power, we have the
spectacle of a second beast, having two horns like a lamb but speaking as a
dragon. The fact that he speaks gives him the quality of ecclesiastical rule.
In this beast we have man rule in the form of Protestantism. He has a lamb-like
aspect instead of the vicious, threatening character of Rome in the days of her
power; but he has the voice of a dragon, which betrays his diabolical spirit.
He exercises as much power in the world as Roman Catholicism did before him. He
deceives by doing great wonders," displaying spiritual manifestations. He
causes people to worship the first beast (Catholicism) by copying its standards
and doing reverence to a human ecclesiastical system; and an image to the first
beast is made whenever a sect is organized. He causes the image to
"speak" (exercise man rule) and to persecute those who, instead of
bowing to the sect image, are disposed to exercise in their spiritual freedom
and give allegiance alone to God. Thus we see so-called Protestantism as a particular form of
beast religion, a distinctive spirit that animates and dominates the sectarian
system. The beast element is the man rule. We are not speaking merely of human
instrumentality, which God certainly uses in his church when the will is wholly
submitted to him and susceptible to his Spirit, but of that exercise and
dominance in ecclesiastical matters which, as apart from God, is distinctly
human. Such prevails more or less as a system in all sects, gives occasion for
jealousy, pride, and emulation, wants to be let alone, and opposes any reform
that threatens it. This is the element which naturally becomes disturbed at the
preaching of the truth that exposes it, and which became a persecuting power
against Brother Warner and all who executed the divine judgment against false
religion. In this deceptive form of evil covering almost four hundred years
Satan has had his seat. When the present reformation shall have resulted in
bringing God's people out of sectarian divisions and placing them on the
whole-church basis, Satan, driven to some new project, will muster the Gog and
Magog forces in a last conflict against the saints, which shall end with the
utter destruction of those forces by the judgment fires. We have, then, Protestantism represented in two aspects: 1.
As a period during which truth by a succession of reform movements has to a
considerable extent been recovered from apostasy and restored to God's people.
2. As a system of false religion, a form of spiritual Babylon that is pervaded
by a satanic spirit that deceives the world and opposes any effort to restore
the church of God to her Scriptural unity, since such effort naturally
threatens the ecclesiastical element lying at the base of organized
sectarianism. A DISPENSATION OF GOD We apprehend, then, that wondrous times have come upon us.
Great ecclesiastical systems are crumbling and are being left destitute as
God's people make their escape. This movement proceeds with no show of
prominence in the world. It causes no political disturbance, but works only in
the province of genuine Christianity, silently, effectively, as the leaven in
the meal. It is altogether a spiritual movement and its discernment can
therefore only be spiritual. It may appear outwardly as only one religious body
among many; for it is only when judged by the spiritual standard of God's word
that its character is seen. It is a call to those who are willing to be led of
God. The dispensations of God are in their beginning often
insignificant and despised in man's eyes. God chooses things that are not, to
bring to naught things that are. The fact that Brother Warner S work was done
in comparative obscurity counts for nothing against its being the work of God. It
is quality that counts. Brother Warner had the right spiritual quality, the
secret of which was letting God have his way. His entire abandonment to God in
a complete consecration, together with his adaptable temperament and gifts,
made him suitable for God's use in this great work, and God chose him. The time
was at hand. Others, contemporary with him and leaders in the holiness
movement, saw the evils of sects and deplored them, but when it came to
renouncing their sectarian affiliations and coming out of the spiritual Babylon
in obedience to God's call, "Come out of her, my people, that ye be not
partakers of her sins, and that ye receive not of her plagues," they drew
back. This point of leaving the sects, abiding in Christ alone and allowing God
to reestablish his church on the primitive basis, was the real test. They
longed for the time when God's people should all be one, but chose to believe
that the time was not yet. And so they have been believing for forty years, and
are today in the greater confusion. They lacked the spiritual equipment. One of
Brother Warner's special endowments was that of considerable light on the
prophecies. He saw that the sectarian denominations were of the true spiritual
Babylon in which God's people were being held captive. He also had in the
Spirit the prospective vision of the pure church un-ruled by man. His
contemporary leaders who opposed him were too blind spiritually to have such a
vision; or, if they had it, were disobedient to it. But there were those, the humble ones, who were willing to
let God have his way. At the sound of the trumpet, which God was giving through
Brother Warner thousands have rallied to the standard of truth, and through
them the truth has been and is being vindicated. If God has his way all Christians
will be led out of sects, all justified believers will be led into
sanctification, the church will be perfectly organized and governed by the Holy
Spirit, the whole truth will be preached uncompromisingly, full salvation will
be held out to the world, and all will be led to cooperate and do their part.
This is the full measure of Christianity today, and is God's design with his
people. Here is true Christian unity. Such unity can come only by absolute
abandonment to God, for he must be the one-making agent. Men may attempt a
unity through some Interchurch World Movement or other plan, but no plan can
represent the true Scriptural unity unless God does the work himself. He must
have the full right of way in human hearts. Brother Warner's mission was strictly that of a reformer. It
was his part to venture boldly with the truth God had given him, with a
willingness to run the gauntlet of persecutions that were sure to greet him on
the right and left. His severe denunciation of all things sectarian was
consistent with his pioneer position. There first had to be an awakening, a
breaking up of old conditions, particularly of the recognition (into which the
minds of people generally had settled) of the sects as being the church of God.
His work was the initial, or birth, stage of the reform. Following the initial stage has come the constructive, which
comprehends the reformation in the local sense, the sense in which the
Christian life and true ideal of the church must be exemplified in the
community as something more than theory, something that will appeal as being
better than what is represented in the sects. The constructive stage calls not
so much for continual denunciation of sects as for manifesting those essential
principles that characterize the church in her unity and entirety. The
responsibility is to make good the claim, and this means much. Any tendency to
establish traditions, or to regard a past course as giving direction in all
respects for the future, or to become self-centered and manifest a we are
it" spirit and bar the door of progress against the entrance of further
light and truth, or in any way to refuse fellowship with any others who may be
Christians, would itself be sectarian, altogether unlike the true reformation,
which, if it be final, must necessarily be a restoration and possess universal
characteristics. For proper representation everything depends upon the
understanding of, and the attitude toward, this great movement. For any body of
people to hold that the reformation is entrusted to them, or that they have
become the standard for the world, is a self-centered attitude, vastly
different from that which regards the reformation as something prophetically
due, as having come independent of man, and as being greater than the people
who have been favored with its light, and that it is their part to conform to
if in principle, doctrine, and everything. The great movement is in the world,
and any attempt to "corner" it or to limit it to a particular body of
people could only result in making that body a sect, or faction, while the
movement itself would proceed independently. The true spirit of the reformation will be, however, with
those who measure to its standard, whether they be few or many, and God will
manifest himself accordingly. Satan has tried to becloud and defeat the
movement by counterfeit factions--bodies of people who profess to be on the
reformation line, but who misrepresent the truth by denying some part of it,
as, for instance, the doctrine of entire sanctification in this life, or of the
Christian ordinances, or who misrepresent it by advancing erroneous doctrine,
such as the continuation of the Old Testament law and Sabbath, or the speaking
in tongues as a necessary evidence of having received the Holy Ghost. Many are
the counterfeit movements today. One must ignore every influence of man and
then rely on the witness of both the Word and the Spirit in order to be guided
aright. Brother Warner was a remarkable example of a man
possessing the Christian spirit and the Christian graces wonderfully developed.
While he could rebuke evil and deceptive influences in the strongest terms, he
was one of the meekest and kindest of men. Christ-like, he loved all men, even
his persecutors. As a husband, father, Christian brother and friend his love
and respect were genuine and reached to the very soul. And yet the
responsibility of his calling as a Christian and as a minister of God's truth
as it applied to his time, he held more dear than all else, and to it he was
wholly devoted. Not with any object of exalting the man, but to illustrate what
God can accomplish in and through one who is so devoted, we introduce him to
our readers
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