Approach God as One Brotherhood
- Foreword
- Preface
- Did Ellen White Contradict Herself?
- The Betrayal of the Negro: 1895-1910
- “The Southern Field Is Closing!”
- The Age of Booker T. Washington
- Crisis in Mississippi
- Quietly at Work for the Negro
- “We Have Been Eating of the Large Loaf”
- Why Did We Choose Nashville?
- Ellen White on Racial Equality
- Conclusions
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Approach God as One Brotherhood
When the Holy Spirit moves upon human minds, all petty complaints and accusations between man and his fellow man will be put away. The bright beams of the Sun of Righteousness will shine into the chambers of the mind and heart. In our worship of God there will be no distinction between rich and poor, white and black. All prejudice will be melted away. When we approach God, it will be as one brotherhood. We are pilgrims and strangers, bound for a better country, even a heavenly. There all pride, all accusation, all self-deception, will forever have an end. Every mask will be laid aside, and we shall “see him as he is.” There our songs will catch the inspiring theme, and praise and thanksgiving will go up to God.—The Review and Herald, October 24, 1899, p. 677.EGWCRR 121.3