
        
        Christ,
        when He became incarnate into this world, had two natures: one divine
        and one human. The human nature He inherited from Mary. It was a nature,
        according to both the Bible and Spirit of Prophecy, that was just like
        ours.
        On His human side, Christ took our nature 4,000 years
        after the fall of Adam. Because He took our nature, became just like
        us-and in that nature fully resisted temptation and never once sinned,-
        He is able to be both our Example in obedient living, and our Saviour in
        His death on the cross.
        As our Example, He provides us with a pattern to
        follow in perfect obedience to the laws of God. As our Saviour on the
        cross, He died in our nature, thus taking our place. Because of all that
        He has done — and is now doing — we can be justified, sanctified,
        and taken to heaven. The work that He began on earth, He completes in
        heaven. As our High Priest in the heavenly Sanctuary, He provides us
        with forgiveness and enabling strength to do all that He asks of us in
        His Inspired Word.
        But there are modernists in our church that teach
        contrary to the clear statements of the Bible and Spirit of Prophecy on
        this subject. They claim that Christ took the nature of Adam before His
        fall, instead of your and my nature — the nature of the descendants of
        Abraham — with all of its weaknesses and liabilities. When asked why
        they believe this, they explain that they have decided that the earthly
        life of Christ was not a pattern for us since they do not think that God
        really wants anyone in this life to keep His commandments. (All sides
        fully agree that Christ never at any time sinned.)
        Well, what does the Word of God have to say about all
        this? Let us look first at the teachings of the Bible:
        
        The
        Bible
        
        Abraham lived 2,000 years after the fall of Adam.
        Christ took the nature of Abraham’s descendants, not that of Adam with
        his unfallen inheritance.
        "For verily He took not on Him the nature of
        angels; but He took on Him the seed of Abraham." — Hebrews 2:16.
        "And if ye be Christ’s then are ye Abraham’s
        seed, and heirs according to the promise." — Galatians 3:29.
        David lived 3,000 years after that event. According
        to the Bible, Christ was a descendant of David.
        "The book of the generation of Jesus Christ, the
        Son of David, the Son of Abraham." — Matthew 1:1 (Matthew
        1:1-17).
        "Concerning His Son Jesus Christ our Lord, which
        was made of the seed of David according to the flesh, and declared to be
        the Son of God with power, according to the spirit of holiness."
        — Romans 1:3-4
        "I, Jesus, have sent Mine angel to testify unto
        you these things in the churches. I am the root and the offspring of
        David, and the bright and morning star." — Revelation 22:16.
        "The Lord hath sworn unto David; He will not
        turn from it; of the fruit of thy body will I set upon thy
        throne.’" — Psalm 132:11.
        "And there shall come forth a rod out of the
        stem of Jesse, and a Branch shall grow out of his roots." —
        Isaiah 11:1.
        "And all the people were amazed, and said, Is
        not this the seed of David?." —  Matthew 12:23.
        "Behold the days come, saith the Lord, that I
        will raise up unto David a righteous Branch, and a King shall reign and
        prosper and shall execute judgment and justice in the earth." —
        Jeremiah 28:5.
        Jesus took the nature of a descendent of the tribe of
        David, Mary who lived 4,000 years after the fall of Adam.
        
        "And Jacob begat Joseph the husband of Mary, of
        whom was born Jesus, who is called Christ ." — Matthew 1:16.
        He took that nature of those living in the time of
        Mary — the nature of man after 4,000 years of sin, — so that He
        could save us from our sins.
        "And she shall bring forth a son, and thou shalt
        call His name Jesus: for He shall save His people from their sins."
        —  Matthew 1:21.
        He could only save us from sin by taking our nature
        — and in that nature meeting all the demands of the law of God through
        perfect obedience.
        "But when the fullness of time was come, God
        sent forth His Son, made of a woman, made under the law." — 
        Galatians 4:4.
        This is why God sent His Son to take our nature and
        bear our likeness — and become like us in every way, even to taking
        our sinful heredity.
        "For what the law could not do, in that it was
        weak through the flesh, God sending His own Son in the likeness of
        sinful flesh, and for sin, condemned sin in the flesh." — Romans
        8:3.
        ‘And without controversy, great is the mystery of
        godliness: God was manifested in the flesh!" — 1 Timothy 3:16.
        Yes, it is amazing that He would do this. But He did
        because there is no other way that He could save us by the example of
        His life lived in our nature, the propitiation
        of His death laid down in our nature, and the priestly intercession of
        His heavenly ministry in our translated nature.
        "Forasmuch then as the children are partakers of
        flesh and blood, He Himself likewise took part of the same." — 
        Hebrews 2:14.
        Christ took our "sinful flesh," according
        to Scripture (Romans 8:3, quoted above), so that in that nature He could
        live a perfect life, die a perfect death, and be our perfect Priest.
        "Who, being in the form of God, thought it not
        robbery to be equal with God: But made Himself of no reputation, and
        took upon Him the form of a servant, and was made in the likeness of
        men. And being found in fashion as a man, He humbled Himself, and became
        obedient unto death, even the death of the cross." — Philippians
        2:6-8.
        "And He hath made Him to be sin for us, who knew
        no sin; that we might be made the righteousness of God in Him." —
        2 Corinthians 5:21.
        "For we have not an High Priest which cannot be
        touched with the feelings of our infirmities, but was in all points
        tempted like as we are, yet without sin." — Hebrews 4:15.
        "For every high priest taken from among men is
        ordained of men in things pertaining to God, that he may offer both
        gifts and sacrifices for sins: who can have compassion on the ignorant,
        and on them that are out of the way; for that he himself also is
        compassed with infirmity. . And no man taketh this honor unto himself,
        but he that is called of God, as was Aaron. So also Christ glorified not
        Himself to be made an high priest, but He that said unto Him, Thou art
        My Son, today have I begotten Thee.. Who in the days of His flesh, when
        He had offered up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears
        unto Him that was able to save Him from death, and was heard in that He
        feared; Though He were a Son, yet learned He obedience by the things
        which He suffered." — Hebrews 51-8.
        
        If Christ had taken Adam’s perfect, strong,
        unfallen nature, He could not have been made in all points as we are.
        "For we have not an High Priest which cannot be
        touched with the feeling of our infirmities, but was in all points
        tempted like as we are, yet without sin." —  Hebrews 4:15.
        "Wherefore in all things it behoved Him to be
        made like unto His brethren." — Hebrews 2:17.
        If Christ had not really taken our nature, He would
        have experienced no suffering in obedience. According to the Bible, we
        should not believe or teach that Christ did not really come in our
        flesh.
        "And every spirit that confesseth not that Jesus
        is come in the flesh is not of God: and this is the spirit of
        antichrist. " — 1 John 4:3
        
        The
        Spirit of Prophecy
        
        The Spirit of
        Prophecy is quite clear in telling us that Christ took our nature —
        your nature and mine, — and that in that nature He trusted in divine
        power and was never overcome by Satan, and never once yielded in
        thought, word, or action to temptation and sin. And, we are told, that
        if Christ had not taken — really taken — our human nature, with all
        its weaknesses, we could not have empowerment by His grace to obey
        God’s law in our own lives. So we can see that the correct view of the
        Nature of Christ is extremely important, for it is a major basis for the
        great truth that we can, through the strength of Christ’s grace,
        resist and overcome sin.
        Here are a few of the many Spirit of Prophecy
        passages on this important subject. They are very clear and to the
        point:
        "It would have been an almost infinite
        humiliation for the Son of God to take man’s nature, even when Adam
        stood in his innocence in Eden. But Jesus accepted humanity when the
        race had been weakened by four thousand years of sin. Like every child
        of Adam He accepted the results of the working of the great law of
        heredity. What these results were is shown in His earthly ancestors. He
        came with such an heredity to share our sorrows and temptations, and to
        give us the example of a sinless life." — Desire of Ages, 48.
        
        "Satan in heaven had hated Christ for His
        position in the courts of God. He hated Him the more when he himself was
        dethroned. He hated Him who pledged Himself to redeem a race of sinners.
        Yet into the world where Satan claimed dominion God permitted His Son to
        come a helpless babe, subject to the weakness of humanity. He permitted
        Him to meet life’s peril in common with every human soul, to fight the
        battle as every child of humanity must fight it, at the risk of failure
        and eternal loss." — Desire of Ages, 49.
        "Think what Christ’s obedience means to us! It
        means that in His strength we too may obey. Christ was a human being. He
        served His heavenly Father with all the strength of His human nature. He
        has a two-fold nature, at once both human and divine. He is both God and
        man." — 6 Bible Commentary, 1078.
        "The great work of redemption could be carried
        out only by the Redeemer taking the place of fallen Adam. . He would
        take man’s fallen nature and engage to cope with the strong foe who
        triumphed over Adam." — Review, February 24, 1874.
        "The humanity of Christ reached to the very
        depths of human wretchedness and identified itself with the weaknesses
        and necessities of fallen man, while His divine nature grasped the
        Eternal. Christ’s work was to reconcile man to God through His human
        nature, and God to man through His divine nature." — Review,
        August 4,1874.
        "The Son of God humbled Himself and took man’s
        nature after the race had wandered four thousand years from Eden, and
        from their original state of purity and uprightness. Sin had been making
        its terrible marks upon the race for ages; and physical, mental, and
        moral degeneracy prevailed throughout the human family. .Christ bore the
        sins and infirmities of the race as they existed when He came to the
        earth to help man. " — 1 Selected Messages, 267-268.
        "Think of Christ’s humiliation. He took upon
        Himself fallen, suffering human nature, degraded and defiled by sin. He
        endured all the temptations wherewith man is beset. He united humanity
        with divinity, a divine Spirit dwelt in a temple of flesh." — 4
        Bible Commentary, 1147
        "Christ by His own example made it evident that
        man may stand in integrity. Man may have power to resist evil — a
        power that neither earth, nor death, nor hell can master; a power that
        will place them where they may overcome as Christ overcame." —
        Review, February 18, 1890.
        "Christ who knew not the least taint of sin or
        defilement, took our nature in its deteriorated condition. This was
        humiliation greater than finite man can comprehend - - He stooped to
        poverty and to the deepest abasement among men." — Signs, June
        9,1898.
        "Christ did not make believe take human nature,
        He did verily take it. He did in reality possess human nature. ‘As the
        children are partakers of flesh and blood, He also Himself likewise took
        part of the same,’ (Romans 11:3). He was the Son of Mary. He was the
        seed of David according to human descent. " — 5 Bible Commentary,
        1130.
        "It was not a make believe humanity that Christ
        took upon Himself. He took human nature, and lived human nature.
        Christ’s life represents a perfect manhood just that which you may be.
        He was in human nature. He took our infirmities. He was not only made
        flesh, but He was made in the likeness of sinful flesh." — Letter
        No. 106, 1896.
        "The great work of redemption could be carried
        forward only by the Redeemer taking the place of fallen Adam. . He would
        take man’s fallen nature." —  Review, February 24, 1874.
        "Christ, in the wilderness of temptation, stood
        in Adam’s place to bear the test he failed to endure. Here Christ
        overcame in the sinner’s behalf, four thousand years after Adam turned
        his back upon the light of his home. Separated from the presence of God,
        the human family had been departing, every successive generation,
        farther from the original purity, wisdom, and knowledge which Adam
        possessed in Eden. Christ bore the sins and infirmities of the race as
        they existed when He came to earth to help man. In behalf of the race,
        with the weaknesses of fallen man upon Him, He was to stand the
        temptations of Satan upon all points wherewith man would be
        assailed." — 1SM, 267.
        
        "In what contrast is the second Adam as He
        entered the gloomy wilderness to cope with Satan single-handed! Since
        the Fall the race had been decreasing in size and physical strength, and
        sinking lower in the scale of moral worth, up to the period of
        Christ’s advent to the earth. And in order to elevate man, Christ must
        reach him where he was. He took human nature, and bore the infirmities
        and degeneracy of the race." Christ knew that Adam in Eden, with
        his superior advantages, might have withstood the temptations of
        SatanChrist knew that Adam in Eden, with his superior advantages, might
        have withstood the temptations of Satan." — Review, July 28,
        1874.
        "Christ knew that Adam in Eden, with his
        superior advantages, might have withstood the temptations of Satan, and
        conquered him. He also knew that it was not possible for man, out of
        Eden, separated from the light and love of God since the Fall, to resist
        the temptations of Satan in his own strength. In order to bring hope to
        man, and save him from complete ruin, He humbled Himself to take man’s
        nature, that, with His divine power combined with the human, He might
        reach man where he is. He obtains for the fallen sons and daughters of
        Adam that strength which it is impossible for them to gain for
        themselves, that in His name they may overcome the temptations of
        Satan." — Review, August 18, 1874.
        
        "The exalted Son of God in assuming humanity
        draws Himself nearer to man by standing as the sinner’s Substitute. He
        identifies Himself with the sufferings and afflictions of men. He was
        tempted in all points as man is tempted, that He might know how to
        succor those who should be tempted. Christ overcame in the sinner’s
        behalf." — 1 Selected Messages, 271-280.
        "Satan told his angels that when Jesus should
        take fallen man’s nature, he could overpower Him and hinder the
        accomplishment of the plan of salvation. " — Early Writings,
        150-153.
        "Jesus took upon Himself the infirmities and
        bore the griefs and sorrows of humanity, and conquered in our behalf. He
        was made like unto His brethren, with the same susceptibilities, mental
        and physical. He was tempted in all points like as we are yet without
        sin — Review, February 10, 1885.
        "Those who claim that it was not possible for
        Christ to sin, cannot believe that He really took upon Himself human
        nature. " — Manuscript 16, 1890.
        "Bear in mind that Christ’s overcoming and
        obedience is that of a true human being. In our conclusions, we make
        many mistakes because of our erroneous views of the human nature of our
        Lord. When we give, to His human nature, a power that is not possible
        for man to have in his conflicts with Satan, we destroy the completeness
        of His humanity. His imputed grace and power He gives to all who receive
        Him by faith. The obedience of Christ to His Father was the same
        obedience that is required of man." 3SM, 139.
        
        "Man cannot overcome Satan’s temptations
        without divine power to combine with his instrumentality. So with Jesus,
        He could lay hold on divine power. He came not to our world to give the
        obedience of a lesser God to a greater, but as a man to obey God’s
        law, and in this He is our example." OHC, 48.
        
        "The Lord Jesus came to our world, not to reveal
        what a God could do, but what a man could do, through faith in God’s
        power to help in every emergency." — Manuscript 1,1892.
        "As God He could not be tempted: but as a man He
        could be tempted, and that strongly, and could yield to the temptations.
        His human nature must pass through the same test and trial Adam and Eve
        passed through. His human nature was created; it did not even possess
        angelic powers. It was human, identical with our own. He was passing
        over the ground where Adam fell. He was now where, if He endured the
        test and trial in behalf of the fallen race, He would redeem Adam’s
        disgraceful failure and fall, in our own humanity." — 3SM, 129.
        
        "A human body and a human mind were His. He was
        bone of our bone and flesh of our flesh." — 3SM, 129.
        
        "Through being partakers of the divine nature we
        may stand pure and holy and undefiled. The Godhead was not made human,
        and the human was not deified by the blending together of the two
        natures." — Manuscript 94, 1893.
        
        "There is an inexhaustible fund of perfect
        obedience accruing from His obedience. How is it that such an infinite
        treasure is not appropriated? In heaven, the merits of Christ, His
        self-denial, and self-sacrifice, are treasured up as incense, to be
        offered up with the prayers of His people." — General Conference
        Bulletin, 1899.
        "He is a brother in our infirmities, but not in
        possessing like passions.. While He was a child, He thought and spoke as
        a child, but no trace of sin marred the image of God in Him. Yet He was
        not exempt from temptation. He was subject to all the conflicts which we
        have to meet." — 2 Testimonies, 202.
        [Note in the above paragraph that Christ did not have
        our passions — our passionate thoughts, words, or actions. Note in the
        paragraph below that He did have our passions — our inherited
        passionate tendencies. He inherited our weaknesses, but never once did
        He yield to them. He had "no trace of sin’ (paragraph above), and
        "never did He yield to temptation" (paragraph below). Thus He
        could have our passions (passionate inheritance), but not our passions
        (passionate actions).]
        "Though He had all the strength of passion of
        humanity, never did He yield to temptation to do one single act which
        was not pure and elevating and ennobling.’ — In Heavenly Places,
        155.
        "..the soul must purpose the sinful act before
        passion can dominate over reason, or iniquity triumph over
        conscience." — 5 Testimonies, 177.
        "We need not retain one sinful propensity."
        — 7 Bible Commentary, 943.
        "There is no excuse for sinning. A holy temper,
        a Christlike life, is accessible to every repenting, believing child of
        God. As the Son of God was perfect in His life, so His followers are to
        be perfect in their life." — MYP, 136.
        
        "Christ is the ladder that Jacob saw, the base
        resting on the earth, and the topmost round reaching to the gate of
        heaven, to the very threshold of glory. If that ladder had failed by a
        single step of reaching the earth, we should have been lost. But Christ
        reaches us where we are. He took our nature and overcame, that we
        through taking His nature might overcome. Made ‘in the likeness of
        sinful flesh’ (Romans 8:3), He lived a sinless life." — Desire
        of Ages, 311-312.
        
        Conclusion
        
        "When He comes, He is not to cleanse us of our
        sins, to remove from us the defects in our characters, or to cure us of
        the infirmities of our tempers and dispositions. If wrought for us at
        all, this work will all be accomplished before that time.. No work will
        then be done for them [the unsanctified] to remove their defects and
        give them holy characters. The Refiner does not then sit to pursue His
        refining process and remove their sins and corruption. This is all to be
        done in these hours of probation. It is now that this work is to be
        accomplished for us."  — 2 Testimonies, 355.
        "Christ rendered obedience to God, and overcame
        as humanity must overcome. We are led to wrong conclusions because of
        erroneous views of the nature of our Lord. To attribute to His nature a
        power that it is not possible for man to have in his conflicts with
        Satan, is to destroy the obedience that is required of man. Man cannot
        overcome Satan’s temptations except as divine power works through
        humanity. The Lord Jesus came to our world, not to reveal what God in
        His own divine person could do, but what He could do through humanity.
        Through faith man is to be a partaker of the divine nature, and to
        overcome every temptation where with he is beset. It was the Majesty of
        heaven who became a man, who humbled Himself to our human nature; it was
        He who was tempted in the wilderness and endured the contradiction of
        sinners against Himself." — ST April 10, 1893.
        
        "We are not to serve God as if we were not
        human, but we are to serve Him as those who have been redeemed by the
        Son of God, through the righteousness of Christ we shall stand befor God
        pardoned, as if we had never sinned." — Signs 38, August 29,
        1911.
        "But God has met this by sending His own Son
        Jesus Christ to live in that human nature which causes the trouble. And
        while Christ was actually taking upon Himself the sins of men, God
        condemned that sinful nature." —  Romans 8:3, Phillips.
        "The greatest work that can be done in our world
        is to glorify God by living the character of Christ". — 6
        Testimonies, 439.
        "God calls upon us to reach the standard of
        perfection and places before us the example of Christ’s character. In
        His humanity, perfected by a life of constant resistance to evil, the
        Saviour showed that through cooperation with Divinity, human beings man
        in this life attain to perfection of character. This is God’s
        assurance to us that we, too, may obtain complete victory." — 
        Acts of the Apostles, 531.
        "The enemy of God and man is not willing that
        this truth should be clearly presented; for he knows that if the people
        receive it fully, his power will be broken. If he can control minds so
        that doubt and unbelief and darkness shall compose the experience of
        those who claim to be the children of God, he can overcome them with
        temptation. Unless divine power is brought into the experience of the
        people of God, false theories and erroneous ideas will take minds
        captive, Christ and His righteousness will be dropped out of the
        experience of many, and their faith will be without power or life."
        — Gospel Workers, 103-205, 1893.
        "None are living Christians unless they are
        having a daily experience in the things of God, and daily practice
        self-denial cheerfully bearing the cross and following Christ. Every
        living Christian will advance daily in the divine life. As he advances
        toward perfection, he experiences a conversion to God every day; and
        this conversion is not completed until he attains to perfection of
        character, a full preparation for the finishing touch of
        immortality." — 2 Testimonies, 505.
        "Man must do his part; he must be victor on his
        own account, through the strength and grace that Christ gives him. The
        Saviour came to show man how to overcome. All the temptations of Satan,
        Christ met with the Word of God. By trusting in God’s promises, He
        received power to obey God’s commands." — 4 Testimonies, 32-33.
        
        "There are thoughts and feelings suggested and
        aroused by Satan that annoy even the best of men; but if they are not
        cherished, if they are repulsed as hateful, the soul is not contaminated
        with guilt, and no other is defiled by their influence." —
        Review, March 27, 1888.
        "The very image of God is to be reproduced in
        humanity. The honor of God, the honor of Christ, is involved in the
        perfection of the character of His people." — Desire of Ages,
        671.
        "If we will trust Him, and commit our ways to
        Him, He will direct our steps in the very path that will result in our
        obtaining the victory over every evil passion, and every trait of
        character that is unlike the character of our divine Pattern." —
        Our High Calling, 316.
        "How man can be a counterpart of Jesus Christ is
        beyond human comprehension. But the Holy Spirit can strengthen our
        spiritual eyesight." —   Sons and Daughters of God, 34.
        "Scarcely can the human mind comprehend what is
        the breadth and depth and height of the spiritual attainments that can
        be reached by becoming partakers of the divine nature. " — Our
        High Calling, 60.
        "This robe, woven in the loom of heaven, has in
        it not one thread of human devising. Christ in His humanity wrought out
        a perfect character, and this character He offers to impart to us. When
        we submit ourselves to Christ, the heart is united with His heart, the
        will is merged in His will, the mind becomes one with His mind, the
        thoughts are brought into captivity to Him; we live His life. This is
        what it means to be clothed with the garment of His righteousness"
        — Christ’s Object Lessons, 311-312.
        
        "There is an inexhaustible fund of perfect
        obedience accruing from His obedience. How is it, that such an infinite
        treasure is not appropriated? In heaven, the merits of Christ, His
        self-denial, and self-sacrifice, are treasured up as incense, to be
        offered up with the prayers of His people." — General Conference
        Bulletin, 1899.
        The soul must purpose the sinful act before passion
        can dominate over reason, or iniquity triumph over conscience." —
        5 Testimonies, 177.
        "We need not retain one sinful propensity."
        — 7 Bible Commentary, 943.
        "Christ’s identity with man will ever be the
        power of His influence. He became bone of our bone and flesh of our
        flesh . . He clothed His divine nature with the garb of humanity, and
        demonstrated before the heavenly universe, before the unfallen worlds,
        and before the fallen world how much God loves the human race." —
        Manuscript 165, 1899.
        "God has spoken, and He means that man shall
        obey. He does not inquire if it is convenient for man to do so. The Lord
        of life and glory did not consult His convenience or pleasure when he
        left his station of high command to become a man of sorrows and
        acquainted with grief . . Jesus died, not to save man in his sins, but
        from his sins. Man is to leave the error of his ways, to follow the
        example of Christ, to take up his cross and follow Him, denying self and
        obeying God at any cost." — 4 Testimonies, 250-25 1.
        "What Christ was in His perfect humanity, we
        must be, for we must form characters for eternity." — Testimonies
        to Ministers, 183
        "Through faith in Christ every deficiency of
        character may be supplied, every defilement cleansed, every fault
        corrected, every excellence developed." — Education, 257.
        "As a man He supplicated the throne of God till
        His humanity was charged with a heavenly current that should connect
        humanity with divinity. His expediencies to be ours." — Desire of
        Ages, 363.
        "The heavenly intelligences will work with the
        human agent who seeks with determined faith that perfection of character
        which will reach out to perfection in action. To everyone engaged in
        this work Christ says, I am at your right hand to help you." —
        Christs Object Lessons, 332.
        
        "As the will of man cooperates with the will of
        God, it will become omnipotent. Whatever is to be done at His command
        may be accomplished in His strength. All His commands are enablings."
        — Christ’s Object Lessons, 332-333.
        "He knows how strong are the inclinations of the
        natural heart, and He will help in every time of temptation." — 5
        Testimonies, 177.
        "It was necessary for Him to be constantly on
        guard in order to preserve His purity." — Desire of Ages, 71.
        "Today Satan presents the same temptations that
        he presented to Christ, offering us the kingdoms of the world in return
        for our allegiance. But upon him who looks to Jesus as the author and
        finisher of his faith, Satan’s temptations have no power. He can not
        cause to sin the one who will accept by faith the virtues of Him who was
        tempted in all points as we are, yet without sin." — 
        Review, January 28, 1909.
        "Therefore he [Satan] is constantly seeking to
        deceive the followers of Christ with his fatal sophistry that it is
        impossible for them to overcome."— Great Controversy, 489.
        "When it becomes the habit of the soul to
        converse with God, the power of the evil one is broken; for Satan cannot
        abide near the soul that draws nigh unto God." — Our High
        Calling, 96.
        "Enoch’s life and character. . represent the
        lives and characters of all who will be translated when Christ
        comes." — Signs, November 11, 1886.
        "In order for man to retain justification, there
        must be continual obedience, through active faith that works by love and
        purifies the soul." —   1 Selected Messages, 366.
        "Let no one say I cannot remedy my defects of
        character. If you come to this decision, you will certainly fail of
        obtaining everlasting life." — Christ’s Object Lessons, 331.
        "The righteousness of God is absolute. This
        righteousness characterizes all His works, all His laws. As He is, so
        must His people be." — 1 Selected Messages, 198.
        "‘The prince of this world cometh,’ said
        Jesus, ‘and hath nothing in Me.’ John 14:30. There was in Him
        nothing that responded to Satan’s sophistry. He did not consent to
        sin. Not even by a thought did He yield to temptation. So it may be with
        us. Christ’s humanity was united with divinity; He was fitted for the
        conflict by the indwelling of the Holy Spirit. And He came to make us
        partakers of the divine nature. So long as we are united to Him by
        faith, sin has no more dominion over us. God reaches for the hand of
        faith in us to direct it to lay fast hold upon the divinity of Christ,
        that we may attain to perfection of character." — Desire of Ages,