4- Errors In Education.
Many mothers feel that they have not time to instruct
their children, and in order to get them out of the way, and get rid of their
noise and trouble, they send them to school. The school-room is a hard place for
children who have inherited enfeebled constitutions. School-rooms generally have
not been constructed in reference to health, but in regard to cheapness. The
rooms have not been arranged so that they could be ventilated as they should
have been, without exposing the children to severe colds. And the seats have
seldom been made so that the children could sit with ease, and keep their
little, growing frames in a proper posture to insure healthy action of the lungs
and heart. Young children can grow into almost any shape, and can, by habits of
proper exercise and positions of the body, obtain healthy forms. It is
destructive to the health and life of young children for them to sit in the
school-room, upon hard, ill-formed benches, from three to five hours a day,
inhaling the impure air caused by many breaths. The weak lungs become affected,
the brain, from which the nervous energy of the whole system is derived, becomes
enfeebled by being called into active exercise before the strength of the mental
organs is sufficiently matured to endure fatigue.
In the school-room, the foundation has been too surely laid for diseases of
various kinds. But, more especially, that most delicate of all organs, the
brain, has often been permanently injured by too great exercise. This has often
caused inflammation, then dropsy of the head, and convulsions, with their
dreaded results. And the lives of many have been thus sacrificed by ambitious
mothers. Of those children who have apparently had sufficient force of
constitution to survive this treatment, there are very many who carry the
effects of it through life. The nervous energy of the brain becomes so weakened,
that after they come to maturity, it is impossible for them to endure much
mental exercise. The force of some of the delicate organs of the brain seems to
be expended.
And not only has the physical and mental health of children been endangered by
being sent to school at too early a period, but they have been the losers in a
moral point of view. They have had opportunities to become acquainted with
children who were uncultivated in their manners, They were thrown into the
society of the course and rough, who lie, swear, steal, and deceive, and who
delight to impart their knowledge of vice to those younger than themselves.
Young children, if left to themselves, learn the bad more readily than the good.
Bad habits agree best with the natural heart, and the things which they see and
hear in infancy and childhood are deeply imprinted upon their minds, and the bad
seed sown in their young hearts will take root, and will become sharp thorns to
wound the hearts of their parents.
During the first six or seven years of a child's life, special attention should
be given to its physical training, rather than the intellect. After this period,
if the physical constitution is good, the education of both should receive
attention. Infancy extends to the age of six or seven years. Up to this period,
children should be left, like little lambs, to roam around the house and in the
yards, skipping and jumping in the buoyancy of their spirits, free from care and
trouble.
Parents, especially mothers, should be the only teachers of such infant minds.
They should not educate from books. The children will generally be inquisitive
to learn the things of nature. They will ask questions in regard to the things
they see and hear, and parents should improve the opportunity to instruct, and
patiently answer, these little inquirers. They can in this manner get the
advantage of the enemy, and fortify the minds of their children, by sowing good
seed in their hearts, leaving no room for the bad to take root. The mother's
loving instructions is what is needed by children of a tender age in the
formation of character.
The first important lesson for children to learn is the proper denial of
appetite. It is the duty of mothers to attend to the wants of their children, by
soothing and diverting their minds, instead of giving them food, and thus
teaching them that eating is the remedy for life's ills.
If parents had lived healthfully, being satisfied with simple diet, much expense
would have been saved. The father would not have been obliged to labor beyond
his strength, in order to supply the wants of his family. A simple, nourishing
diet would not have had an influence to unduly excite the nervous system and the
animal passions, producing moroseness and irritability. If he had partaken only
of plain food, his head would have been clear, his nerves steady, his stomach in
a healthy condition, and with a pure system, he would have had no loss of
appetite, and the present generation would be in a much better condition than it
now is. But even now, in this late period, something can be done to improve our
condition. Temperance in all things is necessary. A temperate father will not
complain if he has no great variety upon his table. A healthful manner of living
will improve the condition of the family in every sense, and will allow the wife
and mother time to devote to her children. The great study with the parents will
be in what manner they can best train their children for usefulness in this
world, and for Heaven hereafter. They will be content to see their children with
neat, plain, but comfortable, garments, free from embroidery and adornment. They
will earnestly labor to see their children in the possession of the inward
adorning, the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit, which is in the sight of God
of great price.
Before the Christian father leaves his home, to go to his labor, he will gather
his family around him, and bowing before God will commit them to the care of the
Chief Shepherd. He will then go forth to his labor with the love and blessing of
his wife, and the love of his children, to make his heart cheerful through his
laboring hours. And that mother who is aroused to her duty, will realize the
obligations resting upon her to her children in the absence of the father. She
will feel that she lives for her husband and children. By training her children
aright, teaching them habits of temperance and self-control, and teaching them
their duty to God, she is qualifying them to become useful in the world, to
elevate the standard of morals in society, and to reverence and obey the law of
God. Patiently and perseveringly will the godly mother instruct her children,
giving them line upon line, and precept upon precept, not in a harsh, compelling
manner, but in love, and in tenderness; and thus will she win them. They will
consider her lessons of love, and will happily listen to her words of
instruction. 136
Instead of sending her children from her presence, that she may not be troubled
with their noise, and be annoyed with the numerous attentions they would desire,
she will feel that her time cannot be better employed than in soothing, and
diverting their restless, active minds with some amusement, or light, happy
employment. The mother will be amply repaid for the efforts she may make, and
the time she may spend to invent amusement for her children.
Young children love society. They cannot, as a general thing, enjoy themselves
alone, and the mother should feel that, in most cases, the place for her
children, when they are in the house, is in the room she occupies. She can then
have a general oversight of them, and be prepared to set little differences
right, when appealed to by them, and correct wrong habits, or the manifestation
of selfishness or passion, and can give their minds a turn in the right
direction. That which children enjoy, they think mother can be pleased with, and
it is perfectly natural for them to consult mother in little matters of
perplexity. And the mother should not wound the heart of her sensitive child by
treating the matter with indifference, or by refusing to be troubled with such
small matters. That which may be small to the mother is large to them. And a
word of direction or caution, at the right time, will often prove of great
value. An approving glance, a word of encouragement and praise from the mother,
will often cast a sunbeam into their young hearts for a whole day.
The first education children should receive from the mother in infancy, should
be in regard to their physical health. They should be allowed only plain food,
of that quality that will preserve to them the best condition of health, and
that should be partaken of only at regular periods, not oftener than three times
a day, and two meals would be better than three. If children are disciplined
aright, they will soon learn that they can receive nothing by crying or
fretting. A judicious mother will act in training her children, not merely in
regard to her own present comfort, but for their future good. And to this end,
she will teach her children the important lesson of controlling the appetite,
and of self-denial, that they should eat, drink, and dress, in reference to
health.
A well-disciplined family, who love and obey God, will be cheerful and happy.
The father, when he returns from his daily labor, will not bring his
perplexities to his home. He will feel that home and the family circle are too
sacred to be marred with unhappy perplexities. When he left his home, he did not
leave his Saviour and his religion behind. Both were his companions. The sweet
influence of his home, the blessing of his wife, and love of his children, make
his burdens light, and he returns with peace in his heart, and cheerful,
encouraging words for his wife and children, who are waiting to joyfully welcome
his coming. As he bows with his family at the altar of prayer, to offer up his
grateful thanks to God, for his preserving care of himself and loved ones
through the day, angels of God hover in the room, and bear the fervent prayers
of God-fearing parents to Heaven, as sweet incense, which are answered by
returning blessings.
Parents should impress upon their children that it is sin to consult the taste,
to the injury of the stomach. They should impress upon their minds that by
violating the laws of their being, they sin against their Maker. Children thus
educated will not be difficult of restraint. They will not be subject to
irritable, changeable tempers, and will be in a far better condition for
enjoying life. Such children will the more readily and clearly understand their
moral obligations. Children who have been taught to yield their will and wishes
to their parents, will the more easily and readily yield their wills to God, and
will submit to be controlled by the Spirit of Christ. Why so many who claim to
be Christians have numerous trials, which keep the church burdened, is because
they were not correctly trained in their childhood, but were left in a great
measure to form their own character. Their wrong habits, and peculiar, unhappy
dispositions, were not corrected. They were not taught to yield their will to
their parents. Their whole religious experience is affected by their training in
childhood. They were not then controlled. They grew up undisciplined, and now,
in their religious experience, it is difficult for them to yield to that pure
discipline taught in the word of God. Parents should, then, realize the
responsibility resting upon them to educate their children in reference to their
religious experience.
Those who regard the marriage relation as one of God's sacred ordinances,
guarded by his holy precept, will be controlled by the dictates of reason. They
will consider carefully the result of every privilege the marriage relation
grants. Such will feel that their children are precious jewels committed to
their keeping by God, to remove from their natures the rough surface by
discipline, that their luster may appear. They will feel under most solemn
obligations to so form their characters that they may do good in their life,
bless others with their light, and the world be better for their having lived in
it, and they be finally fitted for the higher life, the better world, to shine
in the presence of God and the Lamb forever.
E. W.
5- Obedience to the
Law of God
Mercy and truth are promised to the humble and penitent, and judgments
are prepared for the sinful and rebellious. "Justice and judgment are the
habitation of Thy throne." Ps. 89:14. A wicked and adulterous people will
not escape the wrath of God, the punishment they have justly earned. Man has
fallen, and his is a work of a lifetime, be it longer or shorter, to recover
from his fall, and regain, through Christ, the image of the divine, which he has
lost by sin and continued transgression. God requires a thorough transformation
of soul, body, and spirit, in order to regain the estate lost through Adam. The
Lord mercifully sends rays of light to show man his true condition. If he will
not walk in the light, he manifests a pleasure in darkness. He will not come to
the light lest his deeds should be reproved.
The nominal churches of this day are
filled with fornication and adultery, the result of base, lustful passion, but
these things, to a great extent, are kept covered. Ministers, in high places,
are guilty, yet a cloak of godliness covers their dark deeds, and they pass on
from year to year in their course of hypocrisy. Their sins have reached unto
Heaven.
Fornication and adultery are estimated
by many professing Christians as sins which God winketh at. These sins are
practiced to a great extent. They do not acknowledge the claims of God's law
upon them. They have broken the commandments of the great Jehovah, and are
zealously teaching their hearers to do the same, declaring that the law of God
is abolished, and consequently has no claims upon them. In accordance with this
free state of things, sin does not appear so exceedingly sinful; for by the law
is the knowledge of sin, We may expect to find men among those who thus teach,
who will deceive, and lie, and give loose rein to lustful passions. But men and
women who acknowledge the ten commandments binding, should carry out in their
lives, the principles of all ten of the precepts given in awful grandeur from
Sinai.
The Lord made this special covenant
with ancient Israel: "Now, therefore, if ye will obey my voice indeed, and
keep my covenant, then ye shall be a peculiar treasure unto me above all people;
for all the earth is mine. And ye shall be unto me a kingdom of priests, and an
holy nation." Ex. 19:5, 6. He addresses his commandment-keeping people in
these last days, "But ye are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, an
holy nation, a peculiar people; that ye should show forth the praises of Him who
hath called you out of darkness into his marvelous light." "Dearly
beloved, I beseech you as strangers and pilgrims, abstain from fleshly lusts
which war against the soul." 1 Pet. 2:9, 11.
But all who profess to keep the
commandments of God are not possessing their bodies in sanctification and honor.
They can have a powerful influence if they will be sanctified by the truths they
profess. They profess to be standing upon the elevated platform of eternal
truth, keeping all of God's commandments; therefore, if they indulge in sin, if
they commit fornication and adultery, their crime is of tenfold greater
magnitude than those I have referred to who do not acknowledge the law of God
binding upon them. In a peculiar sense do those who profess to keep God's law
dishonor him and reproach the truth by transgressing that law.
This very sin, fornication, prevailed
among ancient Israel, which brought the signal manifestation of God's
displeasure. The judgments of God followed close upon their heinous sin.
Thousands of them fell, and their polluted bodies were left in the wilderness.
"But with many of them God was not well pleased; for they were overthrown
in the wilderness. Now these things were our examples, to the intent we should
not lust after evil things, as they also lusted. Neither be ye idolaters, as
were some of them; as it is written, The people sat down to eat and drink, and
rose up to play. Neither let us commit fornication, as some of them committed,
and fell in one day three and twenty thousand. Neither let us tempt Christ, as
some of them also tempted, and were destroyed of serpents. Neither murmur ye, as
some of them also murmured, and were destroyed of the destroyer. Now all these
things happened unto them for ensamples; and they are written for our
admonition, upon whom the ends of the world are come. Wherefore let him that
thinketh he standeth, take heed lest he fall." 1 Cor. 10:5-12.
God's people, above all people in the
world, should be patterns of piety, holy in heart and in conversation. The
people whom God has chosen as his peculiar treasure, he requires to be elevated,
refined, sanctified--partakers of the divine nature, having escaped the
corruption that is in the world through lust. If such indulge in sin and
iniquity who make so high a profession, their guilt is very great, because they
have great light, and have by their profession taken their position as God's
special, chosen people, having the law of God written in their hearts. They
signify their loyalty to the God of Heaven by yielding obedience to the laws of
his government. They are God's representatives upon the earth. Any sin or
transgression in them separates them from God, and, in a special manner,
dishonors his name by giving the enemies of God's holy law occasion to reproach
his cause and his people, whom he has called "a chosen generation, a royal
priesthood, an holy nation, a peculiar people," that they should show forth
the praises of Him that hath called them out of darkness into his marvelous
light.
The people who are at war with the law
of the great Jehovah, who consider it a special virtue to talk, and write, and
act, the most bitter and hateful things, to show their contempt of that law, may
make high and exalted profession of love to God, and apparently have much
religious zeal, as did the Jewish chief priests and elders; yet in the day of
God, "Found wanting" will be said to them by the Majesty of Heaven. By
the law is the knowledge of sin. The mirror which discovers to them the defects
in their character, they are infuriated against, because it points out their
sins. Ministers who have rejected the light are fired with madness against God's
holy law, as the Jewish priests were against the Son of God. They are in a
terrible deception, deceiving souls, and being deceived themselves. They will
not come to the light, lest their deeds should be reproved. Such will not be
taught. But the people who profess to keep the law of God, he corrects, he
reproves. He points out their sins, and lays open their iniquity; because he
wishes to separate all sin and wickedness from them, that they may perfect
holiness in his fear, and be prepared to die in the Lord, or to be translated to
Heaven. God will rebuke, reprove, and correct them, that they may be refined,
sanctified, elevated, and finally exalted to his throne.
The professed people of God are not
all holy. Some are corrupt. God is seeking to elevate them; but these refuse to
come up upon a high plane of action. The animal passions bear sway, and the
moral and intellectual are overborne, and made servants to the animal. Those who
do not control their passions cannot appreciate the atonement, or place a right
value upon the worth of the soul. Salvation to them is not experienced nor
understood. The gratification of their animal passions is to them the highest
ambition of their lives. But nothing but purity and holiness will God accept.
One spot, one wrinkle, one defect in the character, will debar them from Heaven,
with all its glories and treasures, forever.
Ample provisions have been made for
all who sincerely, earnestly, and thoughtfully, set about the work of perfecting
holiness in the fear of God. Power and strength, grace and glory, have been
provided through Christ, to be brought by ministering angels to the heirs of
salvation. None are so low, and corrupt, and vile, but that they can find in
Jesus, who died for them, strength, purity, and righteousness, if they will put
away their sins, stop their course of iniquity, and turn with full purpose of
heart to the living God. He is waiting to strip them of their garments, stained
and polluted by sin, and to put upon them the pure robes of righteousness, and
bid them live and not die. In him they may flourish. Their branches will not
wither nor be fruitless. If they abide in him, they can draw sap and nourishment
from him, be imbued with his Spirit, walk even as he walked, overcome as he
overcame, and be exalted to his own right hand.
"Let not sin, therefore, reign in
your mortal body, that ye should obey it, in the lust thereof. Neither yield ye
your members as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin; but yield yourselves
unto God as those that are alive from the dead, and your members as instruments
of righteousness unto God." Rom. 6:12, 13. Professed Christians, if there
is no further light given you than that contained in this text, you will be
without excuse if you suffer yourselves to be controlled by base passions. The
word of God is sufficient to enlighten the most beclouded mind. And it can be
understood by those who have any wish to understand it. But notwithstanding all
this, some of those who profess to make the word of God their study, are found
living in direct opposition to its plainest teachings. But in order to leave men
and women without excuse, God has given plain and pointed testimonies, bringing
them to the word they have neglected to follow. Yet all the light is turned from
by those who serve their own lusts, and they will not cease their course of sin,
but continue to take pleasure in unrighteousness, in the face of the
threatenings and vengeance of God against those who do such things.
E. W.
CONTINUE:
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