With a Piece of Land and a Comfortable Home. -- Whenever possible, it is the
duty of parents to make homes in the country for their children.
Fathers and mothers who possess a piece of land and a comfortable home are
kings and queens.
Do not consider it a privation when you are called to leave the cities and
move out into the country places. Here there await rich blessings for those who
will grasp them.
Contributes to Economic Security. --Again and again the Lord has instructed
that our people are to take their families away from the cities, into the
country, where they can raise their own provisions; for in the future the
problem of buying and selling will be a very serious one. We should now begin to
heed the instruction given us over and over again: Get out of the cities into
rural districts, where the houses are not crowded closely together, and where
you will be free from the interference of enemies. (For further detailed counsel
on this topic see Country Living .)
Advice to a City Dweller. --It would be well for you to lay by your
perplexing cares and find a retreat in the country, where there is not so strong
an influence to corrupt the morals of the young. True, you would not be entirely
free from annoyances and perplexing cares in the country; but you would there
avoid many evils and close the door against a flood of temptations which
threaten to overpower the minds of your children. They need employment and variety. The sameness of their home makes them uneasy and
restless, and they have fallen into the habit of mingling with the vicious lads
of the town, thus obtaining a street education. . . .
To live in the country would be very beneficial to them; an active,
out-of-door life would develop health of both mind and body. They should have a
garden to cultivate, where they might find both amusement and useful employment.
The training of plants and flowers tends to the improvement of taste and
judgement, while an acquaintance with God's useful and beautiful creations has a
refining and ennobling influence upon the mind, referring it to the Maker and
Master of all.
Rich Blessings Assured Country Dwellers. --The earth has blessings hidden in
her depths for those who have courage and will and perseverance to gather her
treasures. . . . Many farmers have failed to secure adequate returns from their
land because they have undertaken the work as though it was a degrading
employment; they do not see that there is a blessing in it for themselves and
their families.
Labour That Will Quicken the Mind, Refine the Character. --In the cultivation
of the soil the thoughtful worker will find that treasures little dreamed of are
opening up before him. No one can succeed in agriculture or gardening without
attention to the laws involved. The special needs of every variety of plant must
be studied. Different varieties require different soil and cultivation, and
compliance with the laws governing each is the condition of success. The
attention required in transplanting, that not even a root fibre shall be crowded
or misplaced, the care of the young plants, the pruning and watering, the shielding from frost at night and sun by day, keeping out weeds, disease,
and insect pests, the training and arranging, not only teach important lessons
concerning the development of character, but the work itself is a means of
development. In cultivating carefulness, patience, attention to detail,
obedience to law, it imparts a most essential training. The constant contact
with the mystery of life and the loveliness of nature, as well as the tenderness
called forth in ministering to these beautiful objects of God's creation, tends
to quicken the mind and refine and elevate the character.
God Will Instruct and Teach. --He who taught Adam and Eve in Eden how to tend
the garden would instruct men today. There is wisdom for him who holds the plow
and plants and sows the seed. The earth has its concealed treasures, and the
Lord would have thousands and tens of thousands working upon the soil who are
crowded into the cities to watch for a chance to earn a trifle. . . . Those who
will take their families into the country place them where they have fewer
temptations. The children who are with parents that love and fear God are in
every way much better situated to learn of the Great Teacher, who is the source
and fountain of wisdom. They have a much more favourable opportunity to gain a
fitness for the kingdom of heaven.
God's Plan for Israel's Land. --Through disobedience to God Adam and Eve had
lost Eden, and because of sin the whole earth was cursed. But if God's people
followed His instruction, their land would be restored to fertility and beauty.
God Himself gave them directions in regard to the culture of the soil, and they
were to co-operate with Him in its restoration. Thus the whole land, under God's control, would become an object lesson of spiritual truth. As in
obedience to His natural laws the earth should produce its treasures, so in
obedience to His moral law the hearts of the people were to reflect the
attributes of His character.
Find Spiritual Lessons in Daily Living. --God has surrounded us with nature's
beautiful scenery to attract and interest the mind. It is His design that we
should associate the glories of nature with His character. If we faithfully
study the book of nature, we shall find it a fruitful source for contemplating
the infinite love and power of God.
Christ has linked His teaching, not only with the day of rest, but with the
week of toil. . . . In the plowing and sowing, the tilling and reaping, He
teaches us to see an illustration of His work of grace in the heart. So in every
line of useful labour and every association of life, He desires us to find a
lesson of divine truth. Then our daily toil will no longer absorb our attention
and lead us to forget God; it will continually remind us of our Creator and
Redeemer. The thought of God will run like a thread of gold through all our
homely cares and occupations. For us the glory of His face will again rest upon
the face of nature. We shall ever be learning new lessons of heavenly truth and
growing into the image of His purity.
Identical Laws Govern Nature and Mankind. --The Great Teacher brought His
hearers in contact with nature, that they might listen to the voice which speaks
in all created things; and as their hearts became tender and their minds
receptive, He helped them to interpret the spiritual teaching of the scenes upon
which their eyes rested. . . . In His lessons there was something to interest every mind, to
appeal to every heart. Thus the daily task, instead of being a mere round of
toil, bereft of higher thoughts, was brightened and uplifted by constant
reminders of the spiritual and the unseen.
So we should teach. Let the children learn to see in nature an expression of
the love and the wisdom of God; let the thought of Him be linked with bird and
flower and tree; let all things seen become to them the interpreters of the
unseen, and all the events of life be a means of divine teaching.
As they learn thus to study the lessons in all created things and in all
life's experiences, show that the same laws which govern the things of nature
and the events of life are to control us, that they are given for our good, and
that only in obedience to them can we find true happiness and success.
Give Practical Lessons in Agriculture. --Of the almost innumerable lessons
taught in the varied processes of growth, some of the most precious are conveyed
in the Saviour's parable of the growing seed. It has lessons for old and young.
. . .
The germination of the seed represents the beginning of spiritual life, and
the development of the plant is a figure of the development of character. . . .
As parents and teachers try to teach these lessons, the work should be made
practical. Let the children themselves prepare the soil and sow the seed. As
they work, the parent or teacher can explain the garden of the heart, with the
good or bad seed sown there, and that as the garden must be prepared for the
natural seed, so the heart must be prepared for the seed of truth. . . . No one
settles upon a raw piece of land with the expectation that it will at once yield a harvest. Diligent, persevering labour must be put forth in the
preparation of the soil, the sowing of the seed, and the culture of the crop. So
it must be in the spiritual sowing.
Wrong Habits Seen as Weeds. --If possible, the home should be out of the
city, where the children can have ground to cultivate. Let them each have a
piece of ground of their own; and as you teach them how to make a garden, how to
prepare the soil for seed, and the importance of keeping all the weeds pulled
out, teach them also how important it is to keep unsightly, injurious practices
out of the life. Teach them to keep down wrong habits as they keep down the
weeds in their gardens. It will take time to teach these lessons, but it will
pay, greatly pay.
Home Surroundings to Exemplify Our Beliefs. -- Parents are under obligation
to God to make their surroundings such as will correspond to the truth they
profess. They can then give correct lessons to their children, and the children
will learn to associate the home below with the home above. The family here
must, as far as possible, be a model of the one in heaven. Then temptations to
indulge in what is low and grovelling will lose much of their force. Children
should be taught that they are only probationers here, and educated to become
inhabitants of the mansions which Christ is preparing for those who love Him and
keep His commandments. This is the highest duty which parents have to perform.
Parents: Get Homes in the Country. --So long as God gives me power to speak
to our people, I shall continue to call upon parents to leave the cities and get
homes in the country, where they can cultivate the soil and learn from the book
of nature the lessons of purity and simplicity. The things of nature are the Lord's silent ministers, given
to us to teach us spiritual truths. They speak to us of the love of God and
declare the wisdom of the great Master Artist.
I love the beautiful flowers. They are memories of Eden, pointing to the
blessed country into which, if faithful, we shall soon enter. The Lord is
leading my mind to the health-giving properties of the flowers and trees.