THE DUTIES OF PARENTS
Bishop J C Ryle of Liverpool 1816-1900
"Train up a child in the way he
should go; and when he is old, he will not depart from it."
(Proverbs 22: 6)
I SUPPOSE that most professing Christians are acquainted with the text at the
head of this page. The sound of it is probably familiar to your ears, like an
old tune. It is likely you have heard it, or read it, talked of it, or quoted
it, many a time. Is it not so?
But, after all, how little is the substance of this text regarded! The doctrine
it contains appears scarcely known, the duty it puts before us seems fearfully
seldom practiced. Reader, do I not speak the truth?
It cannot be said that the subject is a new one. The world is old, and we have
the experience of nearly six thousand years to help us. We live in days when
there is a mighty zeal for education in every quarter. We hear of new schools
rising on all sides. We are told of new systems, and new books for the young, of
every sort and description. And still for all this, the vast majority of
children are manifestly not trained in the way they should go, for when they
grow up to man's estate, they do not walk with God.
Now how shall we account for this state of things ? The plain truth is, the
Lord's commandment in our text is not regarded; and therefore the Lord's promise
in our text is not fulfilled.
Reader, these things may well give rise to great searchings of heart. Suffer
then a word of exhortation from a minister, about the right training of
children. Believe me, the subject is one that should come home to every
conscience, and make every one ask himself the question, "Am I in this
matter doing what I can?"
It is a subject that concerns almost all. There is hardly a household that it
does not touch. Parents, nurses, teachers, godfathers, godmothers, uncles,
aunts, brothers, sisters, all have an interest in it. Few can be found, I think,
who might not influence some parent in the management of his family, or affect
the training of some child by suggestion or advice. All of us, I suspect, can do
something here, either directly or indirectly, and I wish to stir up all to bear
this in remembrance.
It is a subject, too, on which all concerned are in great danger of coming short
of their duty. This is pre-eminently a point in which men can see the faults of
their neighbours more clearly than their own. They will often bring up their
children in the very path which they have denounced to their friends as unsafe.
They will see motes in other men's families, and overlook beams in their own.
They will be quick sighted as eagles in detecting mistakes abroad, and yet blind
as bats to fatal errors which are daily going on at home. They will be wise
about their brother's house, but foolish about their own flesh and blood. Here,
if anywhere, we have need to suspect our own judgment. This, too, you will do
well to bear in mind.
As a minister, I cannot help remarking that there is hardly any subject about
which people seem so tenacious as they are about their children. I have
sometimes been perfectly astonished at the slowness of sensible Christian
parents to allow that their own children are in fault, or deserve blame. There
are not a few persons to whom I would far rather speak about their own sins,
than tell them their children had done anything wrong.
Come now, and let me place before you a few hints about right training. God the
Father, God the Son, God the Holy Ghost bless them, and make them words in
season to you all. Reject them not because they are blunt and simple; despise
them not because they contain nothing new. Be very sure, if you would train
children for heaven, they are hints that ought not to be lightly set aside.
1. First, then, if you would train your children rightly, train them in
the way they should go, and not in the way that they would.
Remember children are born with a decided bias towards evil, and therefore
if you let them choose for themselves, they are certain to choose wrong.
The mother cannot tell what her tender infant may grow up to be, tall or short,
weak or strong, wise or foolish he may be any of these things or not, it is all
uncertain. But one thing the mother can say with certainty: he will have a
corrupt and sinful heart. It is natural to us to do wrong.
"Foolishness," says Solomon, "is bound in the heart of a
child" (Prov. 22:15). "A child left to himself bringeth his mother to
shame" (Prov. 24:15). Our hearts are like the earth on which we tread; let
it alone, and it is sure to bear weeds.
If, then, you would deal wisely with your child, you must not leave him to the
guidance of his own will. Think for him, judge for him, act for him, just as you
would for one weak and blind; but for pity's sake, give him not up to his own
wayward tastes and inclinations. It must not be his likings and wishes that are
consulted. He knows not yet what is good for his mind and soul, any more than
what is good for his body. You do not let him decide what he shall eat, and what
he shall drink, and how he shall be clothed. Be consistent, and deal with his
mind in like manner. Train him in the way that is scriptural and right, and not
in the way that he fancies.
If you cannot make up your mind to this first principle of Christian training,
it is useless for you to read any further. Self-will is almost the first thing
that appears in a child's mind; and it must be your first step to resist it.
2. Train up your child with all tenderness, affection, and patience.
I do not mean that you are to spoil him, but I do mean that you should let
him see that you love him. Love should be the silver thread that runs through
all your conduct. Kindness, gentleness, long-suffering, forbearance, patience,
sympathy, a willingness to enter into childish troubles, a readiness to take
part in childish joys, these are the cords by which a child may be led most
easily, these are the clues you must follow if you would find the way to his
heart.
Few are to be found, even among grown-up people, who are not more easy to draw
than to drive. There is that in all our minds which rises in arms against
compulsion; we set up our backs and stiffen our necks at the very idea of a
forced obedience. We are like young horses in the hand of a breaker: handle them
kindly, and make much of them, and by and by you may guide them with thread; use
them roughly and violently, and it will be many a month before you get the
mastery of them at all.
Now children's minds are cast in much the same mould as our own. Sternness and
severity of manner chill them and throw them back. It shuts up their hearts, and
you will weary yourself to find the door. But let them only see that you have an
affectionate feeling towards them, that you are really desirous to make them
happy, and do them good, that if you punish them, it is intended for their
profit, and that, like the pelican, you would give your heart's blood to nourish
their souls; let them see this, I say, and they will soon be all your own. But
they must be wooed with kindness, if their attention is ever to be won.
And surely reason itself might teach us this lesson. Children are weak and
tender creatures, and, as such, they need patient and considerate treatment. We
must handle them delicately, like frail machines, lest by rough fingering we do
more harm than good. They are like young plants, and need gentle watering,
often, but little at a time.
We must not expect all things at once. We must remember what children are, and
teach them as they are able to bear. Their minds are like a lump of metal not to
be forged and made useful at once, but only by a succession of little blows.
Their understandings are like narrow-necked vessels: we must pour in the wine of
knowledge gradually, or much of it will be spilled and lost. "Line upon
line, and precept upon precept, here a little and there a little," must be
our rule. The whetstone does its work slowly, but frequent rubbing will bring
the scythe to a fine edge. Truly there is need of patience in training a child,
but without it nothing can be done.
Nothing will compensate for the absence of this tenderness and love. A minister
may speak the truth as it is in Jesus, clearly, forcibly, unanswerably; but if
he does not speak it in love, few souls will be won. Just so you must set before
your children their duty, command, threaten, punish, reason, but if affection be
wanting in your treatment, your labour will be all in vain.
Love is one grand secret of successful training. Anger and harshness may
frighten, but they will not persuade the child that you are right; and if he
sees you often out of temper, you will soon cease to have his respect. A father
who speaks to his son as Saul did to Jonathan (1 Sam. 20:30), need not expect to
retain his influence over that son's mind.
Try hard to keep up a hold on your child's affections. It is a dangerous thing
to make your children afraid of you. Anything is almost better than reserve and
constraint between your child and yourself; and this will come in with fear.
Fear puts an end to openness of manner; fear leads to concealment; fear sows the
seed of much hypocrisy, and leads to many a lie. There is a mine of truth in the
Apostle's words to the Colossians: "Fathers, provoke not your children to
anger, lest they be discouraged" (Col. iii. 21). Let not the advice it
contains be overlooked.
3. Train your children with an abiding persuasion on your mind that much
depends upon you.
Grace is the strongest of all principles. See what a revolution grace
effects when it comes into the heart of an old sinner, how it overturns the
strongholds of Satan, how it casts down mountains, fills up valleys, makes
crooked things straight, and new creates the whole man. Truly nothing is
impossible to grace.
Nature, too, is very strong. See how it struggles against the things of the
kingdom of God, how it fights against every attempt to be more holy, how it
keeps up an unceasing warfare within us to the last hour of life. Nature indeed
is strong. But after nature and grace, undoubtedly, there is nothing more
powerful than education. Early habits (if I may so speak) are everything with
us, under God. We are made what we are by training. Our character takes the form
of that mould into which our first years are cast.'
"He has seen but little of life who does not discern everywhere the effect
of education on men's opinions and habits of thinking. The children bring out of
the nursery that which displays itself throughout their lives." [Cecil].
We depend, in a vast measure, on those who bring us up. We get from them a
colour, a taste, a bias which cling to us more or less all our lives. We catch
the language of our nurses and mothers, and learn to speak it almost insensibly,
and unquestionably we catch something of their manners, ways, and mind at the
same time. Time only will show, I suspect, how much we all owe to early
impressions, and how many things in us may be traced up to seeds sown in the
days of our very infancy, by those who were about us. A very learned Englishman,
Mr. Locke, has gone so far as to say: "That of all the men we meet with,
nine parts out of ten are what they are, good or bad, useful or not, according
to their education."
And all this is one of God's merciful arrangements. He gives your children a
mind that will receive impressions like moist clay. He gives them a disposition
at the starting-point of life to believe what you tell them, and to take for
granted what you advise them, and to trust your word rather than a stranger's.
He gives you, in short, a golden opportunity of doing them good. See that the
opportunity be not neglected, and thrown away. Once let slip, it is gone for
ever.
Beware of that miserable delusion into which some have fallen, that parents can
do nothing for their children, that you must leave them alone, wait for grace,
and sit still. These persons have wishes for their children in Balaam's fashion,
they would like them to die the death of the righteous man, but they do nothing
to make them live his life. They desire much, and have nothing. And the devil
rejoices to see such reasoning, just as he always does over anything which seems
to excuse indolence, or to encourage neglect of means.
I know that you cannot convert your child. I know well that they who are born
again are born, not of the will of man, but of God. But I know also that God
says expressly, "Train up a child in the way he should go," and that
He never laid a command on man which He would not give man grace to perform. And
I know, too, that our duty is not to stand still and dispute, but to go forward
and obey. It is just in the going forward that God will meet us. The path of
obedience is the way in which He gives the blessing. We have only to do as the
servants were commanded at the marriage feast in Cana, to fill the water-pots
with water, and we may safely leave it to the Lord to turn that water into wine.
4. Train with this thought continually before your eyes that the soul of
your child is the first thing to be considered.
Precious, no doubt, are these little ones in your eyes; but if you love
them, think often of their souls. No interest should weigh with you so much as
their eternal interests. No part of them should be so dear to you as that part
which will never die. The world, with all its glory, shall pass away; the hills
shall melt; the heavens shall be wrapped together as a scroll; the sun shall
cease to shine. But the spirit which dwells in those little creatures, whom you
love so well, shall outlive them all, and whether in happiness or misery (to
speak as a man) will depend on you.
This is the thought that should be uppermost on your mind in all you do for your
children. In every step you take about them, in every plan, and scheme, and
arrangement that concerns them, do not leave out that mighty question, "How
will this affect their souls?" Soul love is the soul of all love. To pet
and pamper and indulge your child, as if this world was all he had to look to,
and this life the only season for happiness to do this is not true love, but
cruelty. It is treating him like some beast of the earth, which has but one
world to look to, and nothing after death. It is hiding from him that grand
truth, which he ought to be made to learn from his very infancy,. that the chief
end of his life is the salvation of his soul.
A true Christian must be no slave to fashion, if he would train his child for
heaven. He must not be content to do things merely because they are the custom
of the world; to teach them and instruct them in certain ways, merely because it
is usual; to allow them to read books of a questionable sort, merely because
everybody else reads them; to let them form habits of a doubtful tendency,
merely because they are the habits of the day. He must train with an eye to his
children's souls. He must not be ashamed to hear his training called singular
and strange. What if it is? The time is short, the fashion of this world passeth
away. He that has trained his children for heaven, rather than for earth, for
God, rather than for man, - he is the parent that will be called wise at last.
5. Train your child to a knowledge of the Bible.
You cannot make your children love the Bible, I allow. None but the Holy
Ghost can give us a heart to delight in the Word. But you can make your children
acquainted with the Bible; and be sure they cannot be acquainted with that
blessed book too soon, or too well. A thorough knowledge of the Bible is the
foundation of all clear views of religion. He that is well-grounded in it will
not generally be found a waverer, and carried about by every wind of new
doctrine. Any system of training which does not make a knowledge of Scripture
the first thing is unsafe and unsound.
You have need to be careful on this point just now, for the devil is abroad, and
error abounds. Some are to be found amongst us who give the Church the honour
due to Jesus Christ. Some are to be found who make the sacraments saviours and
passports to eternal life. And some are to be found in like manner who honour a
catechism more than the Bible, or fill the minds of their children with
miserable little story-books, instead of the Scripture of truth. But if you love
your children, let the simple Bible be everything in the training of their
souls; and let all other books go down and take the second place.
Care not so much for their being mighty in the catechism, as for their being
mighty in the Scriptures. This is the training, believe me, that God will
honour. The Psalmist says of Him, " Thou hast magnified Thy Word above all
Thy name" (Ps 138:2); and I think that He gives an especial blessing to all
who try to magnify it among men.
See that your children read the Bible reverently. Train them to look on it, not
as the word of men, but as it is in truth, the Word of God, written by the Holy
Ghost Himself, all true, all profitable, and able to make us wise unto
salvation, through faith which is in Christ Jesus.
See that they read it regularly. Train them to regard it as their soul's daily
food, as a thing essential to their soul's daily health. I know well you can not
make this anything more than a form; but there is no telling the amount of sin
which a mere form may indirectly restrain.
See that they read it all. You need not shrink from bringing any doctrine before
them. You need not fancy that the leading doctrines of Christianity are things
which children cannot understand. Children understand far more of the Bible than
we are apt to suppose.
Tell them of sin, its guilt, its consequences, its power, its vileness: you will
find they can comprehend something of this. Tell them of the Lord Jesus Christ,
and His work for our salvation, the atonement, the cross, the blood, the
sacrifice, the intercession: you will discover there is something not beyond
them in all this. Tell them of the work of the Holy Spirit in man's heart, how
He changes, and renews, and sanctifies, and purifies: you will soon see they can
go along with you in some measure in this. In short, I suspect we have no idea
how much a little child can take in of the length and breadth of the glorious
gospel. They see far more of these things than we suppose.
As to the age when the religious instruction of a child should begin, no general
rule can be laid down. The mind seems to open in some children much more quickly
than in others. We seldom begin too early. There are wonderful examples on
record of what a child can attain to, even at three years old. Fill their minds
with Scripture. Let the Word dwell in them richly. Give them the Bible, the
whole Bible, even while they are young.
6. Train them to a habit of prayer.
Prayer is the very life-breath of true religion. It is one of the first
evidences that a man is born again. "Behold," said the Lord of Saul,
in the day he sent Ananias to him, "Behold, he prayeth" (Acts 9:11).
He had begun to pray, and that was proof enough.
Prayer was the distinguishing mark of the Lord's people in the day that there
began to be a separation between them and the world. "Then began men to
call upon the name of the Lord" (Gen. 4:26). Prayer is the peculiarity of
all real Christians now. They pray, for they tell God their wants, their
feelings, their desires, their fears; and mean what they say. The nominal
Christian may repeat prayers, and good prayers too, but he goes no further.
Prayer is the turning-point in a man's soul. Our ministry is unprofitable, and
our labour is vain, till you are brought to your knees. Till then, we have no
hope about you. Prayer is one great secret of spiritual prosperity. When there
is much private communion with God, your soul will grow like the grass after
rain; when there is little, all will be at a standstill, you will barely keep
your soul alive. Show me a growing Christian, a going forward Christian, a
strong Christian, a flourishing Christian, and sure am I, he is one that speaks
often with his Lord. He asks much, and he has much. He tells Jesus everything,
and so he always knows how to act. Prayer is the mightiest engine God has placed
in our hands. It is the best weapon to use in every difficulty, and the surest
remedy in every trouble. It is the key that unlocks the treasury of promises,
and the hand that draws forth grace and help in time of need. It is the silver
trumpet God commands us to sound in all our necessity, and it is the cry He has
promised always to attend to, even as a loving mother to the voice of her child.
Prayer is the simplest means that man can use in coming to God. It is within
reach of all, the sick, the aged, the infirm, the paralytic, the blind, the
poor, the unlearned, all can pray. It avails you nothing to plead want of
memory, and want of learning, and want of books, and want of scholarship in this
matter. So long as you have a tongue to tell your soul's state, you may and
ought to pray. Those words, "Ye have not, because ye ask not" (Jas.
4:2), will be a fearful condemnation to many in the day of judgement.
Parents, if you love your children, do all that lies in your power to train them
up to a habit of prayer. Show them how to begin. Tell them what to say.
Encourage them to persevere. Remind them if they become careless and slack about
it. Let it not be your fault, at any rate, if they never call on the name of the
Lord.
This, remember, is the first step in religion which a child is able to take.
Long before he can read, you can teach him to kneel by his mother's side, and
repeat the simple words of prayer and praise which she puts in his mouth. And as
the first steps in any undertaking are always the most important, so is the
manner in which your children's prayers are prayed, a point which deserves your
closest attention. Few seem to know how much depends on this. You must beware
lest they get into a way of saying them in a hasty, careless, and irreverent
manner. You must beware of giving up the oversight of this matter to servants
and nurses, or of trusting too much to your children doing it when left to
themselves. I cannot praise that mother who never looks after this most
important part of her child's daily life herself. Surely if there be any habit
which your own hand and eye should help in forming, it is the habit of prayer.
Believe me, if you never hear your children pray yourself, you are much to
blame. You are little wiser than the bird described in Job, "which leaveth
her eggs in the earth, and warmeth them in the dust, and forgetteth that the
foot may crush them, or that the wild beast may break them. She is hardened
against her young ones, as though they were not hers: her labour is in vain
without fear" (Job 34:14-16).
Prayer is, of all habits, the one which we recollect the longest. Many a
grey-headed man could tell you how his mother used to make him pray in the days
of his childhood. Other things have passed away from his mind perhaps. The
church where he was taken to worship, the minister whom he heard preach, the
companions who used to play with him, all these, it may be, have passed from his
memory, and left no mark behind. But you will often find it is far different
with his first prayers. He will often be able to tell you where he knelt, and
what he was taught to say, and even how his mother looked all the while. It will
come up as fresh before his mind's eye as if it was but yesterday.
Reader, if you love your children, I charge you, do not let the seed-time of a
prayerful habit pass away unimproved. If you train your children to anything,
train them, at least, to a habit of prayer.
7. Train them to habits of diligence, and regularity about public means of
grace.
Tell them of the duty and privilege of going to the house of God, and
joining in the prayers of the congregation. Tell them that wherever the Lord's
people are gathered together, there the Lord Jesus is present in an especial
manner, and that those who absent themselves must expect, like the Apostle
Thomas, to miss a blessing. Tell them of the importance of hearing the Word
preached, and that it is God's ordinance for converting, sanctifying, and
building up the souls of men. Tell them how the Apostle Paul enjoins us not
"to forsake the assembling of ourselves together, as the manner of some
is" (Heb. 10:25); but to exhort one another, to stir one another up to it,
and so much the more as we see the day approaching.
I call it a sad sight in a church when nobody comes up to the Lord's table but
the elderly people, and the young men and the young women all turn away. But I
call it a sadder sight still when no children are to be seen in a church,
excepting those who come to the Sunday School, and are obliged to attend. Let
none of this guilt lie at your doors. There are many boys and girls in every
parish, besides those who come to school, and you who are their parents and
friends should see to it that they come with you to church.
Do not allow them to grow up with a habit of making vain excuses for not coming.
Give them plainly to understand, that so long as they are under your roof it is
the rule of your house for every one in health to honour the Lord's house upon
the Lord's day, and that you reckon the Sabbath-breaker to be a murderer of his
own soul.
See to it too, if it can be so arranged, that your children go with you to
church, and sit near you when they are there. To go to church is one thing, but
to behave well at church is quite another. And believe me, there is no security
for good behaviour like that of having them under your own eye.
The minds of young people are easily drawn aside, and their attention lost, and
every possible means should be used to counteract this. I do not like to see
them coming to church by themselves, they often get into bad company by the way,
and so learn more evil on the Lord's day than in all the rest of the week.
Neither do I like to see what I call "a young people's corner" in a
church. They often catch habits of inattention and irreverence there, which it
takes years to unlearn, if ever they are unlearned at all. What I like to see is
a whole family sitting together, old and young, side by side, men, women, and
children, serving God according to their households.
But there are some who say that it is useless to urge children to attend means
of grace, because they cannot understand them.
I would not have you listen to such reasoning. I find no such doctrine in the
Old Testament. When Moses goes before Pharaoh (Ex. 10:9), I observe he says,
"We will go with our young and with our old, with our sons and with our
daughters: for we must hold a feast unto the Lord." When Joshua read the
law (Josh. 8:35), I observe, "There was not a word which Joshua read not
before all the congregation of Israel, with the women and the little ones, and
the strangers that were conversant among them." "Thrice in the
year," says Ex. 34:23, "shall all your men children appear before the
Lord God, the God of Israel." And when I turn to the New Testament, I find
children mentioned there as partaking in public acts of religion as well as in
the Old. When Paul was leaving the disciples at Tyre for the last time, I find
it said (Acts 11:5)," They all brought us on our way, with wives and
children, till we were out of the city: and we kneeled down on the shore, and
prayed."
Samuel, in the days of his childhood, appears to have ministered unto the Lord
some time before he really knew Him. "Samuel did not yet know the Lord,
neither was the word of the Lord yet revealed unto him" (1 Sam. 3: 7). The
Apostles themselves do not seem to have understood all that our Lord said at the
time that it was spoken: "These things understood not His disciples at the
first: but when Jesus was glorified, then remembered they that these things were
written of Him" (John 12:16).
Parents, comfort your minds with these examples. Be not cast down because your
children see not the full value of the means of grace now. Only train them up to
a habit of regular attendance. Set it before their minds as a high, holy, and
solemn duty, and believe me, the day will very likely come when they will bless
you for your deed.
8. Train them to a habit of faith.
I mean by this, you should train them up to believe what you say. You should
try to make them feel confidence in your judgment, and respect your opinions, as
better than their own. You should accustom them to think that, when you say a
thing is bad for them, it must be bad, and when you say it is good for them, it
must be good; that your knowledge, in short, is better than their own, and that
they may rely implicitly on your word. Teach them to feel that what they know
not now, they will probably know hereafter, and to be satisfied there is a
reason and a needs-be for everything you require them to do.
Who indeed can describe the blessedness of a real spirit of faith? Or rather,
who can tell the misery that unbelief has brought upon the world? Unbelief made
Eve eat the forbidden fruit, she doubted the truth of God's word: "Ye shall
surely die." Unbelief made the old world reject Noah's warning, and so
perish in sin. Unbelief kept Israel in the wilderness, it was the bar that kept
them from entering the promised land. Unbelief made the Jews crucify the Lord of
glory, they believed not the voice of Moses and the prophets, though read to
them every day. And unbelief is the reigning sin of man's heart down to this
very hour, unbelief in God's promises, unbelief in God's threatenings, unbelief
in our own sinfulness, unbelief in our own danger, unbelief in everything that
runs counter to the pride and worldliness of our evil hearts. Reader, you train
your children to little purpose if you do not train them to a habit of implicit
faith, faith in their parents' word, confidence that what their parents say must
be right.
I have heard it said by some, that you should require nothing of children which
they cannot understand that you should explain and give a reason for everything
you desire them to do. I warn you solemnly against such a notion. I tell you
plainly, I think it an unsound and rotten principle. No doubt it is absurd to
make a mystery of everything you do, and there are many things which it is well
to explain to children, in order that they may see that they are reasonable and
wise. But to bring them up with the idea that they must take nothing on trust,
that they, with their weak and imperfect understandings, must have the "
why " and the "wherefore" made clear to them at every step they
take, this is indeed a fearful mistake, and likely to have the worst effect on
their minds.
Reason with your child if you are so disposed, at certain times, but never
forget to keep him in mind (if you really love him) that he is but a child after
all, that he thinks as a child, he understands as a child, and therefore must
not expect to know the reason of everything at once.
Set before him the example of Isaac, in the day when Abraham took him to offer
him on Mount Moriah (Gen. 23). He asked his father that single question,
"Where is the lamb for a burnt-offering?" and he got no answer but
this, "God will provide Himself a lamb." How, or where, or whence, or
in what manner, or by what means, all this Isaac was not told; but the answer
was enough. He believed that it would be well, because his father said so, and
he was content.
Tell your children, too, that we must all be learners in our beginnings, that
there is an alphabet to be mastered in every kind of knowledge, that the best
horse in the world had need once to be broken, that a day will come when they
will see the wisdom of all your training. But in the meantime if you say a thing
is right, it must be enough for them, they must believe you, and be content.
Parents, if any point in training is important, it is this. I charge you by the
affection you have to your children, use every means to train them up to a habit
of faith.
9. Train them. to a habit of obedience.
This is an object which it is worth any labour to attain. No habit, I
suspect, has such an influence over our lives as this. Parents, determine to
make your children obey you, though it may cost you much trouble, and cost them
many tears. Let there be no questioning, and reasoning, and disputing, and
delaying, and answering again. When you give them a command, let them see
plainly that you will have it done.
Obedience is the only reality. It is faith visible, faith acting, and faith
incarnate. It is the test of real discipleship among the Lord's people. "Ye
are My friends if ye do whatsoever I command you" (John 15: 14). It ought
to be the mark of well-trained children, that they do whatsoever their parents
command them. Where, in deed, is the honour which the fifth commandment enjoins,
if fathers and mothers are not obeyed cheerfully, willingly, and at once?
Early obedience has all Scripture on its side. It is in Abraham's praise, not
merely he will train his family, but "he will command his children, and his
household after him" (Gen. 18: 19). It is said of the Lord Jesus Christ
Himself, that when "He was young He was subject to Mary and Joseph"
(Luke 2:51). Observe how implicitly Joseph obeyed the order of his father Jacob
(Gen. 27: 13). See how Isaiah speaks of it as an evil thing, when "the
child shall behave himself proudly against the ancient" (Isa. 3:5). Mark
how the Apostle Paul names disobedience to parents as one of the bad signs of
the latter days (2 Tim. 3:2). Mark how he singles out this grace of requiring
obedience as one that should adorn a Christian minister: "a bishop must be
one that ruleth well his own house, having his children in subjection with all
gravity." And again, "Let the deacons rule their children and their
own houses well " (1 Tim. 3: 4, 12). And again, an elder must be one
"having faithful children, children not accused of riot, or unruly"
(Tit. 1:6).
Parents, do you wish to see your children happy? Take care, then, that you train
them to obey when they are spoken to, to do as they are bid. Believe me, we are
not made for entire independence, we are not fit for it. Even Christ's freemen
have a yoke to wear, they "serve the Lord Christ" (Col. 3: 24).
Children cannot learn too soon that this is a world in which we are not all
intended to rule, and that we are never in our right place until we know how to
obey our betters. Teach them to obey while young, or else they will be fretting
against God all their lives long, and wear themselves out with the vain idea of
being independent of His control.
Reader, this hint is only too much needed. You will see many in this day who
allow their children to choose and think for themselves long before they are
able, and even make excuses for their disobedience, as if it were a thing not to
be blamed. To my eyes, a parent always yielding, and a child always having its
own way, are a most painful sight ; painful, because I see God's appointed order
of things inverted and turned upside down; painful, because I feel sure the
consequence to that child's character in the end will be self-will, pride, and
self-conceit. You must not wonder that men refuse to obey their Father which is
in heaven, if you allow them, when children, to disobey their father who is upon
earth.
Parents, if you love your children, let obedience be a motto and a watchword
continually before their eyes.
10. Train them to a habit of always speaking the truth.
Truth-speaking is far less common in the world than at first sight we are
disposed to think. The whole truth, and nothing but the truth, is a golden rule
which many would do well to bear in mind. Lying and prevarication are old sins.
The devil was the father of them, he deceived Eve by a bold lie, and ever since
the fall it is a sin against which all the children of Eve have need to be on
their guard.
Only think how much falsehood and deceit there is in the world! How much
exaggeration! How many additions are made to a simple story! How many things
left out, if it does not serve the speaker's interest to tell them! How few
there are about us of whom we can say, we put unhesitating trust in their word !
Verily the ancient Persians were wise in their generation: it was a leading
point with them in educating their children, that they should learn to speak the
truth. What an awful proof it is of man's natural sinfulness, that it should be
needful to name such a point at all!
Reader, I would have you remark how often God is spoken of in the Old Testament
as the God of truth. Truth seems to be especially set before us as a leading
feature in the character of Him with whom we have to do. He never swerves from
the straight line. He abhors lying and hypocrisy. Try to keep this continually
before your children's minds. Press upon them at all times, that less than the
truth is a lie; that evasion, excuse-making, and exaggeration are all halfway
houses towards what is false, and ought to be avoided. Encourage them in any
circumstances to be straightforward, and, whatever it may cost them, to speak
the truth.
I press this subject on your attention, not merely for the sake of your
children's character in the world, though I might dwell much on this, I urge it
rather for your own comfort and assistance in all your dealings with them. You
will find it a mighty help indeed, to be able always to trust their word. It
will go far to prevent that habit of concealment, which so unhappily prevails
sometimes among children. Openness and straightforwardness depend much upon a
parent's treatment of this matter in the days of our infancy.
11. Train them to a habit of always redeeming the time.
Idleness is the devil's best friend. It is the surest way to give him an
opportunity of doing us harm. An idle mind is like an open door, and if Satan
does not enter in himself by it, it is certain he will throw in something to
raise bad thoughts in our souls.
No created being was ever meant to be idle. Service and work is the appointed
portion of every creature of God. The angels in heaven work, they are the Lord's
ministering servants, ever doing His will. Adam, in Paradise, had work, he was
appointed to dress the garden of Eden, and to keep it. The redeemed saints in
glory will have work, "They rest not day and night singing praise and glory
to Him who bought them." And man, weak, sinful man, must have something to
do, or else his soul will soon get into an unhealthy state. We must have our
hands filled, and our minds occupied with something, or else our imaginations
will soon ferment and breed mischief.
And what is true of us, is true of our children too. Alas, indeed, for the man
that has nothing to do! The Jews thought idleness a positive sin: it was a law
of theirs that every man should bring up his son to some useful trade, and they
were right. They knew the heart of man better than some of us appear to do.
Idleness made Sodom what she was. "This was the iniquity of thy sister
Sodom, pride, fullness of bread, and abundance of idleness was in her"
(Ezek. 16:49). Idleness had much to do with David's awful sin with the wife of
Uriah. I see in 2 Sam. 11 that Joab went out to war against Ammon, "but
David tarried still at Jerusalem." Was not that idle? And then it was that
he saw Bathsheba, and the next step we read of is his tremendous and miserable
fall.
Verily, I believe that idleness has led to more sin than almost any other habit
that could be named. I suspect it is the mother of many a work of the flesh, the
mother of adultery, fornication, drunkenness, and many other deeds of darkness
that I have not time to name. Let your own conscience say whether I do not speak
the truth. You were idle, and at once the devil knocked at the door and came in.
And indeed I do not wonder ; everything in the world around us seems to teach
the same lesson. It is the still water which becomes stagnant and impure: the
running, moving streams are always clear. If you have steam machinery, you must
work it, or it soon gets out of order. If you have a horse, you must exercise
him; he is never so well as when he has regular work. If you would have good
bodily health yourself, you must take exercise. If you always sit still, your
body is sure at length to complain. And just so is it with the soul. The active
moving mind is a hard mark for the devil to shoot at. Try to be always full of
useful employment, and thus your enemy will find it difficult to get room to sow
tares.
Reader, I ask you to set these things before the minds of your children. Teach
them the value of time, and try to make them learn the habit of using it well.
It pains me to see children idling over what they have in hand, whatever it may
be. I love to see them active and industrious, and giving their whole heart to
all they do; giving their whole heart to lessons, when they have to learn;
giving their whole heart even to their amusements, when they go to play.
But if you love them well, let idleness be counted a sin in your family.
12. Train them with a constant fear of over-indulgence.
This is the one point of all on which you have most need to be on your
guard. It is natural to be tender and affectionate towards your own flesh and
blood, and it is the excess of this very tenderness and affection which you have
to fear. Take heed that it does not make you blind to your children's faults,
and deaf to all advice about them. Take heed lest it make you overlook bad
conduct, rather than have the pain of inflicting punishment and correction.
I know well that punishment and correction are disagreeable things. Nothing is
more unpleasant than giving pain to those we love, and calling forth their
tears. But so long as hearts are what hearts are, it is vain to suppose, as a
general rule, that children can ever be brought up without correction.
Spoiling is a very expressive word, and sadly full of meaning. Now it is the
shortest way to spoil children to let them have their own way, to allow them to
do wrong and not to punish them for it. Believe me, you must not do it, whatever
pain it may cost you unless you wish to ruin your children's souls.
You cannot say that Scripture does not speak expressly on this subject: "He
that spareth his rod, hateth his son; but he that loveth him, chasteneth him
betimes" (Prov. 12:24). "Chasten thy son while there is hope, and let
not thy soul spare for his crying" (Prov. 19:18). "Foolishness is
bound in the heart of a child: but the rod of correction shall drive it from
him" (Prov. 22:15). "Withhold not correction from the child, for if
thou beatest him with the rod he shall not die. Thou shalt beat him with the
rod, and deliver his soul from hell" (Prov. 23:13, 14). "The rod and
reproof give wisdom: but a child left to himself bringeth his mother to
shame." "Correct thy son, and he shall give thee rest, yea, he shall
give delight to thy soul" (Prov. 29:15, 17).
How strong and forcible are these texts! How melancholy is the fact, that in
many Christian families they seem almost unknown! Their children need reproof,
but it is hardly ever given; they need correction, but it is hardly ever
employed. And yet this book of Proverbs is not obsolete and unfit for
Christians. It is given by inspiration of God, and profitable. It is given for
our learning, even as the Epistles to the Romans and Ephesians. Surely the
believer who brings up his children without attention to its counsel is making
himself wise above that which is written, and greatly errs.
Fathers and mothers, I tell you plainly, if you never punish your children when
they are in fault, you are doing them a grievous wrong. I warn you, this is the
rock on which the saints of God, in every age, have only too frequently made
shipwreck. I would fain persuade you to be wise in time, and keep clear of it.
See it in Eli's case. His sons Hophni and Phinehas "made themselves vile,
and he restrained them not." He gave them no more than a tame and lukewarm
reproof, when he ought to have rebuked them sharply. In one word, he honoured
his sons above God. And what was the end of these things? He lived to hear of
the death of both his sons in battle, and his own grey hairs were brought down
with sorrow to the grave (1 Sam. 2:22- 29, 3:13).
See, too, the case of David. Who can read without pain the history of his
children, and their sins? Amnon's incest, Absalom's murder and proud rebellion,
Adonijah's scheming ambition: truly these were grievous wounds for the man
after God's own heart to receive from his own house. But was there no fault on
his side? I fear there can be no doubt there was. I find a clue to it all in the
account of Adonijah in 1 Kings 1:6: "His father had not displeased him at
any time in saying, Why hast thou done so?" There was the foundation of all
the mischief. David was an over-indulgent father, a father who let his children
have their own way, and he reaped according as he had sown.
Parents, I beseech you, for your children's sake, beware of over-indulgence. I
call on you to remember, it is your first duty to consult their real interests,
and not their fancies and likings; to train them, not to humour them to profit,
not merely to please.
You must not give way to every wish and caprice of your child's mind, however
much you may love him. You must not let him suppose his will is to be
everything, and that he has only to desire a thing and it will be done. Do not,
I pray you, make your children idols, lest God should take them away, and break
your idol, just to convince you of your folly.
Learn to say "No" to your children. Show them that you are able to
refuse whatever you think is not fit for them. Show them that you are ready to
punish disobedience, and that when you speak of punishment, you are not only
ready to threaten, but also to perform. Do not threaten too much. Threatened
folks, and threatened faults, live long. Punish seldom, but really and in good
earnest, frequent and slight punishment is a wretched system indeed.
Some parents and nurses have a way of saying, "Naughty child," to a
boy or girl on every slight occasion, and often without good cause. It is a very
foolish habit. Words of blame should never be used without real reason.
As to the best way of punishing a child, no general rule can be laid down. The
characters of children are so exceedingly different, that what would be a severe
punishment to one child, would be no punishment at all to another. I only beg to
enter my decided protest against the modern notion that no child ought ever to
be whipped. Doubtless some parents use bodily correction far too much, and far
too violently; but many others, I fear, use it far too little.
Beware of letting small faults pass unnoticed under the idea "it is a
little one." There are no little things in training children; all are
important. Little weeds need plucking up as much as any. Leave them alone, and
they will soon be great.
Reader, if there be any point which deserves your attention, believe me, it is
this one. It is one that will give you trouble, I know. But if you do not take
trouble with your children when they are young, they will give you trouble when
they are old. Choose which you prefer.
13. Train them remembering continually how God trains His children.
The Bible tells us that God has an elect people, a family in this world. All
poor sinners who have been convinced of sin, and fled to Jesus for peace, make
up that family. All of us who really believe on Christ for salvation are its
members.
Now God the Father is ever training the members of this family for their
everlasting abode with Him in heaven. He acts as a husbandman pruning his vines,
that they may bear more fruit. He knows the character of each of us, our
besetting sins, our weaknesses, our peculiar infirmities, our special wants. He
knows our works and where we dwell, who are our companions in life, and what are
our trials, what our temptations, and what are our privileges. He knows all
these things, and is ever ordering all for our good. He allots to each of us, in
His providence, the very things we need, in order to bear the most fruit, as
much of sunshine as we can stand, and as much of rain, as much of bitter things
as we can bear, and as much of sweet. Reader, if you would train your children
wisely, mark well how God the Father trains His. He doeth all things well; the
plan which He adopts must be right.
See, then, how many things there are which God withholds from His children. Few
could be found, I suspect, among them who have not had desires which He has
never been pleased to fulfil. There has often been some one thing they wanted to
attain, and yet there has always been some barrier to prevent attainment. It has
been just as if God was placing it above our reach, and saying, "This is
not good for you; this must not be." Moses desired exceedingly to cross
over Jordan, and see the goodly land of promise; but you will remember his
desire was never granted.
See, too, how often God leads His people by ways which seem dark and mysterious
to our eyes. We cannot see the meaning of all His dealings with us; we cannot
see the reasonableness of the path in which our feet are treading. Sometimes so
many trials have assailed us, so many difficulties encompassed us, that we have
not been able to discover the needs-be of it all. It has been just as if our
Father was taking us by the hand into a dark place and saying, "Ask no
questions, but follow Me." There was a direct road from Egypt to Canaan,
yet Israel was not led into it; but round, through the wilderness. And this
seemed hard at the time. "The soul of the people," we are told,
"was much discouraged because of the way" (Exod.13:17; Num. 21:4).
See, also, how often God chastens His people with trial and affliction. He sends
them crosses and disappointments; He lays them low with sickness; He strips them
of property and friends; He changes them from one position to another; He visits
them with things most hard to flesh and blood; and some of us have well-nigh
fainted under the burdens laid upon us. We have felt pressed beyond strength,
and have been almost ready to murmur at the hand which chastened us. Paul the
Apostle had a thorn in the flesh appointed him, some bitter bodily trial, no
doubt, though we know not exactly what it was. But this we know, he besought the
Lord thrice that it might be removed; yet it was not taken away (2 Cor. 12:8,
9).
Now, reader, notwithstanding all these things, did you ever hear of a single
child of God who thought his Father did not treat him wisely? No, I am sure you
never did. God's children would always tell you, in the long run, it was a
blessed thing they did not have their own way, and that God had done far better
for them than they could have done for themselves. Yes! And they could tell you,
too, that God's dealings had provided more happiness for them than they ever
would have obtained themselves, and that His way, however dark at times, was the
way of pleasantness and the path of peace.
I ask you to lay to heart the lesson which God's dealings with His people is
meant to teach you. Fear not to withhold from your child anything you think will
do him harm, whatever his own wishes may be. This is God's plan.
Hesitate not to lay on him commands, of which he may not at present see the
wisdom, and to guide him in ways which may not now seem reasonable to his mind.
This is God's plan.
Shrink not from chastising and correcting him whenever you see his soul's health
requires it, however painful it may be to your feelings; and remember medicines
for the mind must not be rejected because they are bitter. This is God's plan.
And be not afraid, above all, that such a plan of training will make your child
unhappy. I warn you against this delusion. Depend on it, there is no surer road
to unhappiness than always having our own way. To have our wills checked and
denied is a blessed thing for us; it makes us value enjoyments when they come.
To be indulged perpetually is the way to be made selfish; and selfish people and
spoiled children, believe me, are seldom happy.
Reader, be not wiser than God; train your children as He trains His.
14. Train them remembering continually the influence; of your own example.
Instruction, and advice, and commands will profit little, unless they are
backed up by the pattern of your own life. Your children will never believe you
are in earnest, and really wish them to obey you, so long as your actions
contradict your counsel. Archbishop Tillotson made a wise remark when he said,
"To give children good instruction, and a bad example, is but beckoning to
them with the head to show them the way to heaven, while we take them by the
hand and lead them in the way to hell."
We little know the force and power of example. No one of us can live to himself
in this world; we are always influencing those around us, in one way or another,
either for good or for evil, either for God or for sin. They see our ways, they
mark our conduct, they observe our behaviour, and what they see us practise,
that they may fairly suppose we think right. And never, I believe, does example
tell so powerfully as it does in the case of parents and children.
Fathers and mothers, do not forget that children learn more by the eye than they
do by the ear. No school will make such deep marks on character as home. The
best of schoolmasters will not imprint on their minds as much as they will pick
up at your fireside. Imitation is a far stronger principle with children than
memory. What they see has a much stronger effect on their minds than what they
are told.
Take care, then, what you do before a child. It is a true proverb, "Who
sins before a child, sins double." Strive rather to be a living epistle of
Christ, such as your families can read, and that plainly too. Be an example of
reverence for the Word of God, reverence in prayer, reverence for means of
grace, reverence for the Lord's day. Be an example in words, in temper, in
diligence, in temperance, in faith, in charity, in kindness, in humility. Think
not your children will practise what they do not see you do. You are their model
picture, and they will copy what you are. Your reasoning and your lecturing,
your wise commands and your good advice; all this they may not understand, but
they can understand your life.
Children are very quick observers; very quick in seeing through some kinds of
hypocrisy, very quick in finding out what you really think and feel, very quick
in adopting all your ways and opinions. You will often find as the father is, so
is the son.
Remember the word that the conqueror Caesar always used to his soldiers in a
battle. He did not say "Go forward," but "Come." So it must
be with you in training your children. They will seldom learn habits which they
see you despise, or walk in paths in which you do not walk yourself. He that
preaches to his children what he does not practise, is working a work that never
goes forward. It is like the fabled web of Penelope of old, who wove all day,
and unwove all night. Even so, the parent who tries to train without setting a
good example is building with one hand, and pulling down with the other.
15. Train them remembering continually the power of sin.
I name this shortly, in order to guard you against unscriptural
expectations.
You must not expect to find your children's minds a sheet of pure white paper,
and to have no trouble if you only use right means. I warn you plainly you will
find no such thing. It is painful to see how much corruption and evil there is
in a young child's heart, and how soon it begins to bear fruit. Violent tempers,
self-will, pride, envy, sullenness, passion, idleness, selfishness, deceit,
cunning, falsehood, hypocrisy, a terrible aptness to learn what is bad, a
painful slowness to learn what is good, a readiness to pretend anything in order
to gain their own ends, all these things, or some of them, you must be prepared
to see, even in your own flesh and blood. In little ways they will creep out at
a very early age; it is almost startling to observe how naturally they seem to
spring up. Children require no schooling to learn to sin.
But you must not be discouraged and cast down by what you see. You must not
think it a strange and unusual thing, that little hearts can be so full of sin.
It is the only portion which our father Adam left us; it is that fallen nature
with which we come into the world; it is that inheritance which belongs to us
all. Let it rather make you more diligent in using every means which seem most
likely, by God's blessing, to counteract the mischief. Let it make you more and
more careful, so far as in you lies, to keep your children out of the way of
temptation.
Never listen to those who tell you your children are good, and well brought up,
and can be trusted. Think rather that their hearts are always inflammable as
tinder. At their very best, they only want a spark to set their corruptions
alight. Parents are seldom too cautious. Remember the natural depravity of your
children, and take care.
16. Train them remembering continually the promises of Scripture.
I name this also shortly, in order to guard you against discouragement.
You have a plain promise on your side, "Train up your child in the way he
should go, and when he is old he shall not depart from it" (Prov. 22:6).
Think what it is to have a promise like this. Promises were the only lamp of
hope which cheered the hearts of the patriarchs before the Bible was written.
Enoch, Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, all lived on a few promises, and
prospered in their souls. Promises are the cordials which in every age have
supported and strengthened the believer. He that has got a plain text upon his
side need never be cast down. Fathers and mothers, when your hearts are failing,
and ready to halt, look at the word of this text, and take comfort.
Think who it is that promises. It is not the word of a man, who may lie or
repent; it is the word of the King of kings, who never changes. Hath He said a
thing, and shall He not do it? Or hath He spoken, and shall He not make it good?
Neither is anything too hard for Him to perform. The things that are impossible
with men are possible with God. Reader, if we get not the benefit of the promise
we are dwelling upon, the fault is not in Him, but in ourselves.
Think, too, what the promise contains, before you refuse to take comfort from
it. It speaks of a certain time when good training shall especially bear fruit,
"when a child is old." Surely there is comfort in this. You may not
see with your own eyes the result of careful training, but you know not what
blessed fruits may not spring from it, long after you are dead and gone. It is
not God's way to give everything at once. "Afterwards' is the time when He
often chooses to work, both in the things of nature and in the things of grace.
"Afterward" is the season when affliction bears the peaceable fruit of
righteousness (Heb. 12:11). "Afterward" was the time when the son who
refused to work in his father's vineyard repented and went (Matt. 21:29). And
"afterward" is the time to which parents must look forward if they see
not success at once, you must sow in hope and plant in hope.
Cast thy bread upon the waters," saith the Spirit, "for thou shalt
find it after many days" (Eccles.11:1). Many children, I doubt not, shall
rise up in the day of judgment, and bless their parents for good training, who
never gave any signs of having profited by it during their parents' lives. Go
forward then in faith, and be sure that your labour shall not be altogether
thrown away. Three times did Elijah stretch himself upon the widow's child
before it revived. Take example from him, and persevere.
17. Train them, lastly, with continual prayer for a blessing on all you
do.
Without the blessing of the Lord, your best endeavours will do no good. He
has the hearts of all men in His hands, and except He touch the hearts of your
children by His Spirit, you will weary yourself to no purpose. Water, therefore,
the seed you sow on their minds with unceasing prayer. The Lord is far more
willing to hear than we to pray; far more ready to give blessings than we to ask
them ; but He loves to be entreated for them. And I set this matter of prayer
before you, as the top-stone and seal of all you do. I suspect the child of many
prayers is seldom cast away.
Look upon your children as Jacob did on his; he tells Esau they are "the
children which God hath graciously given thy servant" (Gen. 33:5). Look on
them as Joseph did on his; he told his father, "They are the sons whom God
hath given me" (Gen. 48:9). Count them with the Psalmist to be "an
heritage and reward from the Lord" (Ps. 127: 3). And then ask the Lord,
with a holy boldness, to be gracious and merciful to His own gifts. Mark how
Abraham intercedes for Ishmael, because he loved him, "Oh that Ishmael
might live before thee" (Gen. 17:18). See how Manoah speaks to the angel
about Samson, "How shall we order the child, and how shall we do unto
him?" (Judg. 13:12). Observe how tenderly Job cared for his children's
souls, "He offered burnt-offerings according to the number of them all, for
he said, It may be my sons have sinned, and cursed God in their hearts. Thus did
Job continually" (Job 1:5). Parents, if you love your children, go and do
likewise. You cannot name their names before the mercy-seat too often.
And now, reader, in conclusion, let me once more press upon you the necessity
and importance of using every single means in your power, if you would train
children for heaven.
I know well that God is a sovereign God, and doeth all things according to the
counsel of His own will. I know that Rehoboam was the son of Solomon, and
Manasseh the son of Hezekiah, and that you do not always see godly parents
having a godly seed. But I know also that God is a God who works by means, and
sure am I, if you make light of such means as I have mentioned, your children
are not likely to turn out well.
Fathers and mothers, you may take your children to be baptized, and have them
enrolled in the ranks of Christ's Church; you may get godly sponsors to answer
for them, and help you by their prayers; you may send them to the best of
schools, and give them Bibles and Prayer Books, and fill them with head
knowledge but if all this time there is no regular training at home, I tell you
plainly, I fear it will go hard in the end with your children's souls. Home is
the place where habits are formed; home is the place where the foundations of
character are laid; home gives the bias to our tastes, and likings, and
opinions. See then, I pray you, that there be careful training at home. Happy
indeed is the man who can say, as Bolton did upon his dying bed, to his
children, "I do believe not one of you will dare to meet me before the
tribunal of Christ in an unregenerate state."
Fathers and mothers, I charge you solemnly before God and the Lord Jesus Christ,
take every pains to train your children in the way they should go. I charge you
not merely for the sake of your children's souls; I charge you for the sake of
your own future comfort and peace. Truly it is your interest so to do. Truly
your own happiness in great measure depends on it. Children have ever been the
bow from which the sharpest arrows have pierced man's heart. Children have mixed
the bitterest cups that man has ever had to drink. Children have caused the
saddest tears that man has ever had to shed. Adam could tell you so; Jacob could
tell you so; David could tell you so. There are no sorrows on earth like those
which children have brought upon their parents. Oh! take heed, lest your own
neglect should lay up misery for you in your old age. Take heed, lest you weep
under the ill treatment of a thankless child, in the days when your eye is dim,
and your natural force abate.
If ever you wish your children to be the restorers of your life, and the
nourishers of your old age, if you would have them blessings and not curses joys
and not sorrows Judahs and not Reubens Ruths and not Orpahs, if you would not,
like Noah, be ashamed of their deeds, and, like Rebecca, be made weary of your
life by them: if this be your wish, remember my advice betimes, train them while
young in the right way.
And as for me, I will conclude by putting up my prayer to God for all who read
this paper, that you may all be taught of God to feel the value of your own
souls. This is one reason why baptism is too often a mere form, and Christian
training despised and disregarded. Too often parents feel not for themselves,
and so they feel not for their children. They do not realize the tremendous
difference between a state of nature and a state of grace, and therefore they
are content to let them alone.
Now the Lord teach you all that sin is that abominable thing which God hateth.
Then, I know you will mourn over the sins of your children, and strive to pluck
them out as brands from the fire.
The Lord teach you all how precious Christ is, and what a mighty and complete
work He bath done for our salvation. Then, I feel confident you will use every
means to bring your children to Jesus, that they may live through Him.
The Lord teach you all your need of the Holy Spirit, to renew, sanctify, and
quicken your souls. Then, I feel sure you will urge your children to pray to Him without ceasing, and never rest till He has come down into their hearts with
power, and made them new creatures.
The Lord grant this, and then I have a good hope that you will indeed train up
your children well, train well for this life, and train well for the life to
come; train well for earth, and train well for heaven; train them for God, for
Christ, and for eternity.