img The American Woman's Home  /  Chapter 1 THE CHRISTIAN FAMILY. | 2.94%
Download App
Reading History
The American Woman's Home

The American Woman's Home

img img img

Chapter 1 THE CHRISTIAN FAMILY.

Word Count: 1630    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

t sustain the many difficult and varied duties of the family state, and thus to render each depart

the family state which Jesus Chri

and wiser members to raise the weaker and more ignorant to equal advantages. The father undergoes toil and self-denial to provide a home, and then the mother becomes a self-sacrificing laborer to train its inmates. The useless, troublesome infant is served in the humblest offices; while both parents unite in t

ker members. Nothing could be more contrary to its first principles than for the older and more capable children to combine to

st place. He chose for his birthplace the most despised village; for his parents the lowest in rank; for his trade, to labor with his hands as a carpenter, being "subject to his parents" thirty years. And, what is very significant, his trade was that which prepares the family home, as if he would teach that the great duty of man is labor-to provide

ers to self-sacrificing labors for the ignorant and weak: if not her own children, then the neglected children of her Father in heaven. She is to rear all under her care to lay

me. But the great stimulus to all these toils, implanted in the heart of every true man, is the desire for a home of his own, and the hopes of paternity. Every man who truly lives for immortality responds to the beatitude, "Children are a heritage from the Lord: blessed is the man that hath his quiver full of t

do, can take a properly qualified female associate, and institute a family of her own, receiving to its heavenly influences the orphan, the sick, the homeless, and the sinful

call a higher place, and yet humble themselves to the lowest in order to aid in training the young, "not as men-pleasers, but as servants to Christ, with good-will doi

d claims, but it was in taking a low place in order to raise others to a higher. The worldling seeks to raise himself and family to

this life shows that children brought up to labor have the fairest chance for a virtuous and prosperous life, and for hope of future eternal blessedness, yet it is the aim of most parents who can do so, to lay up wealth that their children need not labor with the hands as Christ did. And

e who forsake the family state as ordained by God. Thus came great communities of monks and nuns, shut out from the love and labors of a Christian home; thus, also, came the monkish systems of education, collect

the rich, and the powerful are not to labor with the hands, as Christ did, and as Paul did when he would "not eat any man's bread for nau

r and profit, and the last resort of poverty. And so our Lord, who himself took the form of a servant, teaches, "How hardly shall they that have riches enter the kingdom of heaven!"-that kingdom in which all are toiling to raise the weak, ignorant, and sinful to such equality with themselves as the children of a loving family enjoy. One m

he feeling that servants are to work for them, and they themselves are not to work. To the minds of most children and servants, "to be a lady," is almost synonymous with "to be waited on, and do no work," It is the earnest des

Download App
icon APP STORE
icon GOOGLE PLAY