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         Testimonies for the Church Volume 3
      
      
        teachers, their characters will not be like the reed trembling in the
      
      
        wind.
      
      
        The severe training of youth, without properly directing them to
      
      
        think and act for themselves as their own capacity and turn of mind will
      
      
        allow, that by this means they may have growth of thought, feelings
      
      
        of self-respect, and confidence in their own ability to perform, will
      
      
        ever produce a class who are weak in mental and moral power. And
      
      
        when they stand in the world to act for themselves they will reveal the
      
      
        fact that they were trained like the animals, and not educated. Their
      
      
        wills, instead of being guided, were forced into subjection by the harsh
      
      
        discipline of parents and teachers.
      
      
        Those parents and teachers who boast of having complete control
      
      
        of the minds and wills of the children under their care would cease
      
      
        their boastings could they trace out the future lives of the children who
      
      
        are thus brought into subjection by force or through fear. These are
      
      
        almost wholly unprepared to share in the stern responsibilities of life.
      
      
        When these youth are no longer under their parents and teachers, and
      
      
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        are compelled to think and act for themselves, they are almost sure to
      
      
        take a wrong course and yield to the power of temptation. They do not
      
      
        make this life a success, and the same deficiencies are seen in their
      
      
        religious life. Could the instructors of children and youth have the
      
      
        future result of their mistaken discipline mapped out before them, they
      
      
        would change their plan of education. That class of teachers who are
      
      
        gratified that they have almost complete control of the wills of their
      
      
        scholars are not the most successful teachers, although the appearance
      
      
        for the time being may be flattering.
      
      
        God never designed that one human mind should be under the
      
      
        complete control of another. And those who make efforts to have the
      
      
        individuality of their pupils merged in themselves, and to be mind,
      
      
        will, and conscience for them, assume fearful responsibilities. These
      
      
        scholars may, upon certain occasions, appear like well-drilled soldiers.
      
      
        But when the restraint is removed, there will be seen a want of in-
      
      
        dependent action from firm principle existing in them. Those who
      
      
        make it their object to so educate their pupils that they may see and
      
      
        feel that the power lies in themselves to make men and women of
      
      
        firm principle, qualified for any position in life, are the most useful
      
      
        and permanently successful teachers. Their work may not show to the
      
      
        very best advantage to careless observers, and their labors may not be