Importance of Education
      
      
         67
      
      
        Balanced by religious principle, you may climb to any height you
      
      
        please. We would be glad to see you rising to the noble elevation God
      
      
        designs that you shall reach. Jesus loves the precious youth; and He
      
      
        is not pleased to see them grow up with uncultivated, undeveloped
      
      
        talents. They may become strong men of firm principle, fitted to be
      
      
        intrusted with high responsibilities, and to this end they may lawfully
      
      
        strain every nerve.
      
      
        But never commit so great a crime as to pervert your God-given
      
      
        powers to devil and destroy others. There are gifted men who use their
      
      
        ability to spread moral ruin and corruption; but all such are sowing
      
      
        seed that will produce a harvest which they will not be proud to reap.
      
      
        It is a fearful thing to use God-given abilities in such a way as to
      
      
        scatter blight and woe instead of blessing in society. It is also a fearful
      
      
        thing to fold the talent intrusted to us in a napkin, and hide it away in
      
      
        the world; for this is casting away the crown of life. God claims our
      
      
        service. There are responsibilities for every one to bear; and we can
      
      
        fulfill life’s grand mission only when these responsibilities are fully
      
      
        accepted, and faithfully and conscientiously discharged.
      
      
        Says the wise man, “Remember now thy Creator in the days of thy
      
      
        youth.” But do not for a moment suppose that religion will make you
      
      
        sad and gloomy and will block up the way to success. The religion
      
      
        of Christ does not obliterate or even weaken a single faculty. It in no
      
      
        way incapacitates you for the enjoyment of any real happiness; it is
      
      
        not designed to lessen your interest in life, or to make you indifferent
      
      
        to the claims of friends and society. It does not mantle the life in
      
      
        sackcloth; it is not expressed in deep-drawn sighs and groans. No,
      
      
        no; those who in everything make God first and last and best, are the
      
      
         [84]
      
      
        happiest people in the world. Smiles and sunshine are not banished
      
      
        from their countenance. Religion does not make the receiver coarse
      
      
        and rough, untidy and uncourteous; on the contrary, it elevates and
      
      
        ennobles him, refines his taste, sanctifies his judgment, and fits him
      
      
        for the society of heavenly angels and for the home that Jesus has gone
      
      
        to prepare.
      
      
        Let us never lose sight of the fact that Jesus is a wellspring of
      
      
        joy. He does not delight in the misery of human beings, but loves to
      
      
        see them happy. Christians have many sources of happiness at their
      
      
        command, and they may tell with unerring accuracy what pleasures are
      
      
        lawful and right. They may enjoy such recreations as will not dissipate