Fathers to Lead Children to Religious Light, June 10
Except the Lord build the house, they labour in vain that build it.
Psalm 127:1
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What can we say to awaken the moral sensibilities of fathers, that they may
understand and undertake their duty to their offspring? The subject is of intense
interest and importance, having a bearing upon the future welfare of our country.
We would solemnly impress upon fathers, as well as mothers, the grave responsi-
bility they have assumed in bringing children into the world. It is a responsibility
from which nothing but death can free them. True, the chief care and burden
rests upon the mother during the first years of her children’s lives, yet even then
the father should be her stay and counsel, encouraging her to lean upon his large
affections, and assisting her as much as possible....
In that great day of reckoning it will be asked him: Where are the children that
I entrusted to your care to educate for Me, that their lips might speak My praise,
and their lives be as a diadem of beauty in the world, and they live to honor Me
through all eternity?
In some children the moral powers strongly predominate. They have power of
will to control their minds and actions. In others the animal passions are almost
irresistible. To meet these diverse temperaments, which frequently appear in the
same family, fathers, as well as mothers, need patience and wisdom from the
divine Helper....
The father should frequently gather his children around him, and lead their
minds into channels of moral and religious light. He should study their different
tendencies and susceptibilities, and reach them through the plainest avenues. Some
may be best influenced through veneration and the fear of God; others through
the manifestation of His benevolence and wise providence, calling forth their
deep gratitude; others may be more deeply impressed by opening before them
the wonders and mysteries of the natural world, with all its delicate harmony and
beauty, which speak to their souls of Him who is the Creator of the heavens and
the earth, and all the beautiful things therein.
Children who are gifted with the talent or love of music may receive impres-
sions that will be lifelong, by the judicious use of those susceptibilities as the
medium for religious instruction.... Many may be reached best through sacred
pictures, illustrating scenes in the life and mission of Christ....
While there should be a uniformity in the family discipline, it should be varied
to meet the wants of different members of the family. It should be the parents’
study ... to ... inspire them with a desire to attend to the highest intelligence and
perfection of character.—
The Signs of the Times, December 20, 1877
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