Gold Nugget 243 - Parental Training
Parental Training. ...
In early days this rests chiefly with the mother, and throughout life her moral influence is likely to be the more persuasive. Here is woman’s great work. Man fills the world with the noise of his busy doings. But woman has a no less great and useful task in moulding the characters of the toilers of the future. Yet the father has his duty in parental training; and there are often special circumstances in which his knowledge of the world or his firmness of control is essential.
Let parents feel that nothing can take the place of home training. The Sunday school cannot do the work of the mother’s counsel. No pressure of public duty should let a man excuse himself for neglecting the religious training of his children. He deludes himself if he thinks he can do it by proxy, be the substitute ever so efficient a teacher. Nothing can take the place of the anxious watchfulness of parental love. …
The child has his duty in regard to it as well as the parent. His will is free. The best seed may be wasted on bad soil. It is his duty to treasure up wholesome home lessons as the most valuable portion divided to him. How mad the desire of some to escape from the control of the home to the fascinating liberty of the world, of the perils and deceits of which they are so ignorant? Why should the young man be so anxious to take a journey into a far country out of the sight of those who have his interest most at heart?
Perhaps there have been unwise restraints in the home. But escape from them is no excuse for rushing to the utmost bounds of license.
Sound parental training, well received and followed, is a great boon for the whole of life. It is a source of quiet restfulness. … After the feverish tumult of the day, to retire to rest with hallowed memories loving recalled, what a help it is to peace of heart! … These old memories rise up to cheer in dismal tasks or to warn from deceitful temptations. And if they have become doubly sacred because the voice that spake the words of counsel is hushed in death, shall they not also be more reverently cherished?
Who knows but what those patient, gentle eyes that followed the child in his nursery griefs and joys may be looking down from the heights of heaven to watch him still as he bends to the hard toil of life?
The Pulpit Commentary, Proverbs p. 142-143, Proverbs 6:20-22, (W. F. Adeney)
Gold Nugget 243
Parental Training
