The Story of Patriarchs and Prophets
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 12: Abraham in Canaan
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His own example, the silent influence of his daily life, was a
constant lesson. The unswerving integrity, the benevolence and
unselfish courtesy, which had won the admiration of kings, were
displayed in the home. There was a fragrance about the life, a
nobility and loveliness of character, which revealed to all that he
was connected with Heaven. He did not neglect the soul of the
humblest servant. In his household there was not one law for the
master and another for the servant; a royal way for the rich and
another for the poor. All were treated with justice and compassion,
as inheritors with him of the grace of life.
"He will command his . . . household." There would be no
sinful neglect to restrain the evil propensities of his children, no
weak, unwise, indulgent favoritism; no yielding of his conviction
of duty to the claims of mistaken affection. Abraham would not
only give right instruction, but he would maintain the authority
of just and righteous laws.
How few there are in our day who follow this example! On
the part of too many parents there is a blind and selfish sentimentalism,
miscalled love, which is manifested in leaving children,
with their unformed judgment and undisciplined passions,
to the control of their own will. This is the veriest cruelty to the
youth and a great wrong to the world. Parental indulgence causes
disorder in families and in society. It confirms in the young the
desire to follow inclination, instead of submitting to the divine
requirements. Thus they grow up with a heart averse to doing
God's will, and they transmit their irreligious, insubordinate spirit
to their children and children's children. Like Abraham, parents
should command their households after them. Let obedience to [p. 143] parental authority be taught and enforced as the first step in
obedience to the authority of God.
The light esteem in which the law of God is held, even by
religious leaders, has been productive of great evil. The teaching
which has become so widespread, that the divine statutes are no
longer binding upon men, is the same as idolatry in its effect
upon the morals of the people. Those who seek to lessen the
claims of God's holy law are striking directly at the foundation
of the government of families and nations. Religious parents,
failing to walk in His statutes, do not command their household
to keep the way of the Lord. The law of God is not made the
rule of life. The children, as they make homes of their own, feel
under no obligation to teach their children what they themselves
have never been taught. And this is why there are so many godless
families; this is why depravity is so deep and widespread.
Not until parents themselves walk in the law of the Lord
with perfect hearts will they be prepared to command their children
after them. A reformation in this respect is needed—a reformation
which shall be deep and broad. Parents need to reform;
ministers need to reform; they need God in their households. If
they would see a different state of things, they must bring His
word into their families and must make it their counselor. They
must teach their children that it is the voice of God addressed to
them, and is to be implicitly obeyed. They should patiently instruct
their children, kindly and untiringly teach them how to
live in order to please God. The children of such a household are
prepared to meet the sophistries of infidelity. They have accepted
the Bible as the basis of their faith, and they have a foundation
that cannot be swept away by the incoming tide of skepticism.
In too many households prayer is neglected. Parents feel that
they have no time for morning and evening worship. They cannot
spare a few moments to be spent in thanksgiving to God for
His abundant mercies—for the blessed sunshine and the showers
of rain, which cause vegetation to flourish, and for the guardianship
of holy angels. They have no time to offer prayer for divine
help and guidance and for the abiding presence of Jesus in the
household. They go forth to labor as the ox or the horse goes,
without one thought of God or heaven. They have souls so precious
that rather than permit them to be hopelessly lost, the Son
of God gave His life to ransom them; but they have little more [p. 144] appreciation of His great goodness than have the beasts that
perish.
Like the patriarchs of old, those who profess to love God
should erect an altar to the Lord wherever they pitch their tent.
If ever there was a time when every house should be a house of
prayer, it is now. Fathers and mothers should often lift up their
hearts to God in humble supplication for themselves and their
children. Let the father, as priest of the household, lay upon the
altar of God the morning and evening sacrifice, while the wife
and children unite in prayer and praise. In such a household Jesus
will love to tarry.
From every Christian home a holy light should shine forth.
Love should be revealed in action. It should flow out in all home
intercourse, showing itself in thoughtful kindness, in gentle,
unselfish courtesy. There are homes where this principle is carried
out—homes where God is worshiped and truest love reigns. From
these homes morning and evening prayer ascends to God as sweet
incense, and His mercies and blessings descend upon the suppliants
like the morning dew.
A well-ordered Christian household is a powerful argument
in favor of the reality of the Christian religion—an argument that
the infidel cannot gainsay. All can see that there is an influence
at work in the family that affects the children, and that the God
of Abraham is with them. If the homes of professed Christians
had a right religious mold, they would exert a mighty influence
for good. They would indeed be the "light of the world." The
God of heaven speaks to every faithful parent in the words
addressed to Abraham: "I know him, that he will command his
children and his household after him, and they shall keep the
way of the Lord, to do justice and judgment; that the Lord
may bring upon Abraham that which He hath spoken of him."
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