-First Published in 1860-
The family Bible! What sweet and
hallowed memories cling like tendrils around that Book of Books!
How familiar its sacred pages! How often in the sunny days of
childhood, we were fed from its manna by our parents. It was
our guide to the opening path of life, and a lamp to the feeble,
faltering steps of youth. Who can forget the family Bible? It
was the household oracle of our grandfathers and grandmothers,--of
our dear parents. It bears the record of their venerated names;
their birth, their baptism, their marriage. How joyfully they
gathered around the cheerful hearth to read this book divine.
How often their hearts drew consolation from its living springs.
What a balm it has poured into bleeding and disconsolate hearts.
It has irradiated with the glories of eternal day, the darkest
chamber of their home. What brilliant hopes and promises it
has borne. Here too are our names, and birth, and baptism, written
by that parental hand which now clasps Jesus' in our Heavenly
home.
"My father read this holy book
To brothers, sisters dear;
How calm was my mother's look,
Who loved God's Word to hear.
Her angel-face--I see it yet!
What thronging memories come?
Again that little group is met
Within the halls of home!"
That old family Bible! Do we not love it? Our
names and our children's names are drawn from it. It is the
message of our Father in Heaven. It is the link which connects
our earthly with our Heavenly home; and when we open its sacred
page, we gaze upon words which our loved ones in Heaven have
whispered, and which dwell even now upon their lips; and which
when we utter them, there is joy in Heaven!
The old family Bible! What an inheritance from
a Christian home! Clasp it, child, to thy heart; it was the
gift of a mother's love! It bears the impress of her hand; it
is the memento of her devotedness to thee; and when just before
her spirit took its flight to a better land, she gave it as
a guide for her child to the same happy home.
"My mother's hand this Bible clasped;
She, dying, gave it me!"
Every Christian home has a family Bible. It is
found in the hut as well as the palace. It is an indispensable
appendage to home. Without it the Christian home would be in
darkness; with it, she is a "light which shinneth in darkness."
It is the chart and compass of the parent and the child in their
pilgrimage to a better home.
"Therein thy dim eyes
Will meet a cheering light; and silent words
Of mercy breathed from heaven, will be exhaled
From the blest page into thy withered heart."
Like an ethereal principle of light and life,
its blessed truths extend with electric force through all the
avenues and elements of the home-existence, "giving music
to language, elevation to thought, vitality to feeling, intensity
to power, beauty and happiness."
The Bible is adapted to the Christian home. It
is the book for the family. It is the guardian of her interests,
the exposition of her duties, her privileges, her hopes, and
her enjoyments. It makes sacred her marriages, furnishes names
for her children, gives the sacrament of her dedication to God,
and consecrates her bereavements. It is the fountain of her
richest blessings, the source of her true consolation, and the
ground of her brightest hope. It is, therefore, the Book of
Home. She may have large and splendid libraries; history, poetry,
philosophy, fiction, yea, all the works of classic Greece and
Rome, may crowd upon her shelves; but of these she will soon
grow wearied, and the dust of neglect will gather thick upon
their gilded leaves; but of the Bible the Christian home can
never become weary. Its sufficiency for all her purposes will
throw a garland of freshness around every page; its variety
and manifoldness; its simplicity and beauty; its depth of thought
and intensity of feeling, adapt it to every capacity and to
every want, to every emergency and to every member of the household.
The little child and the old man, hoary with the frost of many
winters, find an equal interest there. The rich and the poor,
the learned and the ignorant, the high and the low, are alike
enriched from its inexhaustible treasury.
It is a book for the mind, the heart, the conscience,
the will, and the life. It suits the palace and the cottage,
the afflicted and the prosperous, the living and the dying.
It is a comfort to "the house of mourning," and a
check to "the house of feasting." It "giveth
seed to the sower, and bread to the eater." It is simple,
yet grand; mysterious, yet plain; and though from God, it is
nevertheless, within the comprehension of a little child. You
may send your children to school to study other books, from
which they may be educated for this world; but in this Divine
Book they study the science of the eternal world.
The family Bible has given to the Christian home
that unmeasured superiority in all the dignities and decencies
and enjoyments of life, over the home of the heathen. It has
elevated woman, revealed her true mission, developed the true
idea and sacredness of marriage and of the home-relationship;
it has unfolded the holy mission of the father and mother, the
responsibilities of the parent, and the blessings of the child.
Take this book from the family, and she will degenerate into
a mere conventionalism, marriage into a "social contract;"
the spirit of the father and mother will depart; natural affection
will sink to mere brute fondness, and what we now call home
would become a den of sullen selfishness and barbaric lust!
The Bible should, therefore, be the text-book
of home-education. Where it is not, parents are recreant to
their duty. It is the basis of all teaching, because it reveals
"the truth, the way and the life," because it is God's
testimony and message, and is "profitable for doctrine,
for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness,"
and was written "for our learning, that we, through patience
and comfort of the scriptures might have hope," and be
made "wise unto salvation."
"While thou wert teaching my lips to
move
And my heart to rise in prayer,
I learned the way to a home above;
And thou shalt meet me there!"
Its invaluable treasures, its manifoldness, its
beautiful simplicity, its striking narrative, its startling
history, its touches of home-life, its expansive views of human
nature, of this life and of that which is to come, its poetry,
eloquence, and soul-stirring sympathies and aspirations, make
it the book for home-training. These features of its character
will develop in beautiful harmony the whole nature of your child.
Do you wish to inspire them with song? What songs are like those
of Zion? Do you wish them to come under the influence of eloquent
oration? What orations so eloquent as those of the prophets,
of Christ, and of His apostles. Do you desire to refine and
elevate their souls with beauty and sublimity? Here in these
sacred pages is a beauty ever fresh, and a sublimity which towers
in dazzling radiance far beyond the reach of human genius. Thus
"Learning and zeal, from age to age,
Have worshiped, loved, explored the page."
How often is this precious book abused! In many
would-be Christian homes, it is used more for an ornament of
fashion than for a lamp to the Christian's path. We find the
Bible upon their parlor table, but how seldom in the family
room! They make it a part of their fashionable furniture, to
be looked at as a pretty, gilded thing. Its golden clasps and
beautiful binding make it an attractive appendage to the parlor.
Hence they buy the Bible not the truth it contains. They place
it upon the table as such; and indeed many do not even give
it that prominence, but, yielding to the taste of fashion, place
it under the parlor table, and there it rests, unmolested, untouched
and unread even for years. In many professedly religious families
this is their family Bible! Ah! It is not so heartsome as that
well-marked and long-used old Bible which lies upon the table
of the nursery room, speaking of many year's service in family
devotion! The other unused Bible seems like a stranger to the
home-heart, and lies in the parlor just to show their visiting
friends that they have a Bible! Go into the nursery and other
private apartments of that home, and you see no Bible, while
you behold piles of romance and filthy novels,--those exponents
of vitiated taste and a corrupt society, suited to destroy the
young forever;--whose outward appearance indicates a studied
perusal by both parents and children, and shows perhaps that
they have been wept over; and whose inward substance must ever
nauseate healthy reason, as well as poison the heart of youth,
leading them from the sober realities of life into a world of
nonentities.
But upon the family Bible you cannot trace the
hand of diligent piety. It is shoved back into some part of
the room, as a worthless thing, obsolete and superfluous. And
see! It is not even kept in decent order. The dust of many day's
neglect has gathered thick upon its cover. Oh, Christian parents,
when you thus close up the wells of salvation by the trash of
degenerate taste and vitiated morals, you are despising the
testimonies of the Lord, and leading your children step-by-step
to the verge of destruction. You may buy them splendid Bibles,
gilt and clasped with gold, and have their names labeled in
golden letters upon its cover; but if the good old family Bible
is neglected, and the yellow covered literature of the day substituted
in its stead; if you permit them to buy and read love-sick tales
in preference to their Bible, and they see you do the same,
you are but making a mock of God's Word, and must answer before
Him for your children's neglect of its sacred pages.
Let me, therefore, affectionately admonish you
to be faithful to that precious book you call the family Bible.
Read it to your children every day. From its sacred pages teach
them the way to live and the way to die. Let it be an opened,
studied family chart to guide you and them in visions of untold
glory to the many mansions of your Father's offered home in
Heaven. It will soothe your sorrows, calm your fears, strengthen
your faith, brighten your hopes, and remind you of the light
and promise of the blessed coming reunion in Heaven!
"A drop of balm from this rich store,
Hath healed the broken heart once more.
Like angels round a dying bed,
Its truths of Heavenly radiance shed;
And hovering on celestial wings,
Breathe music from unnumbered strings."