Take this child away, and nurse it for me, and I will give thee
thy wages.
Exodus 11:9
The Christian home is a stewardship.
The parents are stewards of God. A steward is a servant of a
particular kind, to whom the master commits a certain portion
of his interest to be prosecuted in his name and by his authority,
and according to his laws and regulations. The steward must
act according to the will of his master, in his dealing with
what is committed into his care. Such was Eliezer in the house
of Abraham; and such was Joseph in the house of Potiphar. One
of the specific duties of a steward was to dispense portions
of food to the different members of the household, to give servants
their portions in due season, and to superintend the general
interest of the master's household.
In a religious sense, a steward is a minister of Christ, whose
duty is to dispense the provisions of the gospel, to preach
its doctrines and to administer its ordinances. It is required
of such that they be found faithful. 1 Corinthians
5
In its application to the Christian home, it expresses its
relation of subordination to God, and the kind of services which
the former must render to the latter. The stewardship of the
home is that official character with which God has invested
in the family. In this sense the proprietorship of parents is
of God. They are invested only with delegated authority. Their
home is held by them only in trust. It belongs to them in the
same sense in which a household belongs to a steward. It is
not at their absolute disposal. It is the "household of
the Lord," and they are to live and rule therein as the
Lord directs. They are to appropriate it and dispose its interests
according to the known law and will of their divine Master,
and in this sense, yield, with their whole household, a voluntary
subordination to His authority.
As a stewardship, God has entrusted the Christian home with
important interests. He has committed to her trust, body and
soul, talents and means of grace. He has entrusted to the parents
the training of their children both for time and eternity. These
children are the heritage of the Lord; they are not at the absolute
disposal of their parents; but merely entrusted to their care
to be educated and dealt with according to the will of God.
There is one great peculiarity in this stewardship
of the Christian family, the absolute identity of interest between
the Master and the steward. The interest of the former is that
also of the latter; and the latter, in promoting the interest
of his Lord, is but advancing his own welfare. Such is the economy
of the gospel, and it is this which makes the servitude of the
Christian so delightful. Faithfulness to God is faithfulness
to our own souls. Parents who are thus faithful to God must
be faithful to themselves and to their children. Thus, then,
the interest of God in our own families is the welfare of all
members. When we act towards our children as God directs, we
are but promoting their greatest welfare. This is one prominent
feature of God's mercy towards us in all His dealing with us.
He identifies His interest with the interest of His people.
This is a powerful incentive to parental integrity, and is beautifully
exemplified in the mother of Moses. When the daughter of Pharaoh
said to her, "Take this child and nurse it for me, and
I will pay thee thy wages," was not the interest of the
queen and the nurse the same? In nursing him for the queen,
that devoted mother nursed him also for herself; and in doing
this, she was also promoting the welfare of her son, and executing
the will of God concerning him. This illustrates the principal
of stewardship in the Christian home. Of every child, God says
to its parents:
"Go nurse it for the King of heaven,
And He will pay thee hire."
Here is the important trust; here, too, is the duty of the
steward. It is a trust from God, and the nursing is for God.
The child is a tender plant, an invaluable treasure, more priceless
than gold, or pearls, or diamonds. Your duty as a steward, is
to nurse it, to cultivate it, to polish the lovely gem, to take
tender care of it. And in doing this for God, are you not also
doing it for the child, yea, if you are Christian parents, for
yourselves? Will not even natural affections, as well as the
discerning eye of faith, like that of the mother of Moses, detect
in this stewardship an identity between the interest of the
Master and the steward? It was not the simple compensation which
stimulated the mother of Moses to accede to the proposition
of Pharaoh's daughter. What cared she for the "hire,"
if she could save her son! This was her great reward.
Thus the interest of the child should be the reward of the
parent. God will, it is true, reward the faithful steward of
the family; but He specially rewards and blesses parental faithfulness
in making His purposes concerning home, identical with the parent's
and the children's welfare. In this domestic stewardship,
"Like warp and woof, all interests
Are woven fast;
Locked in sympathy like the keys
Of an organ vast."
"Fear not, little flock; for it is your Father's good
pleasure to give you the kingdom. And the Lord said, Who then
is that faithful and wise steward, whom his lord shall make
ruler over his household, to give them their portion of meat
in due season? Blessed is that servant, whom his lord when he
cometh shall find so doing. Of a truth I say unto you, that
he will make him ruler over all that he hath. But and if that
servant say in his heart, My lord delayeth his coming; and shall
begin to beat the menservants and maidens, and to eat and drink,
and to be drunken; The lord of that servant will come in a day
when he looketh not for him, and at an hour when he is not aware,
and will cut him in sunder, and will appoint him his portion
with the unbelievers. And that servant, which knew his lord's
will, and prepared not himself, neither did according to his
will, shall be beaten with many stripes." Luke
12:32, 42-47
Here, then, we have the character and duties of the steward
in the Christian home, the rewards of their faithfulness, and
the penalties of their unfaithfulness. As the stewards of God,
we must be faithful, giving the souls as well as the bodies
of our children "their meat in due season; we must not
"waste the goods" of our Lord, but be "blameless,
not self-willed, not soon angry, not given to filthy lucre,
but a lover of hospitality, sober just, holy, temperate, holding
fast the faithful word as we have been taught." As the
faithful stewards of God, we should dedicate our household in
all respects to Him, and make it tributary to His glory. "Seek
ye first the kingdom of heaven, and all these things shall be
added unto you." The unjust steward will seek the world
and the things of the world, its gold, its pleasures and its
honors; and after that seek the kingdom of heaven. But this
is reversing the order of procedure as prescribed by the Master;
it is running counter to His will, and, consequently, wasting
His goods.
But the greatest trust committed to parents is, the souls of
their children; and hence their most responsible duty, as stewards
of God, is to attend to their salvation through Christ Jesus
alone. You should "give them bread of life in due season."
It will be of no avail for you to inquire, "What shall
they eat, what shall they drink, and wherewithal shall they
be clothed," if you neglect this their highest interest
and your greatest trust? "What shall a man give in exchange
for his soul?" It is not the wealth, nor the magnificence
of life which will make your home happy; these are but the outward
and fleeting ornaments of the world, and are too often the gaudy
drapery in which guilt and misery are clothed.
If souls are there "fed upon the sincere milk of the word,"
and "trained up in the ways of the Lord." The training
of the soul for heaven is both the duty and the glory of our
homes. What if parents lay up affluence here for their children,
and secure for them all that the world calls interest, while
they permit their souls to famish, and do not care for the education
of their children's souls! Alas! How many such Christian parents
there are who prostitute this highest interest of home either
at the altar of mammon or of fashion! The precious time and
talents with which God has entrusted them, they squander away
in things of folly and of sin, leaving their precious children
to grow up in spiritual ignorance and wickedness, while the
parents resort to balls and theaters and masquerades, in pursuit
of unhallowed amusement and pleasure.
Such are unnatural parents as well as unjust stewards, and
their homes will ere long be made desolate. Other parents prostitute
the holy trust of home to money. They are "self-willed"
stewards, "given to filthy lucre," who for the sake
of a few dollars, will "waste the goods" of their
Lord, make their homes a drudgery, and work their children like
their horses, bringing them up in ignorance, like "calves
in the stall." They contract the children's whole existence
and worth, as well as, all their capacities, desires and hopes,
in a narrow compass of work and money.
We would direct the attention of such parents to our last thought
upon stewardship of the Christian home, that involves the principle
of accountability. It implies a settlement, a time when the
Master and His steward shall meet together to close accounts.
"Give and account of thy stewardship; for thou mayest be
no longer steward." That time will be when "the dead
both small and great shall stand before God." Then He will
examine into your stewardship. He will review with you all that
He had placed into your trust. How truly rich you will be, if
you will hear,"Well, done good and faithful servant, thou
hast been faithful over a few things; behold I will make thee
ruler over many things; enter thou into the joy of thy Lord!"
No worth of this world can ever compare to being good stewards
of our Master. Let us labor with diligent hearts, full of love
towards the "gems" He has entrusted us with. A great
treasury of worth is in the Christian home.