The Children's Six Minutes eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 70 pages of information about The Children's Six Minutes.

The Children's Six Minutes eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 70 pages of information about The Children's Six Minutes.

I had another question.  “When they transplant these little trees how do they plant them, haphazard, every-which-way?” “No, indeed,” was his answer, “they are planted in rows, and close together.”  Exactly what we are doing in our church, I thought.  We are growing our girls and boys, and we are keeping them close together, because they are such a help to one another, and there is great inspiration in numbers.

Looking out of the train window at those trees of future forests, I thought of the verse in Isaiah, “The mountains and the trees shall break forth before you into singing, and all the trees of the field shall clap their hands.”  I can hear the mountains and the hills of the Adirondacks singing because of the growing trees, and I hear the mountains and the hills of earth singing because of the millions of growing girls and boys who shall reforest the desolate places of earth.

MEMORY VERSE, Psalm 92:  13

    “Those that be planted in the house of the Lord shall flourish in
    the courts of our God.”

MEMORY HYMN [677]

    "Saviour, like a shepherd lead us."

KNIFE LESSONS

I have here a knife.  It was given me by a friend, a token of his affection and esteem, when I went aboard the steamer in Manila, Philippine Islands, to return to the homeland.  All these years since then the knife has been on my study desk, daily teaching me.  What lessons does this knife teach?

First of all the knife tells me of Strength.  The most important part of this knife is what I call the backbone.  It is the main portion of the knife to which all the blades are fastened, as well as the polished pearl handle.  This would be a weak and useless knife did it not have a backbone.  It says to me every day “Be strong, stand up, have convictions, be steadfast.”

Lesson number two, Discipline.  This knife has been subjected to many trials and tests.  The steel of which these blades are made had to go through a hard, hot, trying process before they were tempered and fit to take an edge and hold it.  Sometimes I rebel about certain processes of the days, then I think of my knife and learn from it the lesson of discipline.

The third lesson this knife teaches me is Neatness.  Now I can picture the man who bought this knife.  As he went into the store, he stood before the glass show case wherein were displayed scores of different kinds of knives.  There were dark knives and light knives, big knives and little knives.  His eye caught this knife, with its graceful lines, its smooth pearl handle, and he said, “That is a neat knife, I’ll take that one.”  People are attracted to you by your neatness.

The fourth lesson is Usefulness.  Really it is quite wonderful the variety of uses to which this knife can be put.  Here is a big blade, and a small blade; here is a blade with a file; folded in the back is a tiny pair of scissors.  So the great test of life is its usefulness.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Children's Six Minutes from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.