Mrs Whittelsey's Magazine for Mothers and Daughters eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 496 pages of information about Mrs Whittelsey's Magazine for Mothers and Daughters.

Mrs Whittelsey's Magazine for Mothers and Daughters eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 496 pages of information about Mrs Whittelsey's Magazine for Mothers and Daughters.

The Young Men’s Christian Association.—­By Mrs.
  L. H. Sigourney. 228

To Fathers.—­By Amicus. 7

To my Father. 318

Trials. 227

Why are we not Christians? 346

Woman.—­By Rev. M. S. Hutton, D.D. 370

MRS. WHITTELSEY’S

MAGAZINE FOR MOTHERS

And daughters.

* * * * *

Editorial.

A word of exhortation.

Sensible of our accountability to God, of our entire dependence upon his blessing for success in all our undertakings, knowing that of ourselves we can do nothing, but believing that through Christ strengthening us we may accomplish something in his service, we enter upon the duties of another year—­the twentieth year of our editorial labors.

With language similar to that which the mother of Moses is supposed to have employed when she laid her tender offspring by the margin of the Nile:—­

            “Know this ark is charmed
  With incantations Pharaoh ne’er employed,
  With spells that impious Egypt never knew;
  With invocations to the living God,
  I twisted every slender reed together,
  And with a prayer did every ozier weave”—­

we launched our frail bark upon the tide of public opinion.  Since then, with varied success, have we pursued our course—­often amid darkness, through difficulties and dangers, and to the present time have we been wafted in safety on our voyage, because, as he did Moses in the ark, “the Lord hath shut us in.”

Referring whatever of success has attended our efforts to His blessing, and believing that He has given us length of days, and strengthened our weakness, and poured consolation into our hearts when ready to sink in despair, in answer to persevering and importunate prayer, we come to direct our readers to this source of wisdom and aid,—­to urge upon them to engage often in this first duty and highest privilege.  Let us go forth, dear friends, to the work we have to do in the education of our families, having invoked the Divine blessing upon our efforts, holding on to the promises of the covenant, and pleading for their fulfillment in reference to ourselves and our households.

As Mrs. H. More has beautifully said:  “Prayer draws all the Christian graces into her focus.  It draws Charity, followed by her lovely train—­her forbearance with faults—­her forgiveness of injuries—­her pity for errors—­her compassion for want.  It draws Repentance, with her holy sorrows—­her pious resolutions—­her self-distrust.  It attracts Truth, with her elevated eyes; Hope, with her gospel anchor; Beneficence, with her open hand; Zeal, looking far and wide; Humility, with introverted eye, looking at home.”

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Mrs Whittelsey's Magazine for Mothers and Daughters from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.