Life and Labors of Elder John Kline, the Martyr Missionary eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 712 pages of information about Life and Labors of Elder John Kline, the Martyr Missionary.

Life and Labors of Elder John Kline, the Martyr Missionary eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 712 pages of information about Life and Labors of Elder John Kline, the Martyr Missionary.

The two great lessons given in the text, are OBEDIENCE and REWARD.  I will tell you about obedience first.  To make this very plain you must first be told that obedience consists in doing what one is commanded to do.  Two things, however, are necessary to make obedience a duty. First, the command must come from a right source; it must be based upon the right authority. Second, it must be given in a way that can be understood.  The command must be plain.  These two things being established, it is the duty of every one to hear and obey what he is commanded to do.  Disobeying good commands is as sure to bring suffering and loss as violating the laws of health is sure to bring disease into our bodies.  Let us notice some of the commands which, in the course of our lives, it may be our duty to obey.  There is no difference between a law and a command.  Every law is a command in substance, and every command is a law.  There are very deep things involved here, but I will not now enter upon them.  Every command is but the expression of the will of the commander; and the will of the commander in every case, when expressed, and compliance with it is demanded, is a law.

Authority has many grades.  There is parental authority, teachers’ authority, magisterial authority, legislative authority.  All these grades of authority are necessary for our well-being.  But no benefit can be derived from authority of any kind without obedience to that authority.  The best law can do no good unless it be obeyed.  Parental laws, no matter how wise and good they are in themselves, are of no account unless the children obey their parents.  It is the same with all laws.

Possibly it may not be clear to the understanding of some how obedience to God’s laws makes man happy.  Let us then consider this matter of obedience on a lower grade.  Parents love their children.  Parents have much of life’s experiences.  They are capable of knowing better than their children can what is best for the children.  Now if children will heed what their parents say to them in the way of good counsel, instruction, and government, love, peace and harmony will prevail in the household.  Joy will be a constant guest.  Happiness will crown the board.  Habits of good will be formed in the young which will not forsake them when they are old.  In youth the foundation is thus laid for honorable success in later years.  Reverse this picture:  instead of happiness, discontent; instead of joy, distress; instead of peace, contentions and broils; instead of respectability, disgrace; instead of honor, shame.  What an amazing difference between the rewards of obedience and the effects of disobedience!  The good results of obedience to good laws are boundless in extent and endless in duration.

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Life and Labors of Elder John Kline, the Martyr Missionary from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.