The Home Mission eBook

Timothy Shay Arthur
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 207 pages of information about The Home Mission.

The Home Mission eBook

Timothy Shay Arthur
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 207 pages of information about The Home Mission.

Pure kisses—­tender embraces—­the fond “good night.”  What a sweet agitation pervaded all their feelings!  Then two dear heads were placed side by side on the snowy pillow, the mother’s last kiss given, and the shadowy curtains drawn.

What a pulseless stillness reigns throughout the chamber!  Inwardly the parents’ listening ears are bent.  They have given these innocent ones into the keeping of God’s angels, and they can almost hear the rustle of their garments as they gather around their sleeping babes.  A sigh, deep and tremulous, breaks on the air.  Quickly the mother turns to the father of her children, with a look of earnest inquiry on her countenance.  And he answers thus her silent question.

“Far back, through many years, have my thoughts been wandering.  At my mother’s knee thus said I nightly, in childhood, my evening prayer.  It was that best and holiest of all prayers, “Our Father,” that she taught me.  Childhood and my mother passed away.  I went forth as a man into the world, strong, confident, and self-seeking.  Once I came into great temptation.  Had I fallen in that temptation, I would have fallen, I sadly fear, never to have risen again.  The struggle in my mind went on for hours.  I was about yielding.  All the barriers I could oppose to the in-rushing flood seemed just ready to give way, when, as I sat in my room one evening, there came from an adjoining chamber, now first occupied for many weeks, the murmur of low voices.  I listened.  At first, no articulate sound was heard, and yet something in the tones stirred my heart with new and strange emotions.  At length, there came to my ears, in the earnest, loving voice of a woman, the words—­’Deliver us from evil.’  For an instant, it seemed to me as if the voice were that of my mother.  Back, with a sudden bound through all the intervening years, went my thoughts; and, a child in heart again, I was kneeling at my mother’s knee.  Humbly and reverently I said over the words of the holy prayer she had taught me, heart and eyes uplifted to heaven.  The hour and the power of darkness had passed.  I was no longer standing in slippery places, with a flood of waters ready to sweep me to destruction; but my feet were on a rock.  My mother’s pious care had saved her son.  In the holy words she taught me in childhood, was a living power to resist evil through all my after life.  Ah! that unknown mother, as she taught her child to repeat his evening prayer, how little dreamed she that the holy words were to reach a stranger’s ears, and save him through memories of his own childhood and his own mother!  And yet it was so.  What a power there is in God’s Word, as it flows into and rests in the minds of innocent children!”

Tears were in the eyes of the wife and mother as she lifted her face, and gazed with a subdued tenderness upon the countenance of her husband.  Her heart was too full for utterance.  A little while she thus gazed, and then, with a trembling joy, laid her head upon his bosom.  Angels were in the chamber where their dear ones slept, and they felt their holy presence.

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Project Gutenberg
The Home Mission from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.