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‘Suffer the little children to come unto me, and forbid them not: for of such is the kingdom of God.’ Mark 10:14 
 
Suggested Further Reading: Deuteronomy 6:4–7 
 
We
 can say with the apostle John, ‘I have no greater joy than to hear that
 my children walk in truth.’ We continue, therefore, to bring them to 
Christ by daily, constant, earnest prayer on their behalf. As soon as 
they become of years capable of understanding the things of God, we 
endeavour to bring them to Christ by teaching them the truth. Hence our 
Sabbath schools, hence the use of the Bible and family prayer, and 
catechizing at home. Any person who shall say, ‘Do not teach your 
children; they will be converted in God’s own time if it be his purpose;
 therefore leave them to run wild in the streets,’ will certainly both 
‘sin against the child’ and the Lord Jesus. We might as well say, ‘If 
that piece of ground is to grow a harvest, it will do so if it be God’s 
good pleasure; therefore leave it, and let the weeds spring up and cover
 it; do not endeavour for a moment to kill the weeds, or to sow the good
 seed.’ Why, such reasoning as this would be not only cruel to our 
children, but grievously displeasing to Christ. Parents! I do hope you 
are all endeavouring to bring your children to Christ by teaching them 
the things of God. Let them not be strangers to the plan of salvation. 
Never let it be said that a child of yours reached years in which his 
conscience could act, and he could judge between good and evil, without 
knowing the doctrine of the atonement, without understanding the great 
substitutionary work of Christ. Set before your child life and death, 
hell and heaven, judgment and mercy, his own sin, and Christ’s most 
precious blood; and as you set these before him, labour with him, 
persuade him, as the apostle did his congregation, with tears and 
weeping, to turn unto the Lord. 
 
For meditation: Christian parents should bring their children up ‘in the nurture and admonition of the Lord’ (Ephesians 6:4). This may be harder in non-Christian marriages when only one of the partners becomes a Christian, but it is not hopeless (1 Corinthians 7:14); Timothy was proof (Acts 16:1; 2 Timothy 1:5; 3:15). 
Sermon no. 581 24 July (1864) |  
 
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