Education comprises more than a knowledge
of books. Proper education includes not only mental discipline,
but that training which will secure sound morals and correct
deportment. We have had many fears that those who take students
into their houses will not realize their responsibility and will
neglect to exert a proper influence over these youth. Thus students
will fail to obtain all the benefit which they might receive
at the college. The question too often arises: "Am I my
brother's keeper?' What care, what burden or responsibility,
should I have for the students who occupy rooms in our houses?"
I answer: The very same interest that you have for your own children.
Says Christ: "Love one another, as
I have loved you." The souls of the youth that are brought
under your roof are as precious in the eyes of the Lord as are
the souls of your own dear children. When young men and women
are separated from the softening, subduing influences of the
home circle, it is the duty of those who have the care of them
to make home influences for them. They would thus supply a great
lack and would be doing a work for God as verily as the minister
in the desk. To throw around these students an influence which
would preserve them from temptations to immorality, and lead
them to Jesus, is a work which heaven would approve.
Grave responsibilities rest upon those who
reside at the great center of the work, where are important interests
to be sustained. Those who choose their homes at Battle Creek
should be men and women of faith, of wisdom, and of prayer.
Hundreds of youth of various dispositions
and of different education are associated in the school, and
great care as well as much patience is required to balance in
the right direction minds that have been warped by bad management.
Some have never been disciplined, and others have been governed
too much, and have felt, when away from the vigilant hands that
held the reins of control, perhaps too tightly, that they were
free to do as they pleased. They despise the very thought of
restraint. These varying elements brought together in our college
bring care, burdens, and weighty responsibility, not only upon
teachers, but on the entire church.
The students at our college are exposed
to manifold temptations. They will be brought in contact with
individuals of almost every stamp of mind and morals. Those who
have any religious experience are censurable if they do not place
themselves in a position to resist every evil influence. But
many choose to follow inclination. They do not consider that
they must make or mar their own happiness. It is in their own
power to so improve their time and opportunities as to develop
a character that will make them happy and useful.
The youth who reside at Battle Creek are in
constant danger because they do not connect with heaven. If they
would be true to their profession they might be living missionaries
for God. By manifesting Christian interest, sympathy, and love,
they might greatly benefit the youth who come to Battle Creek
from other places. An earnest effort should be made to keep these
strangers from choosing superficial, frivolous, pleasure-seeking
associates. This class exert a demoralizing influence upon the
college, upon the sanitarium, and upon the office of publication.
Our numbers are constantly increasing, and vigilance and zeal
to keep the fort are steadily decreasing. If they will open their
eyes, all may see whither these things are tending.
Many move to Battle Creek to give their
children the advantages of the college, and at the same time
do not feel their own responsibility in making this move. They
do not realize that something more is to be considered than their
own selfish interest; that they may be a hindrance instead of
a blessing, unless they come with the full purpose to do good
as well as to get good. Yet none need lose their spirituality
in coming to Battle Creek; if we will follow Christ, it is not
in the power of any to lead us astray from the path cast up for
the ransomed of the Lord to walk in. No one is compelled to copy
the errors of professed Christians. If he sees the mistakes and
faults of others, he will be responsible before God and before
his fellow men if he does not set a better example. But some
make the faults of others an excuse for their own defects of
character, and even copy the very objectionable traits which
they condemn. Such persons strengthen those of whom they complain
as pursuing an unchristian course. With their eyes open they
walk into the enemy's snare. Not a few in Battle Creek have pursued
this course. Some have come to the place where our institutions
are located, with the selfish motive of making money. This class
will be no help to the youth either by precept or example.
The dangers of the young are greatly increased
as they are thrown into the society of a large number of their
own age of varied character and habits of life. Under these circumstances
many parents are inclined to relax rather than redouble their
own efforts to guard and control their children. Thus they cast
a tremendous burden upon those who feel the responsibility. When
these parents see that their children are becoming demoralized,
they are inclined to find fault with those who have charge of
the work at Battle Creek, when the evils have been caused by
just such a course as these parents themselves have pursued.
Instead of uniting with those who bear
the burdens, to lift up the standard of morals, and working with
heart and soul in the fear of God to correct the wrongs in their
children, many parents soothe their
own consciences by saying: "My children are no worse than
others." They seek to conceal the glaring wrongs which God
hates, lest their children shall become offended and take some
desperate course. If the spirit of rebellion is in their hearts,
far better subdue it now than permit it to increase and strengthen
by indulgence. If parents would do their duty, we should see
a different state of things. Many of these parents have backslidden
from God. They do not have wisdom from Him to perceive the devices
of Satan and to resist his snares.
In this age of the world, children should
have strict watchcare. They should be advised and restrained.
Eli was cursed of God because he did not promptly and decidedly
restrain his wicked sons. There are parents at Battle Creek who
are doing no better than did Eli. They are afraid to control
their children. They see them serving Satan with a high hand
and pass it by as a disagreeable necessity which must be endured
because it cannot be cured.
Every son and daughter should be called
to account if absent from home at night. Parents should know
what company their children are in and at whose house they spend
their evenings. Some children deceive their parents with falsehoods
to avoid exposure of their wrong course. There are those who
seek the society of corrupt companions and secretly visit saloons
and other forbidden places of resort in the city. There are students
who visit the billiard rooms, and who engage in card playing,
flattering themselves that there is no danger. Since their object
is merely amusement, they feel perfectly safe. It is not the
lower grade alone who do this. Some who have been carefully reared,
and educated to look upon such things with abhorrence, are venturing
upon the forbidden ground.
The young should be controlled by firm
principle, that they may rightly improve the powers which God
has given them. But youth follow impulse so much and so blindly,
without reference to principle, that they are constantly in
danger. Since they cannot always have the
guidance and protection of parents and guardians they need to
be trained to self-reliance and self-control. They must be taught
to think and act from conscientious principle.
Those who are engaged in study should have
relaxation. The mind must not be constantly confined to close
thought, for the delicate mental machinery becomes worn. The
body as well as the mind must have exercise. But there is great
need of temperance in amusements, as in every other pursuit.
And the character of these amusements should be carefully and
thoroughly considered. Every youth should ask himself: What influence
will these amusements have on physical, mental, and moral health?
Will my mind become so infatuated as to forget God? shall I cease
to have His glory before me?
Card playing should be prohibited. The
associations and tendencies are dangerous. The prince of the
powers of darkness presides in the gaming room and wherever there
is card playing. Evil angels are familiar guests in these places.
There is nothing in such amusements beneficial to soul or body.
There is nothing to strengthen the intellect, nothing to store
it with valuable ideas for future use. The conversation is upon
trivial and degrading subjects. There is heard the unseemly jest,
the low, vile talk, which lowers and destroys the true dignity
of manhood. These games are the most senseless, useless, unprofitable,
and dangerous employments the youth can have. Those who engage
in card playing become intensely excited and soon lose all relish
for useful and elevating occupations. Expertness in handling
cards will soon lead to a desire to put this knowledge and tact
to some use for personal benefit. A small sum is staked, and
then a larger, until a thirst for gaming is acquired, which leads
to certain ruin. How many has this pernicious amusement led to
every sinful practice, to poverty, to prison, to murder, and
to the gallows! And yet many parents do not see the terrible
gulf of ruin that is yawning for our youth.
Among the most dangerous resorts for pleasure
is the theater. Instead of being
a school of morality and virtue, as is so often claimed, it is
the very hotbed of immorality. Vicious habits and sinful propensities
are strengthened and confirmed by these entertainments. Low songs,
lewd gestures, expressions, and attitudes, deprave the imagination
and debase the morals. Every youth who habitually attends such
exhibitions will be corrupted in principle. There is no influence
in our land more powerful to poison the imagination, to destroy
religious impressions, and to blunt the relish for the tranquil
pleasures and sober realities of life than theatrical amusements.
The love for these scenes increases with every indulgence, as
the desire for intoxicating drinks strengthens with its use.
The only safe course is to shun the theater, the circus, and
every other questionable place of amusement.
There are modes of recreation which are
highly beneficial to both mind and body. An enlightened, discriminating
mind will find abundant means for the entertainment and diversion,
from sources not only innocent, but instructive. Recreation in
the open air, the contemplation of the works of God in nature,
will be of highest benefit.
The great God, whose glory shines from
the heavens, and whose divine hand upholds millions of worlds,
is our Father. We have only to love Him, trust in Him, as little
children in faith and confidence, and He will accept us as His
sons and daughters, and we shall be heirs to all the inexpressible
glory of the eternal world. All the meek will He guide in judgment,
the meek will He teach His way. If we will walk in obedience
to His will, learn cheerfully and diligently the lessons of His
providence, by and by He will say: Child, come home to the heavenly
mansions I have prepared for you.