Among all whose needs demand our interest,
the widow and the fatherless have the strongest claims upon our
tender sympathy. They are the objects of the Lord's special care.
They are lent to Christians in trust for God. "Pure religion
and undefiled before God and the Father is this, To visit the
fatherless and widows in their affliction, and to keep himself
unspotted from the world." James 1:27.
Many a father who has died in the faith,
resting upon the eternal promise of God, has left his loved ones
in full trust that the Lord would care for them. And how does
the Lord provide for these bereaved ones? He does not work a
miracle in sending manna from heaven; He does not send ravens
to bring them food; but He works a miracle upon human hearts,
expelling selfishness from the soul and unsealing the fountains
of benevolence. He tests the love of His professed followers
by committing to their tender mercies the afflicted and bereaved
ones.
Let those who have the love of God open
their hearts and homes to take in these children. It is not the
best plan to care for the orphans in large institutions. If they
have no relatives able to provide for them, the members of our
churches should either adopt these little ones into their families
or find suitable homes for them in other households.
These children are in a special sense the
ones whom Christ looks upon, whom it is an offense to Him to
neglect. Every kind act done to them in the name of Jesus is
accepted by Him as done to Himself.
Those who in any way rob them of the means
they should have, those who regard their wants with indifference,
will be dealt with by the Judge of all the
earth. "Shall not God avenge His own elect, which cry day
and night unto Him, though He bear long with them? I tell you
that He will avenge them speedily." "He shall have
judgment without mercy, that hath showed no mercy." Luke
18:7, 8; James 2:13. The Lord bids us: "Bring the poor that
are cast out to thy house." Isaiah 58:7. Christianity must
supply fathers and mothers and homes for these destitute ones.
Compassion for the widow and orphan, manifested in prayers and
corresponding deeds, will come up in remembrance before God,
to be rewarded by and by.
There is a wide field of usefulness before
all who will work for the Master in caring for these children
and youth who have been deprived of the watchful guidance of
parents and the subduing influence of a Christian home. Many
of them have inherited evil traits of character; and if left
to grow up in ignorance, they will drift into associations that
lead to vice and crime. These unpromising children need to be
placed in a position favorable for the formation of a right character,
that they may become children of God.
Are you who profess to be children of God
acting your part in teaching these, who so much need to be patiently
taught how to come to the Saviour? Are you acting your part as
faithful servants of Christ? Are these unformed, perhaps ill-balanced,
minds cared for with that love which Christ has manifested for
us? The souls of children and youth are in deadly peril if left
to themselves. They need patient instruction, love, and tender
Christian care.
Were there no revelation to point out our
duty, the very sight of our eyes, and what we know of the inevitable
working of cause and effect, should arouse us to rescue these
unfortunate ones. If the members of the church
would bring into this work the same energy and tact and skill
that they employ in the common business relations of life, if
they would seek wisdom from God and earnestly study how to mold
these undisciplined minds, many souls that are ready to perish
might be rescued.
If parents would feel the solicitude for the
salvation of their own children that they should feel, if they
would bear them in their prayers to the throne of grace and live
out their prayers, knowing that God would co-operate with them,
they might become successful workers for children outside of
their own family, and especially for those who do not have parental
counsel and guidance. The Lord calls upon every member of the
church to do his duty to these orphans.