"Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it." Proverbs 22:6
Introduction
I suppose that most professing Christians are acquainted with the
text at the head of this page. The sound of it is probably familiar to
your ears, like an old tune. It is likely you have heard it, or read
it, talked of it, or quoted it, many a time. Is it not so?
But, after all, how little is the substance of this text regarded!
The doctrine it contains appears scarcely known, the duty it puts
before us seems fearfully seldom practised. Reader, do I not speak the
truth? It cannot be said that the subject is a new one.
The world is old, and we have the experience of nearly six thousand
years to help us. We live in days when there is a mighty zeal for
education in every quarter. . . . And still for all this, the vast
majority of children are manifestly not trained in the way they should
go, for when they grow up to man’s estate, they do not walk with God.
Now how shall we account for this state of things? The plain
truth is, the Lord’s commandment in our text is not regarded; and
therefore the Lord’s promise in our text is not fulfilled.
Reader, these things may well give rise to great searchings of
heart. Suffer then a word of exhortation from a minister, about the
right training of children. Believe me, the subject is one that should
come home to every conscience, and make every one ask himself the
question, "Am I in this matter doing what I can?"
It is a subject that concerns almost all.
There is hardly a household that it does not touch. Parents, nurses,
teachers, godfathers, godmothers, uncles, aunts, brothers, sisters, —
all have an interest in it. Few can be found, I think, who might not
influence some parent in the management of his family, or affect the
training of some child by suggestion or advice. All of us, I suspect,
can do something here, either directly or indirectly, and I wish to stir
up all to bear this in remembrance.
It is a subject, too, on which all concerned are in great danger of coming short of their duty.
This is preeminently a point in which men can see the faults of their
neighbours more clearly than their own. They will often bring up their
children in the very path which they have denounced to their friends as
unsafe. They will see motes in other men’s families, and overlook
beams in their own. They will be quick sighted as eagles in detecting
mistakes abroad, and yet blind as bats to fatal errors which are daily
going on at home. They will be wise about their brother’s house, but
foolish about their own flesh and blood. Here, if anywhere, we have
need to suspect our own judgment. This, too, you will do well to bear
in mind.
Come now, and let me place before you a few hints about right training.
God the Father, God the Son, God the Holy Spirit bless them, and make
them words in season to you all. Reject them not because they are
blunt and simple; despise them not because they contain nothing new. Be
very sure, if you would train children for heaven, they are hints that
ought not to be lightly set aside.
Train Them