Motives for Family Prayer
There is no substitute for family
devotions.
Motives for Family Worship
by Dr. J. Merle D'Aubigne (1794-1872)
“As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord” Joshua 24:15
“Let me die the death of the righteous, and let my last end be like
his!” Numbers 23:10
WE have said, my brethren, on a former occasion, that if we would die
His death, we must live His life. It is true that there are cases in
which the Lord shows His mercy and His glory to men who are already
lying on the death-bed, and says to them, as to the thief on the cross,
“ Today shalt thou be with me in paradise” (Luke 23:43). The Lord still
gives the Church similar examples from time to time for the purpose of
displaying His sovereign power by which, when He is pleased to do so, He
can break the hardest hearts and convert the souls most estranged1 to
show that all depends on His grace, and that He hath mercy on whom He
will have mercy. Yet these are but rare exceptions on which you can not
rely absolutely; and if you wish, my dear hearers, to die the
Christian's death, you must live the Christian's life. Your heart must
be truly converted to the Lord; truly prepared for the kingdom; and
trusting only in the mercy of Christ, desirous of going to dwell with
Him. Now, my brethren, there are various means by which you can be made
ready in life to obtain at a future day a blessed end. It is on one of
the most efficacious2 of these means that we wish to dwell today. This
mean3 is Family Worship; that is, the daily edification which the
members of a Christian family may mutually enjoy. “As for me and my
house,” said Joshua to Israel, “we will serve the Lord” (Josh. 24:15).
We wish, my brethren, to give you the motives which should induce us to
make this resolution of Joshua and the directions necessary to fulfill
it.
Why Family Worship?
1. To bring glory to God: But, my brethren, if the love of God be in
your hearts, and if you feel that being bought with a price, you ought
to glorify God in your bodies and spirits, which are His, where do you
love to glorify Him rather than in your families and in your houses” You
love to unite with your brethren in worshipping Him publicly in the
church; you love to pour out your souls before Him in your closets. Is
it only in the presence of that being with whom God has connected you
for life and before your children that you can not think of God? Is it,
then, only, that you have no blessings to a scribe”4 Is it, then, only,
that you have no mercies and protection to implore? You can speak of
every thing when with them; your conversation is upon a thousand
different matters; but your tongue and your heart can not find room for
one word about God! You will not look up as a family to Him who is the
true Father of your family; you will not converse with your wife and
your children about that Being who will one day perhaps be the only
Husband of your wife, the only Father of your children! It is the Gospel
that has formed domestic society. It did not exist before it; it does
not exist without it. It would, therefore, seem to be the duty of that
society, full of gratitude to the God of the Gospel, to be peculiarly
consecrated to it. And yet, my brethren, how many couples, how many
families there are, nominally5 Christian, and who even have some respect
for religion, where God is never named! How many cases there are in
which immortal souls that have been united have never asked one another
who united them, and what their future destiny and objects are to be!
How often it happens that, while they endeavor to assist each other in
every thing else, they do not even think of assisting each other in
searching for the one thing needful, in conversing, in reading, in
praying, with reference to their eternal interests! Christian spouses!
Is it in the flesh and for time alone that you are to be united” Is it
not in the spirit and for eternity also” Are you beings who have met by
accident, whom another accident, death, is soon to separate” Do you not
wish to be united by God, in God, and for God” Religion would unite your
souls by immortal ties! But do not reject them; draw them, on the
contrary, tighter every day, by worshipping together under the domestic
roof. Voyagers on the same vessel converse of the place to which they
are going; and will not you, fellow-travelers to an eternal world, speak
together of that world, of the route which leads to it, of your fears
and your hopes” “For many walk,” says St. Paul, “Of whom I have told you
often, and now tell you even weeping, that they are the enemies of the
cross of Christ” (Phi 3:18); but “our conversation is in heaven; from
whence also we look for the Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ” (Phi 3:20).
2. To protect your children from sin: But if it be your duty to be
engaged with reference to God in your houses for your own sakes, ought
you not to be so engaged for the sakes of those of your households whose
souls have been committed to your care, and especially for your
children? You are greatly concerned for their prosperity, for their
temporal happiness; but does not this concern make your neglect of their
eternal prosperity and happiness still more palpable? Your children are
young trees entrusted to you; your house is the nursery where they ought
to grow, and you are the gardeners. But, oh! Will you plant those tender
and precious saplings in a sterile and sandy soil” Yet this is what you
are doing, if there be nothing in your house to make them grow in the
knowledge and love of their God and Savior. Are you not preparing for
them a favorable soil, from which they can derive sap and life? What
will become of your children in the midst of all the temptations that
will surround them and draw them into sin? What will become of them in
these troublous times, in which it is so necessary to strengthen the
soul of the young man by the fear of God, and thus to give that fragile
bark6 the ballast needed for launching it upon the vast ocean?
Parents! If your children do not meet with a spirit of piety in your
houses, if, on the contrary, your pride consists in surrounding them
with external gifts, introducing them into worldly society, indulging
all their whims, letting them follow their own course, you will see them
grow vain, proud, idle, disobedient, impudent, and extravagant! They
will treat you with contempt; and the more your hearts are wrapped up in
them, the less they will think of you. This is seen but too often to be
the case; but ask yourselves if you are not responsible for their bad
habits and practices; and your conscience will reply that you are; that
you are now eating the bread of bitterness which you have prepared for
yourself. May you learn thereby how great has been your sin against God
in neglecting the means which were in your power for influencing their
hearts; and may others take warning from your misfortune, and bring up
their children in the Lord! Nothing is more effectual in doing this than
an example of domestic piety. Public worship is often too vague and
general for children, and does not sufficiently interest them; as to the
worship of the closet, they do not yet understand it. A lesson learned
by rote, if unaccompanied by any thing else, may lead them to look upon
religion as a study, like those of foreign languages or history. Here as
everywhere, and more than elsewhere, example is more effectual than
precept. They are not merely to be taught out of some elementary book
that they must love God, but you must show them God is loved. If they
observe that no worship is paid to that God of whom they hear, the very
best instruction will prove useless; but by means of Family Worship,
these young plants will grow “like a tree planted by the rivers of
water, that bringeth forth his fruit in his season: his leaf also shall
not wither” (Psa 1:13). Your children may leave the parental roof, but
they will remember in foreign lands the prayers of the parental roof,
and those prayers will protect them. “If any,” says the Scripture, “Have
children or nephews, let them learn first to show piety at home” (1 Ti
5:4).
3. To produce real joy in the home: And what delight, what peace, what
real happiness a Christian family will find in erecting a family altar
in their midst, and in uniting to offer up sacrifice unto the Lord! Such
is the occupation of angels in heaven; and blessed are those who
anticipate those pure and immortal joys! “Behold, how good and pleasant
it is for brethren to dwell together in unity! It is like the precious
ointment upon the head, that ran down upon the beard, even Aaron's
beard; that went down to the skirts of his garments; as the dew of
Hermon, and as the dew that descended upon the mountains of Zion; for
there the Lord commanded the blessing, even life for evermore” (Psa
133). O what new grace and life piety gives to a family! In a house
where God is forgotten, there is rudeness, ill-humor, and vexation of
spirit. Without the knowledge and the love of God, a family is but a
collection of individuals who may have more or less natural affection
for one another; but the real bond, the love of God our Father in Jesus
Christ our Lord, is wanting. The poets are full of beautiful
descriptions of domestic life; but, alas! how different the pictures
often are from the reality! Sometimes there is a want of confidence in
the providence of God; sometimes there is love of riches; at others, a
difference of character; at others, an opposition of principles. O how
many troubles, how many cares there are in the bosoms of families!
Domestic piety will prevent all these evils; it will give perfect
confidence in that God who gives food to the birds of the air; it will
give true love toward those with whom we have to live: not an exacting,
sensitive love, but a merciful love, which excuses and forgives, like
that of God Himself; not a proud love, but a humble love, accompanied by
a sense of one's own faults and weakness; not a fickle love, but a love
unchangeable as eternal charity. “The voice of rejoicing and salvation
is in the tabernacle of the righteous,” (Psa 118:15).
4. To console during times of trial: And when the hour of trial comes,
that hour which must come sooner or later, and which sometimes visits
the homes of men more than once, what consolation will domestic piety
afford! Where do trials occur, if not in the bosoms of families” Where
then ought the remedy for trials to be administered, if not in the
bosoms of families” How much a family where there is mourning is to be
pitied if it has not that consolation! The various members of whom it is
composed increase one another's sadness. But if, on the contrary, that
family loves God, if it is in the habit of meeting to invoke the holy
name of God, from Whom comes every trial, as well as every good gift;
then how will the souls that are cast down be raised up! The members of
the family who still remain around the table on which is laid the Book
of God, that book where they find the words of resurrection, life, and
immortality, where they find sure pledges of the happiness of the being
who is no more among them, as well as the warrant of their own hopes.
The Lord is pleased to send down the Comforter to them; the Spirit of
glory and of God rests upon them; an ineffable7 balm is poured upon
their wounds, and gives them much consolation; peace is communicated
from one heart to another. They enjoy moments of celestial bliss.
“Though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death I will fear no
evil; for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff they comfort me,”
(Psalm 23:4). “O Lord, thou hast brought up my soul from the grave!
Thine anger endureth but a moment: in thy favour is life; weeping may
endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning” (Psalm 30:3).
5. To influence society: And who can tell, my brethren, what an
influence domestic piety might exert over society itself” What
encouragements all men would have in doing their duty, from the
statesman down to the poorest mechanic! How would all become accustomed
to act with respect not only to the opinions of men, but also to the
judgment of God! How would each learn to be satisfied with the position
in which he is placed! Good habits would be adopted; the powerful voice
of conscience would be strengthened: prudence, propriety, talent, social
virtues, would be developed with renewed vigor. This is what we might
expect both for ourselves and for society. Godliness hath promise of the
life that now is, and of that which is to come.
From Family Worship.
ENDNOTES:
1. estranged: alienated; separated; turned from kindness to hostility.
2. efficacious: having the power to produce a desired effect.
3. mean: method by which something is accomplished.
4. ascribe: to attribute as to a cause.
5. nominally: existing in name only.
6. bark: a small ship.
7. ineffible: indescribable; incapable of being expressed.
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