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THE DOMESTIC CIRCLE.

"Go home to thy friends and tell'thenhow great thing the Lord hath done for thee."—Mark v. 19.

(Concluded.)

CHILDREN'S CURSES

Oh, if you do not inculcate Christian principle in the hearts of your children, and you do not warn them against evil, and you do not invite them to holiness and to God, and they wander off into dissipation and into infidelity, and at last make shipwreck of their immortal soul, on their death-bed and in their Day of Judgment they will curse you. Seated by the register or the stove, what if on the wall should come out the history of your children? What a history—the mortal and immortal life of your loved ones. Every parent is writing the history of his child. He is writing it, composing it into a song or turning it into a groan.

My mind runs back to one of the best of early homes. Prayer, life a roof, over if. Peace, like an atmosphere, in it. Parents, personifications of faith in trial and comfort in darkness. The two pillars of that earthly home long- ago crumbled to dust. But shall I ever forget that early home? Yes, when the flower forgets the sun that warms it. Yes. when the mariner forgets the star that, guided him. Yes, when love has gone out on the heart's altar and memory has emptied his urn into forgetfulness. Then, the home of my childhood, I will forget thee! th . family altar of a father's importunity and a mother's tenderness, the voices of affection, the funerals of our dead father and mother, with interlocked arms like intertwining branches of trees making* a perpetual arbor of lovo. and peace, and kindness—then I will forget them—then and only then. You know, my brother, that a hundred times you have been kept out of sin by the memory of such a scene as I have been describing. You have often had raging- temptations, but you know what has held you with supernatural grasp. I tell you, a man who has had such a good home as that never gets over it, and a man who has had a bad early home never gets over it. Again, I remark, that home is a type of heaven. To bring us to that home Christ left His home. Far up and far back in the history of heaven there came, a period when its most illustrious ciii-Oii was about to absent Himself. He was not going to sail from beach to beach; we have often done that. He was not going to put out from one hemisphere to another hemisphere; many of us have done that. But he was to sail from world to world, the spaces unexplored and the immensities untravelled. No world had ever hailed heaven, and so far as we know heaven had never hailed any ether world. I think that the wlndDSVs and the balconies were thronged, and that the pearline beach was crowded with those who had come to see Him sail out the harbour of light into the ocean beyond. THE EXILE. Out; and out, and out, and on, and on, and on, and down, and down, and down, He sped, until one night, with only one to greet Him, He arrived, His disembarkation so unpretending, so quiet, that it -was not known on earth until the excitement in the cloud gave intimation that something grand and glorious had happened. Who comes there? From what port did He sail? Why was this the place of His destination? I question the shepherds, I question the camel drivers, I question the angels. I have found out! He was an exile. But the world.has had plenty of exiles—Abraham an exile from Ur of the Chaldees; John an exile from Ephesus; Kosciusko an exile from Poland; Mazzini an exile from Rome; Emmett an exile from Ireland; Victor Hugo an exile from France; Kossuth an exile from Hungary. But this one of whom I speak to-day had such resounding farewell and came into such chilling reception—for not even an hostler went out with his lantern to help Him in—that He is more to be celebrated than any other expatriated one of earth or heaven. HOMESICKNESS. It is ninety-five million miles from Here to the sun, and all astronomers agree in saying that our solar system is only one of the small -wheels of the great machinery 'of the universe, turning round some one great centre, the centre so far distant it is beyond all imagination and calculation, and if, as some think, that great centre in the distance is heaven, Christ came far from home when He came here. Have you ever thought of the homesickness of Christ? Some of you know what homesickness is, when you haye heen only a few weeks absent from the domestic circle. Christ was thirtythree Years away from home/ Some of you feel homesickness when you are a hundred or 'a thousand miles away from the domestic circle. Christ was more millions of miles away from home than you could calculate if all your life you did nothing but calculate. You know what it is to he homesick even amid pleasurahle surroundings; but Christ slept in huts, and He was atjiirst, and He was a-huhgered, and He was on the way from heing born in another man's barn to b.ing buried in another man's grave. 1 have read how the Swiss, when they are far; away from their" native" country, at the sound of their national air get so homesick that they fall into melancholy, and sometimes they die under the homesickness. But oh, the homesickness of Christ! Poverty homesick for celestial -riches. Persecution homesick for hos-S-anna. Weariness homesick for rest. Homesick -for angelic and archangelic companionship. Homesick to go out of the night, and the storm, and the world's execration, and all that homesickness suffered to get us home. THE HOME-GATHERING. 'At our best estate we are only pilgrims and strangers here. "Heaven is our home." Death will never knock at the door of that mansion, and in all that country there is not a single grave. How glad parents are in holiday times to gather their children home again. But I have noticed that there is almost always a son or a daughter absent—absent from home, perhaps absent from the country, perhaps absent from the world. Oh, how glad our Heavenly Father will be when He gets all- His children home with Him in heaven!' And how delightful it will ne for brothers and sisters to meet after long separation! Once they parted at the door of the tomb; now.tTTey meet at the door of immortality. Once they saw only through a glass darkly; now it is face to face; corruption, incorruption; mortality, immortality. Where are now all their sins and sorrows and troubles? Overwhelmed in the Red Sea of Death while they passed through dry shod; Gates of pearl, capstones of amethyst, thrones of dominion, do not stir my soul so much as the thought of home. Once •there let earthly sorrows howl like •storms and roll like seas. Home. Let thrones rot and empires wither. Home. Let the. world die in earthquake struggle, and.be buried amid procession of planets and dirge of spheres. Home. Let everlasting, ages roll irresistible sweep. Home. No sorrow, no crying, no tears, no death. But home, sweet home, home, •beautiful home, everlasting home, home - with each other, home with God. A DREAM. One night lying on my lounge, when yvery tired, my children all around about me in full romp and hilarity, and laughter—on the lounge, half awake and half! . asleep, I dreamed this dreamf I was in a; far country. It was not Persia, although ' more than Oriental luxuriance" crowned

the cities. It was not the tropics, although more than tropical frultfulness filled the gardens. It was not Italy, although more than Italian softness .Hied the air. And I wandered around lookingfor thorns and nettles, but I found that none of them grew there, and I saw the sun rise, and I watched to see it set, but it sank not.' And I saw the people in holiday attire, and I said: "When will they put off this and put on workmen's garb, and again delve in the mine or swelter at the forge?" But they never put off the holiday attire. And* 1 wandered in the suburbs of the city to find the place where the dead sleep, and I looked all along the line ot. the beautiful hills, the place where the dead might most blissfully sleep, and I saw towers and castles, but not a mausoleum or a monument or a while slab could I see. And 1 went into the chapel of the great town, and I said: "Where do the poor worship, and where are the hard benches on which they sit?" And the answer was made me: "WE HAVE NO POOR * in this'country." And then I wandered, out to find the hovels of the destitute, and I found mansions of amber and ivory and gold; but not a tear could I see, not. a sigh could I hear, and 1 was bewildered, and I sat down under the branches of a great tree, and I said: "Where am I? And whence comes all this scene?" And then out from among the leaves, and up the flowery paths, and across the bright streams there came a beautiful group, thronging all about me, and as I saw them come 1 thought I know their step; and as they shouted I thought J knew their voices; but then they were so gloriously arrayed in apparel such as 1 had never' bet.re witnessed that 1 bowed as stranger to stranger. Did when again they chipped their hands and shouted: "Welcome, Welcome." the mystery all vanished, and I found that time had gone and eternity had come, and we were till together again in our new home In heaven. And 1 looked around, and said: "Are we all here?" and the voices or many generations responded: "All here." And' While tears of gladness were raining down our cheeks, and tlie branches of the Lebanon cedars were clapping their hands, and the towers of the great city were chiming their welcome, we all together began to leap and shout and sing "Home, home, home, home!"

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19001208.2.46.6

Bibliographic details

Auckland Star, Volume XXXI, Issue 292, 8 December 1900, Page 2 (Supplement)

Word Count
1,731

THE DOMESTIC CIRCLE. Auckland Star, Volume XXXI, Issue 292, 8 December 1900, Page 2 (Supplement)

THE DOMESTIC CIRCLE. Auckland Star, Volume XXXI, Issue 292, 8 December 1900, Page 2 (Supplement)