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The Children For Christ by Andrew Murray

The Children for Christ, contains 52 devotional readings on the subject of parental duty. Each lesson includes passage from the Bible and Murray's thoughts on how the passage illuminates the important role of parenting. The lessons all conclude with a short prayer. Christian Parenting is a timeless resource for parents who want to learn more about strengthening their Christian household.

The Children for Christ, contains 52 devotional readings on the subject of parental duty. Each lesson includes passage from the Bible and Murray's thoughts on how the passage illuminates the important role of parenting. The lessons all conclude with a short prayer. Christian Parenting is a timeless resource for parents who want to learn more about strengthening their Christian household.

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eing a treasure to which her love now clings, at first only gives new<br />

bitterness to the trial. It is not only the heart of man that is touched <strong>by</strong><br />

this thought: the heart of God too. Throughout Scripture, from the<br />

repeated commands in the law of Moses down to James’s testimony that<br />

pure religion teaches us to visit `the fatherless and widows’ in their<br />

affliction, God never forgets the widow. `A Father of the fatherless, and<br />

a Judge of the widows, is God in His holy habitation;’ `He upholds the<br />

fatherless and the widow;’ `Leave thy fatherless children, I will preserve<br />

them alive; and let thy widows trust in me’ (Ps. 68: 5, 146: 9; Jer. 49: 11):<br />

Such words reveal to us the very heart of God.<br />

And now, when Jesus came, how could He fail of showing in this too,<br />

that He was the Father’s image, that God was in <strong>Christ</strong>. It is as if the<br />

picture of the Master’s life would be incomplete without the story of<br />

the widow of Nain. In what He said of the widow’s mite, we see how His<br />

eye watches over a widow’s poverty, and values, what men would call,<br />

her little deed of love. At Nain we see Him as the Comforter of widowed<br />

motherhood. Let us go to Nain, the sacred spot to which so many a<br />

widow has resorted to find in Jesus her Friend and Lord, to learn what<br />

Jesus, the Friend and Savior of our children, has to say to a widow<br />

weeping over her child. Not only when the tears are those of sorrow<br />

over one taken away, but those of anxious love or sad distress at the<br />

sight of those still left behind, Jesus meets us with His, Weep not.<br />

Weep not, widowed mother, as you look at your little ones, and the<br />

heart almost breaks at the thought of their being fatherless. Weep not,<br />

but come, follow me, as we seek Him who has been anointed `to comfort<br />

all that mourn.’ Weep not, as you tremble to think of how you are to<br />

train and educate them all alone in your feebleness. Let your soul for a<br />

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