The Atmosphere in the Family
by Ellen White
You and your wife are opposite in your organisations. You love order and neatness, and
have a nice taste, and quite good government. As a husband, you are rather stiff and
stern. You fail to take a course to encourage confidence and familiarity in your wife. Her
deficiencies have led you to regard her as inferior to yourself, and have also caused her
to feel that you thus regard her. God esteems her more highly than yourself; for your ways
are crooked before Him. For the sake of her husband and children, and for other reasons,
she should seek to correct her deficiencies and to improve in those things wherein she now
fails. She can do it if she will try hard enough. 2T 298
I have been shown families where the husband and father has not preserved that reserve,
that dignified, godlike manhood, which is befitting a follower of Christ. He has failed to
perform the kind, tender, courteous acts due to his wife, whom he has promised before God
and angels to love, respect, and honour while they both shall live. The girl employed to
do the work has been free and somewhat forward to dress his hair and to be affectionately
attentive, and he is pleased, foolishly pleased. In his love and attention to his wife he
is not as demonstrative as he once was. Be sure that Satan is at work here. Respect your
hired help, treat them kindly, considerately, but go no further. Let your deportment be
such that there will be no advances to familiarity from them. If you have words of
kindness and acts of courtesy to give, it is always safe to give them to your wife. It
will be a great blessing to her, and will bring happiness to her heart, to be reflected
upon you again. 2T 461
Home should be made all that the word implies. It should be a little heaven upon earth,
a place where the affections are cultivated instead of being studiously repressed. Our
happiness depends upon this cultivation of love, sympathy, and true courtesy to one
another. 3T 539
Fathers and mothers who make God first in their households, who teach their children
that the fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom, glorify God before angels and before
men by presenting to the world a well-ordered, well-disciplined family--a family that love
and obey God instead of rebelling against Him. Christ is not a stranger in their homes;
His name is a household name, revered and glorified. Angels delight in a home where God
reigns supreme and the children are taught to reverence religion, the Bible, and their
Creator. Such families can claim the promise, "Them that honour Me I will
honour." As from such a home the father goes forth to his daily duties, it is with a
spirit softened and subdued by converse with God. 5T 424
Administer the rules of the home in wisdom and love, not with a rod of iron. Children
will respond with willing obedience to the rule of love. Commend your children whenever
you can. Make their lives as happy as possible. . . . Keep the soil of the heart mellow by
the manifestation of love and affection, thus preparing it for the seed of truth. Remember
that the Lord gives the earth not only clouds and rain, but the beautiful, smiling
sunshine, causing the seed to germinate and the blossom to appear. Remember that children
need not only reproof and correction, but encouragement and commendation, the pleasant
sunshine of kind words. AH 18
The home that is beautified by love, sympathy, and tenderness is a place that angels
love to visit, and where God is glorified. The influence of a carefully guarded Christian
home in the years of childhood and youth is the surest safeguard against the corruptions
of the world. In the atmosphere of such a home the children will learn to love both their
earthly parents and their heavenly Father. AH 19
The first work to be done in a Christian home is to see that the Spirit of Christ
abides there, that every member of the household may be able to take his cross and follow
where Jesus leads the way. AH 20
The presence of Christ alone can make men and women happy. All the common waters of
life Christ can turn into the wine of heaven. The home then becomes as an Eden of bliss;
the family, a beautiful symbol of the family in heaven. AH 28
In many a home the wife and mother has no time to read, to keep herself well informed,
no time to be a companion to her husband, no time to keep in touch with the developing
minds of her children. There is no time or place for the precious Saviour to be a close,
dear companion. Little by little she sinks into a mere household drudge, her strength and
time and interest absorbed in the things that perish with the using. Too late she awakes
to find herself almost a stranger in her own home. The precious opportunities once hers to
influence her dear ones for the higher life, unimproved, have passed away forever.
Let the homemakers resolve to live on a wiser plan. Let it be your first aim to make a
pleasant home. Be sure to provide the facilities that will lighten labour and promote
health. MH 368
The home should be to the children the most attractive place in the world, and the
mother's presence should be its greatest attraction. Children have sensitive, loving
natures. They are easily pleased, and easily made unhappy. By gentle discipline, in loving
words and acts, mothers may bind their children to their hearts. MH 388
In early times the father was the ruler and priest of his own family, and he exercised
authority over his children, even after they had families of their own. His descendants
were taught to look up to him as their head, in both religious and secular matters. This
patriarchal system of government Abraham endeavoured to perpetuate, as it tended to
preserve the knowledge of God. It was necessary to bind the members of the household
together, in order to build up a barrier against the idolatry that had become so
widespread and so deep-seated. Abraham sought by every means in his power to guard the
inmates of his encampment against mingling with the heathen and witnessing their
idolatrous practices, for he knew that familiarity with evil would insensibly corrupt the
principles. The greatest care was exercised to shut out every form of false religion and
to impress the mind with the majesty and glory of the living God as the true object of
worship. PP 141
While there are weighty responsibilities devolving upon the parents to guard carefully
the future happiness and interests of their children, it is also their duty to make home
as attractive as possible. This is of far greater consequence than to acquire estates and
money. Home must not lack sunshine. The home feeling should be kept alive in the hearts of
the children, that they may look back upon the home of their childhood as a place of peace
and happiness next to heaven. Then as they come to maturity, they should in their turn try
to be a comfort and blessing to their parents. RH FEB.02,1886
The home may be plain, but it can always be a place where cheerful words are spoken and
kindly deeds are done, where courtesy and love are abiding guests. RH JUL. 9,1901
God would have our families symbols of the family in heaven. Let parents and children
bear this in mind every day, relating themselves to one another as members of the family
of God. Then their lives will be of such a character as to give to the world an object
lesson of what families who love God and keep His commandments may be. Christ will be
glorified; His peace and grace and love will pervade the family circle like a precious
perfume. RH NOV.17,1896
Every Christian home should have rules; and parents should, in their words and
deportment toward each other, give to the children a precious, living example of what they
desire them to be. Purity in speech and true Christian courtesy should be constantly
practised. Teach the children and youth to respect themselves, to be true to God, true to
principle; teach them to respect and obey the law of God. These principles will control
their lives and will be carried out in their associations with others. They will create a
pure atmosphere--one that will have an influence that will encourage weak souls in the
upward path that leads to holiness and heaven. Let every lesson be of an elevating and
ennobling character, and the records made in the books of heaven will be such as you will
not be ashamed to meet in the judgement.
Children who receive this kind of instruction will . . . be prepared to fill places of
responsibility and, by precept and example, will be constantly aiding others to do right.
Those whose moral sensibilities have not been blunted will appreciate right principles;
they will put a just estimate upon their natural endowments and will make the best use of
their physical, mental, and moral powers. Such souls are strongly fortified against
temptation; they are surrounded by a wall not easily broken down. SPTB NO.16 4
The sweetest type of heaven is a home where the Spirit of the Lord presides. If the
will of God is fulfilled, the husband and wife will respect each other and cultivate love
and confidence. ST JUN.20,1911
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