Home Scenes, and Home Influence
Timothy Shay Arthur, 1854
This is another fiction work by Arthur.
CONTENTS
1. I Will!
2. Taking Comfort
3. The Power of Patience
4. A Mother’s Influence
5. The Christmas Party
6. An Old Man’s Recollections
7. If That Were My Child!
8. Losing One’s Temper
9. Children–a Family Scene
10. Haven’t the Change
11. Old Maids’ Children
12. The Mother and Boy
13. Going into Mourning
14. Is She a Lady?
15. Trouble with Servants
PREFACE
Many of the scenes presented in this volume are such as show the mother’s influence with her children; a few include the marriage relation; and a few give other domestic pictures. In all will be found, we trust, motives for self-denial and right action in the various conditions of domestic life. Home is the center of good, as well as of bad influence. How much, then, depends on those to whom have been committed the sacred trust of giving to the home-circle its true power over the heart!
Burroughs Gospel Worship 14 chapters (263 pages) which are each a sermon on how to properly worship God. (format PDF)
“Jeremiah Burroughs’ Gospel Worship has greatly influenced my understanding of biblical worship. It is one of the most important books I have ever read.”
–R.C. Sproul
Download: Burroughs Gospel Worship.
Category: | Mysw-bok-a |
Date: | February 4, 2015 |
fam42 The Foolish Child explains what the Bible teaches on fools and foolishness, and also a parent's solution to a foolish child.
Excerpts: Ecclesiastes 4:13 Better is a poor and a wise child than an old and foolish king, who will no more be admonished. A fool is a person who rejects advice.
We can define the concept of foolishness as the lack of values and vision toward eternity, toward spiritual things. In other words, this person lives focusing on things that the person wants, and he does not pay attention to what God says as being important, or how God says we should live.
Proverbs 18:2 A fool hath no delight in understanding, but that his heart may discover itself.
The basis of being wise is that you do not limit yourself, to just what you think you know. A wise person opens his thinking to the wisdom and advice of others, and weighs others’ opinions to see if they are right or not. The foolish only considers what he himself thinks, or what other fools like him think.
View tract: fam42 The Foolish Child