I like this one.
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Carleeta Manser 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Saturday, June 20, 2009 11:35 PM
  Subject: {dbilg} Teaching Children


  Teaching Children

  Suffer the little children to come unto me, and forbid them not: for of such
  is the kingdom of heaven. Mark 10:14. 

  Jesus knows the burdens of every mother's heart. He who had a mother that
  struggled with poverty and privation sympathizes with every mother in her
  labors. He who made a long journey in order to relieve the anxious heart of
  a Canaanite woman will do as much for the mothers of today. He who gave back
  to the widow of Nain her only son, and in His agony upon the cross
  remembered His own mother, is touched today by the mother's sorrow. In every
  grief and every need, He will comfort and help. . . . 

  In the children who were brought in contact with Him, Jesus saw the men and
  women who should be heirs of His grace and subjects of His kingdom, and some
  of whom would become martyrs for His sake. He knew that these children would
  listen to Him and accept Him as their Redeemer far more readily than would
  grown-up people, many of whom were the worldly-wise and hard-hearted. In
  teaching, He came down to their level. He, the Majesty of heaven, answered
  their questions and simplified His important lessons to meet their childish
  understanding. He planted in their minds the seeds of truth, which in after
  years would spring up and bear fruit unto eternal life. 

  When Jesus told the disciples not to forbid the children to come to Him, He
  was speaking to His followers in all ages--to officers of the church,
  ministers, helpers, and all Christians. Jesus is drawing the children, and
  He bids us, "Suffer them to come"; as if He would say, They will come, if
  you do not hinder them. . . . 

  As the Holy Spirit moves upon the hearts of the children, cooperate with His
  work. Teach them that the Saviour is calling them, that nothing can afford
  Him greater joy than for them to give themselves to Him in the bloom and
  freshness of their years. 

  The Saviour regards with infinite tenderness the souls whom He has purchased
  with His blood. They are the claim of His love. He looks upon them with
  unutterable longing. His heart is drawn out, not only to the best-trained
  and most attractive children, but to those who by inheritance and through
  neglect have objectionable traits of character. Many parents do not
  understand how much they are responsible for these traits in their children.
  . . . Jesus looks upon these children with pity. He traces from cause to
  effect. 

  The Christian worker may be Christ's agent in drawing these faulty and
  erring ones to the Saviour. By wisdom and tact he may bind them to his
  heart, he may give courage and hope, and through the grace of Christ may see
  them transformed in character, so that of them it may be said, "Of such is
  the kingdom of God" (The Ministry of Healing, pp. 42-44). 

  >From Lift Him Up - Page 182


  

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