Our minds have been much exercised day and night in regard to our schools. How shall they
be conducted? And what shall be the education and training of the youth? Where shall our
Australian Bible School be located? I was awakened this morning at one o'clock with a heavy
burden upon my soul. The subject of education has been presented before me in different lines, in
varied aspects, by many illustrations, and with direct specification, now upon one point, and
again upon another. I feel, indeed, that we have much to learn. We are ignorant in regard to many
things.
In writing and speaking upon the life of John the Baptist and the life of Christ, I have tried to
present that which has been presented to me in regard to the education of our youth. We are
under obligation to God to study this subject candidly; for it is worthy of close, critical
examination upon every side. Of John the Baptist, Christ declared, "Of them that are born of
women there hath not risen a greater." That prophet was led by the Spirit of God into the
wilderness, away from the contaminating influences of the city, to obtain an education that would
qualify him to receive instruction from God rather than from any of the learned scribes. He was
not to connect himself with the rabbis; the less he became acquainted with their teachings, their
maxims, and traditions, the more easily could the Lord impress his mind and heart, and give him
the pure mold of truth that was to be given to the people to prepare the way of the Lord. The
teachings of the scribes and Pharisees were of a character to turn the people away from the
unadulterated truth that was to be presented by the Great Teacher when He should enter upon His
mission. The only hope of the people was to open their hearts and minds to the light sent from
heaven by His prophet, the forerunner of Christ.
These lessons are for us. Those who claim to know the truth and understand the great work to
be done for this time are to consecrate themselves to God, soul, body, and spirit. In heart, in
dress, in language, in every respect they are to be separate from the fashions and practices of the
world. They are to be a peculiar and holy people. It is not their dress that makes them peculiar,
but because they are a peculiar and holy people, they cannot carry the marks of likeness to the
world.
As a people we are to prepare the way of the Lord. Every iota of ability God has given us must
be put to use in preparing the people after God's fashion, after His spiritual mold, to stand in this
great day of God's preparation; and the serious question may be awakened in world-loving hearts,
"What is eternity to us? How will my case stand in the investigative judgment? What will be my
lot and place?" Many who suppose they are going to heaven are blindfolded by the world. Their
ideas of what constitutes a religious education and religious discipline are vague, resting only on
probabilities; there are many who have no intelligent hope, and are running great risk in
practicing the very things which Jesus has taught that they should not do, in eating, drinking, and
dressing, binding themselves up with the world in a variety of ways. They have yet to learn the
serious lessons so essential to growth in spirituality, to come out from the world and be separate.
The heart is divided, the carnal mind craves conformity, similarity to the world in so many ways
that the mark of distinction from the world is scarcely distinguishable. Money, God's money, is
expended in order to make an appearance after the world's customs; the religious experience is
contaminated with worldliness, and the evidence of discipleship -- Christ's likeness in self-denial
and cross-bearing -- is not discernible by the world or by the universe of heaven.
In this country, Satan has in a most striking manner enthroned himself to control the leading
men in the government of the nation. The education which they have received from childhood is erroneous. Many things
are regarded as essential which have a most injurious effect upon the people. The many holidays
have had a baleful influence upon the minds of the youth; their effect is demoralizing to the
government, and they are entirely contrary to the will of God. They have a tendency to encourage
an artificial excitement, a desire for amusement. The people are led to squander precious time
which should be employed in useful labor to sustain their families honestly and keep clear of
debt. The passion for amusements and the squandering of money in horse racing, in betting, and
various similar lines, is increasing the poverty of the country, and deepening the misery that is
the sure result of this kind of education.
Never can the proper education be given to the youth in this country, or any other country,
unless they are separated a wide distance from the cities. The customs and practices in the cities
unfit the minds of the youth for the entrance of truth. The liquor-drinking, the smoking and
gambling, the horse racing, the theater going, the great importance placed upon holidays,-- are all
a species of idolatry, a sacrifice upon idol altars. If people conscientiously attend to their lawful
business upon the holidays, they are regarded as mean-spirited and unpatriotic. The Lord cannot
be served in this way. Those who multiply the days for pleasure and amusement are really giving
patronage to liquor-sellers, and are taking from the poor the very means that should purchase
food and clothing for their children, the very means that, used economically, would soon provide
a dwelling place for their families. These evils we can only touch upon.
It is not the correct plan to locate school buildings where the students will have constantly
before their eyes the erroneous practices that have molded their education during their lifetime,
be it longer or shorter. These holidays, with all their train of evil, result in twentyfold more
misery than good.
In a large degree the observance of these days is really compulsory. Even persons who have been
truly converted find it difficult to break away from these customs and practices. Should schools
be located in the cities or within a few miles from them, it would be most difficult to counteract
the influence of the former education which students have received in regard to these holidays
and the practices connected with them, such as horse racing, betting, and the offering of prizes.
The very atmosphere of these cities is full of poisonous malaria. The freedom of individual
action is not respected; a man's time is not regarded as really his own; he is expected to do as
others do. Should our school be located in one of these cities, or within a few miles of it, there
would be a counterworking influence constantly in active exercise to be met and overcome. The
devotion to amusements and the observance of so many holidays, give a large business to the
courts, to officers and judges, and increase the poverty and squalor that need no increasing.
All this is a false education. We shall find it necessary to establish our schools out of, and
away from, the cities, and yet not so far away that they cannot be in touch with them, to do them
good, to let light shine amid the moral darkness. Students need to be placed under the most
favorable circumstances to counteract very much of the education they have received.
Entire families are in need of thorough transformation in their habits and ideas before they can
be true representatives of Jesus Christ. And to a great extent children who are to receive an
education in our schools, will make far more advancement if separated from the family circle
where they have received an erroneous education. It may be necessary for some families to locate
where they can board their children and save expense, but in many cases it would prove a
hindrance rather than a blessing to their children. The people of this country have so little
appreciation of the importance
of industrious habits that the children are not educated to do real, earnest work. This must be a
part of the education given to the youth.
God gave Adam and Eve employment. Eden was the school for our first parents, and God was
their instructor. They learned how to till the soil and to care for the things which the Lord had
planted. They did not regard labor as degrading, but as a great blessing. Industry was a pleasure
to Adam and Eve. The fall of Adam changed the order of things; the earth was cursed: but the
decree that man should earn his bread by the sweat of his brow, was not given as a curse.
Through faith and hope, labor was to be a blessing to the descendants of Adam and Eve. God
never meant that man should have nothing to do. But the more and deeper the curse of sin, the
more the order of God is changed. The burden of toil rests heavily upon a certain class, but the
curse of idleness is upon many who are in possession of God's money, and all because of the
false idea that money increases the moral worth of men. Labor is to human beings what they
make it. To delve in constant toil, seeking momentary relief in liquor-drinking and exciting
amusements, will make men little better than the brutes.
We need schools in this country to educate children and youth that they may be masters of
labor, and not slaves of labor. Ignorance and idleness will not elevate one member of the human
family. Ignorance will not lighten the lot of the hard toiler. Let the worker see what advantage he
may gain in the humblest occupation, by using the ability God has given him as an endowment.
Thus he can become an educator, teaching others the art of doing work intelligently. He may
understand what it means to love God with the heart, the soul, the mind, and the strength. The
physical powers are to be brought into service from love to God. The Lord wants the physical
strength, and you can reveal your love for Him by the right use of your physical powers, doing
the very work which needs to be done. There is no respect of persons with God.
When the tabernacle was built in the wilderness for the service of God, the work was done
under divine direction. God was the designer, the workmen were educated by Him, and they put
heart and soul and strength into the work. There was hard labor to be done, and the sturdy
mechanic taxed muscle and sinew, manifesting his love to God in the toil for His honor.
There is in the world a great deal of hard, taxing work to be done, and he who labors without
exercising the God-given powers of mind and heart and soul, he who employs the physical
strength alone, makes the work a wearisome tax and burden. There are men with mind, heart, and
soul who regard work as a drudgery, and settle down to it with self-complacent ignorance,
delving without thought, without taxing the mental capabilities in order to do the work better.
There is science in the humblest kind of work, and if all would thus regard it, they would see
nobility in labor. Heart and soul are to be put into work of any kind; then there is cheerfulness
and efficiency. In agricultural or mechanical occupations men may give evidence to God that
they appreciate His gift in the physical powers, and the mental faculties as well. Let the educated
ability be employed in devising improved methods of work. This is what the Lord wants. There is
honor in any class of work that is essential to be done. Let the law of God be made the standard
of action, and it ennobles and sanctifies all labor. Faithfulness in the discharge of every duty
makes the work noble, and reveals a character that God can approve.
"Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy
mind, and with all thy strength." God desires the love that is expressed in heart-service, in
soul-service, in the service of the physical powers. We are not to be dwarfed in any kind of
service for God
Whatever He has lent us is to be used intelligently for Him. The man who exercises his faculties
will surely strengthen them, but he must seek to do his best. There is need of intelligence and
educated ability to devise the best methods in farming, in building, and in every other
department, that the worker may not labor in vain.
It is not a virtue for men or women to excuse slow bungling at work of any character. The
slow habits must be overcome. The man who is slow, and does his work at a disadvantage, is an
unprofitable workman. His slowness is a defect that needs to be seen and corrected. He needs to
exercise his intellect in planning how to use his time so as to secure the best results. When one is
forever at work, and the work is never done, it is because mind and heart are not put into the
work. It takes some persons ten hours to do that which another accomplishes readily in five. Such
workmen do not bring tact and method into their labor. There is something to be learned every
day as to how to improve in the manner of labor so as to get through the work, and have time for
something else. It is the duty of every worker not merely to give his strength but his mind and
intellect to that which he undertakes to do. Some who are engaged in domestic labor are always
at work; it is not because they have so much to do, but they do not plan in such a way as to have
time. They should give themselves a certain time to accomplish their task, and make every move
tell. Dullness and ignorance are no virtue. You can choose to become stereotyped in a wrong
course of action because you have not the determination to take yourselves in hand and to reform,
or you may cultivate your powers to do the very best kind of service, and then you will find
yourselves in demand anywhere and everywhere. You will be appreciated for all that you are
worth. "Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might." "Not slothful in business;
fervent in spirit; serving the Lord."
Australia needs the leaven of sound, solid, common sense
to be freely introduced into all her cities and towns. There is need of proper education. Schools
should be established for the purpose of obtaining not only knowledge from books, but
knowledge of practical industry. Men are needed in different communities to show the people
how riches are to be obtained from the soil. The cultivation of land will bring its return.
Through the observance of holidays the people both of the world and of the churches have
been educated to believe that these lazy days are essential to health and happiness; but the results
reveal that they are full of evil, which is ruining the country. The youth generally are not
educated to diligent habits. Cities and even country towns are becoming like Sodom and
Gomorrah, and like the world in the days of Noah. The training of the youth in those days was
after the same order as children are being educated and trained in this age, to love excitement, to
glorify themselves, to follow the imagination of their own evil hearts. Now as then, depravity,
cruelty, violence, and crime are the result.
All these things are lessons for us. Few now are really industrious and economical. Poverty
and distress are on every hand. There are men who work hard, and obtain very little for their
labor. There is need of much more extensive knowledge in regard to the preparation of the soil.
There is not sufficient breadth of view as to what can be realized from the earth. A narrow and
unvarying routine is followed with discouraging results. The land boom has cursed this country,
extravagant prices have been paid for lands bought on credit; then the land must be cleared, and
more money is hired; a house to be built calls for more money, and then interest with open mouth
swallows up all the profits. Debts accumulate, and then come the closing and failure of banks,
and then the foreclosure of mortgages. Thousands have been turned out of employment; families
lose their little all, they borrow and borrow, and then have to give up their property and come out
penniless. Much money and hard labor have been put into
farms bought on credit, or inherited with an incumbrance. The occupants lived in hope of
becoming real owners, and it might have been so, but for the failure of banks throughout the
country.
Now the case where a man owns his place clear is a happy exception to the rule. Merchants
are failing, families are suffering for food and clothing. No work presents itself. But the holidays
are just as numerous. Their amusements are entered into as eagerly. All who can do so will spend
their hard-earned pence and shillings and pounds for a taste of pleasure, for strong drink, or some
other indulgence. The papers that report the poverty of the people, have regular standing notices
of the horse races, and of the prizes presented for different kinds of exciting sports. The shows,
the theaters, and all such demoralizing amusements, are taking the money from the country, and
poverty is continually increasing. Poor men will invest their last shilling in a lottery, hoping to
secure a prize, and then they have to beg for food to sustain life, or go hungry. Many die of
hunger, and many put an end to their existence. The end is not yet. Men take you to their
orchards of oranges and lemons, and other fruits, and tell you that the produce does not pay for
the work done in them. It is next to impossible to make ends meet, and parents decide that the
children shall not be farmers; they have not the courage and hope to educate them to till the soil.
What is needed is schools to educate and train the youth so that they will know how to
overcome this condition of things. There must be education in the sciences, and education in
plans and methods of working the soil. There is hope in the soil, but brain and heart and strength
must be brought into the work of tilling it. The money devoted to horse racing, theater going,
gambling and lotteries; the money spent in the public houses for beer and strong drink,--let it be
expended in making the land productive, and we shall see a different state of things.
This country needs educated farmers. The Lord gives the showers of rain and the blessed
sunshine. He gives to men all their powers; let them devote heart and mind and strength to doing
His will in obedience to His commandments. Let them cut off every pernicious habit, never
expending a penny for beer or liquor of any kind, nor for tobacco, having nothing to do with
horse racing or similar sports, and then commit themselves to God, working with their
endowment of physical strength, and their labor will not be in vain. That God who has made the
world for the benefit of man, will provide means from the earth to sustain the diligent worker.
The seed placed in thoroughly prepared soil, will produce its harvest. God can spread a table for
His people in the wilderness.
The various trades and occupations have to be learned, and they call into exercise a great
variety of mental and physical capabilities; the occupations requiring sedentary habits are the
most dangerous, for they take men away from the open air and sunshine, and train one set of
faculties, while other organs are becoming weak from inaction. Men carry on their work, perfect
their business, and soon lie down in the grave. Much more favorable is the condition of one
whose occupation keeps him in the open air, exercising his muscles, while the brain is equally
taxed, and all the organs have the privilege of doing their work. To those who can live outside of
the cities, and labor in the open air, beholding the works of the great Master Artist, new scenes
are continually unfolding. As they make the book of nature their study, a softening, subduing
influence comes over them; for they realize that God's care is over all, from the glorious sun in
the heavens to the little brown sparrow or the tiniest insect that has life. The Majesty of heaven
has pointed us to these things of God's creation as an evidence of His love. He who fashioned the
flowers has said: "Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow; they toil not, neither do they
spin: and yet I say unto you, That even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like
one of these. Wherefore, if God so clothe the grass of the field, which today is, and tomorrow is
cast into the oven, shall He not much more clothe you, O ye of little faith?" The Lord is our
teacher, and under His instruction we may learn the most precious lessons from nature.
The world is under the curse of sin, and yet even in its decay it is very beautiful. If it were not
defiled by the wicked, corrupt deeds of the men who tread the soil, we could, with the blessing of
God, enjoy our world as it is. But ignorance, pleasure loving, and sinful habits, corrupting soul,
body, and spirit, make the world full of moral leprosy; a deadly moral malaria is destroying
thousands and tens of thousands. What shall be done to save our youth? We can do little, but God
lives and reigns, and He can do much. The youth are our hope for missionary labor.
Schools should be established where there is as much as possible to be found in nature to
delight the senses and give variety to the scenery. While we shun the false and artificial,
discarding horse racing, card playing, lotteries, prize fights, liquor drinking, and tobacco using,
we must supply sources of pleasure that are pure and noble and elevating. We should choose a
location for our school apart from the cities, where the eye will not rest continually upon the
dwellings of men, but upon the works of God; where there shall be places of interest for them to
visit, other than what the city affords. Let our students be placed where nature can speak to the
senses, and in her voice they may hear the voice of God. Let them be where they can look upon
His wondrous works, and through nature behold her Creator.
The youth in this country require more earnest spiritual labor than in any other country we
have yet visited. Temptations are strong and numerous; the many holidays and the habits of
idleness are most unfavorable for the young. Satan makes the idle man a partaker and co-worker
in his schemes, and the Lord Jesus does not abide in the heart by faith. The
children and youth are not educated to realize that their influence is a power for good or for evil.
It should ever be kept before them how much they can accomplish; they should be encouraged to
reach the highest standard of rectitude. But from their youth up they have been educated to the
popular idea that the appointed holidays must be treated with respect and be observed. From the
light that the Lord has given me, these days have no more influence for good than would the
worship of heathen deities; for this is really nothing less. These days are Satan's special harvest
seasons. The money drawn from men and women is expended for that which is not bread. The
youth are educated to love those things which are demoralizing, things which the word of God
condemns. The influence is evil and only evil continually.
Manual occupation for the youth is essential. The mind is not to be constantly taxed to the
neglect of the physical powers. The ignorance of physiology, and a neglect to observe the laws of
health, have brought many to the grave who might have lived to labor and study intelligently. The
proper exercise of mind and body will develop and strengthen all the powers. Both mind and
body will be preserved, and will be capable of doing a variety of work. Ministers and teachers
need to learn in regard to these things, and they need to practice as well. The proper use of their
physical strength, as well as of the mental powers, will equalize the circulation of the blood, and
keep every organ of the living machinery in running order. Minds are often abused; they are
goaded on to madness by pursuing one line of thought; the excessive employment of the brain
power and the neglect of the physical organs create a diseased condition of things in the system.
Every faculty of the mind may be exercised with comparative safety if the physical powers are
equally taxed, and the subject of thought varied. We need a change of employment, and nature is
a living, healthful teacher.
When students enter the school to obtain an education, the
instructors should endeavor to surround them with objects of the most pleasing, interesting
character, that the mind may not be confined to the dead study of books. The school should not
be in or near a city, where its extravagance, its wicked pleasures, its wicked customs and
practices, will require constant work to counteract the prevailing iniquity, that it may not poison
the very atmosphere which the students breathe. All schools should be located, as far as possible,
where the eye will rest upon the things of nature instead of clusters of houses. The ever-shifting
scenery will gratify the taste, and control the imagination. Here is a living teacher, instructing
constantly.
I have been troubled over many things in regard to our school. In their work the young men
are associated with the young women, and are doing the work which belongs to women. This is
nearly all that can be found for them to do as they are now situated; but from the light given me,
this is not the kind of education that the young men need. It does not give them the knowledge
they need to take with them to their homes. There should be a different kind of labor opened
before them, that would give opportunity to keep the physical powers taxed equally with the
mental. There should be land for cultivation. The time is not far distant when the laws against
Sunday labor will be more stringent, and an effort should be made to secure grounds away from
the cities, where fruits and vegetables can be raised. Agriculture will open resources for
self-support, and various other trades also could be learned. This real, earnest work calls for
strength of intellect as well as of muscle. Method and tact are required even to raise fruits and
vegetables successfully. And habits of industry will be found an important aid to the youth in
resisting temptation.
Here is opened a field to give vent to their pent-up energies, that, if not expended in useful
employment, will be a continual source of trial to themselves and to their teachers.
Many kinds of labor adapted to different persons may be devised. But the working of the land
will be a special blessing to the worker. There is a great want of intelligent men to till the soil,
who will be thorough. This knowledge will not be a hindrance to the education essential for
business or for usefulness in any line. To develop the capacity of the soil requires thought and
intelligence. Not only will it develop muscle, but capability for study, because the action of brain
and muscle is equalized. We should so train the youth that they will love to work upon the land,
and delight in improving it. The hope of advancing the cause of God in this country is in creating
a new moral taste in love of work, which will transform mind and character.
False witness has been borne in condemning land which, if properly worked, would yield rich
returns. The narrow plans, the little strength put forth, the little study as to the best methods, call
loudly for reform. The people need to learn that patient labor will do wonders. There is much
mourning over unproductive soil, when if men would read the Old Testament Scriptures they
would see that the Lord knew much better than they in regard to the proper treatment of land.
After being cultivated for several years, and giving her treasure to the possession of man,
portions of the land should be allowed to rest, and then the crops should be changed. We might
learn much also from the Old Testament in regard to the labor problem. If men would follow the
directions of Christ in regard to remembering the poor and supplying their necessities, what a
different place this world would be!
Let God's glory be kept ever in view; and if the crop is a failure, be not discouraged; try again;
but remember that you can have no harvest unless the ground is properly prepared for the seed;
failure may be wholly due to neglect on this point.
The school to be established in Australia should bring the question of industry to the front,
and reveal the fact that physical labor has its place in God's plan for every man, and
that His blessing will attend it. The schools established by those who teach and practice the truth
for this time, should be so conducted as to bring fresh and new incentives into all kinds of
practical labor. There will be much to try the educators, but a great and noble object has been
gained when students shall feel that love for God is to be revealed, not only in the devotion of
heart and mind and soul, but in the apt, wise appropriation of their strength. Their temptations
will be far less; from them by precept and example a light will radiate amid the erroneous
theories and fashionable customs of the world. Their influence will tend to correct the false idea
that ignorance is the mark of a gentleman.
God would be glorified if men from other countries who have acquired an intelligent
knowledge of agriculture, would come to this land, and by precept and example teach the people
how to cultivate the soil, that it may yield rich treasures. Men are wanted to educate others how
to plow, and how to use the implements of agriculture. Who will be missionaries to do this work,
to teach proper methods to the youth, and to all who feel willing and humble enough to learn? If
any do not want you to give them improved ideas, let the lessons be given silently, showing what
can be done in setting out orchards and planting corn; let the harvest be eloquent in favor of right
methods of labor. Drop a word to your neighbors when you can, keep up the culture of your own
land, and that will educate.
It may be urged by some that our school must be in the city in order to give influence to our
work, and that if it is in the country, the influence is lost to the cities; but this is not necessarily
the case.
The youth who attend our school for the first time, are not prepared to exert a correct
influence in any city as lights shining amid the darkness. They will not be prepared to reflect light
until the darkness of their own erroneous education is dispelled. In the future our school will not
be the same as it
has been in the past. Among the students there have been reliable, experienced men who have
taken advantage of the opportunity to gain more knowledge in order to do intelligent work in the
cause of God. These have been a help in the school, for they have been as a balance wheel; but in
the future the school will consist mostly of those who need to be transformed in character, and
who will need to have much patient labor bestowed upon them; they have to unlearn, and learn
again. It will take time to develop the true missionary spirit, and the farther they are removed
from the cities and the temptations that are flooding them, the more favorable will it be for them
to obtain the true knowledge and develop well-balanced characters.
Farmers need far more intelligence in their work. In most cases it is their own fault if they do
not see the land yielding its harvest. They should be constantly learning how to secure a variety
of treasures from the earth. The people should learn as far as possible to depend upon the
products that they can obtain from the soil. In every phase of this kind of labor they can be
educating the mind to work for the saving of souls for whom Christ has died. "Ye are God's
husbandry; ye are God's building." Let the teachers in our schools take their students with them
into the gardens and fields, and teach them how to work the soil in the very best manner. It would
be well if ministers who labor in word or doctrine could enter the fields and spend some portion
of the day in physical exercise with the students. They could do as Christ did in giving lessons
from nature to illustrate Bible truth. Both teachers and students would have much more healthful
experience in spiritual things, and much stronger minds and purer hearts to interpret eternal
mysteries, than they can have while studying books so constantly, and working the brain without
taxing the muscles. God has given men and women reasoning powers, and He would have men
employ their reason in regard to the use of their physical machinery. The question may be asked,
How can he get wisdom that holdeth the plow, and driveth oxen? -- by seeking her as silver, and
searching for her as for hid treasures. "For his God doth instruct him to discretion, and doth teach
him." "This also cometh forth from the Lord of hosts, which is wonderful in counsel, and
excellent in working."
He who taught Adam and Eve in Eden how to tend the garden, would instruct men today.
There is wisdom for him who holds the plow, and plants and sows the seed. The earth has its
concealed treasures, and the Lord would have thousands and tens of thousands working upon the
soil who are crowded into the cities to watch for a chance to earn a trifle; in many cases that trifle
is not turned into bread, but is put into the till of the publican, to obtain that which destroys the
reason of man formed in the image of God. Those who will take their families into the country,
place them where they have fewer temptations. The children who are with parents that love and
fear God, are in every way much better situated to learn of the Great Teacher, who is the source
and fountain of wisdom. They have a much more favorable opportunity to gain a fitness for the
kingdom of heaven. Send the children to schools located in the city, where every phase of
temptation is waiting to attract and demoralize them, and the work of character building is
tenfold harder for both parents and children.
The earth is to be made to give forth its strength; but without the blessing of God it could do
nothing. In the beginning, God looked upon all that He had made, and pronounced it very good.
The curse was brought upon the earth in consequence of sin. But shall this curse be multiplied by
increasing sin? Ignorance is doing its baleful work. Slothful servants are increasing the evil by
their lazy habits. Many are unwilling to earn their bread by the sweat of their brow, and they
refuse to till the soil. But the earth has blessings hidden in her depths for those who have courage
and will and
perseverance to gather her treasures. Fathers and mothers who possess a piece of land and a
comfortable home are kings and queens.
Many farmers have failed to secure adequate returns from their land because they have
undertaken the work as though it was a degrading employment; they do not see that there is a
blessing in it for themselves and their families. All they can discern is the brand of servitude.
Their orchards are neglected, the crops are not put in at the right season, and a mere surface work
is done in cultivating the soil. Many neglect their farms in order to keep holidays and to attend
horse races and betting clubs; their money is expended in shows and lotteries and idleness, and
then they plead that they cannot obtain money to cultivate the soil and improve their farms; but
had they more money, the result would still be the same--"Special Testimonies on Education,"
February, 1894.