“Our Father.”
“Our Father.”
The mother’s voice was low, and tender, and solemn.
“Our Father.” On
two sweet voices the words were borne upward.
It was the innocence of reverent childhood that gave
them utterance.
“Who art in the heavens.”
“Who art in the heavens,”
repeated the children, one with her eyes bent meekly
down, and the other looking upward, as if she would
penetrate the heavens into which her heart aspired.
“Hallowed be Thy name.”
Lower fell the voices of the little
ones. In a gentle murmur they said: “Hallowed
be Thy name.”
“Thy kingdom come.”
And the burden of the prayer was still
taken up by the children—“Thy kingdom
come.”
“Thy will be done on earth, as it is done in
heaven.”
Like a low, sweet echo from the land
of angels—“Thy will be done on earth,
as it is done in heaven,” filled the chamber.
And the mother continued—“Give
us this day our daily bread.”
“Our daily bread” lingered
a moment on the air, as the mother’s voice was
hushed into silence.
“And forgive us our debts, as
we also forgive our debtors.”
The eyes of the children had drooped
for a moment. But they were uplifted again as
they prayed—“And forgive us our debts,
as we also forgive our debtors.”
“And lead us not into temptation;
but deliver us from evil. For Thine is the kingdom,
and the power, and the glory, for ever. Amen.”
All these holy words were said, piously
and fervently, by the little ones, as they knelt with
clasped hands beside their mother. Then, as their
thoughts, uplifted on the wings of prayer to their
heavenly Father, came back again and rested on their
earthly parents, a warmer love came gushing from their
hearts.
Pure kisses—tender embraces—the
fond “good night.” What a sweet agitation
pervaded all their feelings! Then two dear heads
were placed side by side on the snowy pillow, the
mother’s last kiss given, and the shadowy curtains
drawn.
What a pulseless stillness reigns
throughout the chamber! Inwardly the parents’
listening ears are bent. They have given these
innocent ones into the keeping of God’s angels,
and they can almost hear the rustle of their garments
as they gather around their sleeping babes. A
sigh, deep and tremulous, breaks on the air. Quickly
the mother turns to the father of her children, with
a look of earnest inquiry on her countenance.
And he answers thus her silent question.
“Far back, through many years,
have my thoughts been wandering. At my mother’s
knee thus said I nightly, in childhood, my evening
prayer. It was that best and holiest of all prayers,
“Our Father,” that she taught me.
Childhood and my mother passed away. I went forth
as a man into the world, strong, confident, and self-seeking.
Once I came into great temptation. Had I fallen
in that temptation, I would have fallen, I sadly fear,
never to have risen again. The struggle in my
mind went on for hours. I was about yielding.
All the barriers I could oppose to the in-rushing
flood seemed just ready to give way, when, as I sat
in my room one evening, there came from an adjoining
chamber, now first occupied for many weeks, the murmur
of low voices. I listened. At first, no
articulate sound was heard, and yet something in the
tones stirred my heart with new and strange emotions.
At length, there came to my ears, in the earnest, loving
voice of a woman, the words—’Deliver
us from evil.’ For an instant, it seemed
to me as if the voice were that of my mother.
Back, with a sudden bound through all the intervening
years, went my thoughts; and, a child in heart again,
I was kneeling at my mother’s knee. Humbly
and reverently I said over the words of the holy prayer
she had taught me, heart and eyes uplifted to heaven.
The hour and the power of darkness had passed.
I was no longer standing in slippery places, with
a flood of waters ready to sweep me to destruction;
but my feet were on a rock. My mother’s
pious care had saved her son. In the holy words
she taught me in childhood, was a living power to
resist evil through all my after life. Ah! that
unknown mother, as she taught her child to repeat
his evening prayer, how little dreamed she that the
holy words were to reach a stranger’s ears, and
save him through memories of his own childhood and
his own mother! And yet it was so. What
a power there is in God’s Word, as it flows
into and rests in the minds of innocent children!”
Tears were in the eyes of the wife
and mother as she lifted her face, and gazed with
a subdued tenderness upon the countenance of her husband.
Her heart was too full for utterance. A little
while she thus gazed, and then, with a trembling joy,
laid her head upon his bosom. Angels were in
the chamber where their dear ones slept, and they
felt their holy presence.