ake Christ first and last and best in


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  1. t such temperaments as hers and yours should unite. You possess a large
  2. proportion of the animal. You have strong animal passions which have not
  3. been controlled as they should have been. The more noble, elevated powers of
  4. the mind have been servant to the lower, or baser, passions. You have failed to
  5. be sanctified through the truth which you profess, have failed to be a partaker
  6. of the divine nature, having escaped the corruption that is in the world through
  7. lust.
  8. 23
  9. Anna Hale is not a person who can endure the roughs of life. She is a frail
  10. flower and would soon droop and die if exposed to storm and neglect. You
  11. have not in your previous marriage understood the wants of a woman. You
  12. have not appreciated her delicate organism. You failed, greatly failed, with
  13. your first wife. She possessed a powerful constitution which can scarcely be
  14. equaled for power of endurance, but she presumed too much. Your anxiety to
  15. acquire led you both to overtax yourselves and be swallowed up in the cares
  16. of this life, and to neglect present happiness and comfort, looking ahead to a
  17. time when you should have more of this world’s goods, and then you could
  18. afford to look after the comforts of life.
  19. You have made a sad mistake. The life of your wife was sacrificed. She
  20. might have lived. She ought to have lived. But you knew so little of woman’s
  21. organism that you failed to have care, and neglected the preparation you
  22. should have made for her comfort. To a very great degree you possess the
  23. temperament of your father.
  24. When you seek a wife, go not among the delicate and refined, where
  25. the intellectual predominates. Select you a wife among that class more in
  26. accordance with your organization. You cannot make a person of refined
  27. spiritual temperament happy.—Letter 21, 1868.
  28. Faithfulness in the Parental Home. It is by faithfulness to duty in the
  29. parental home that the young are to prepare themselves for homes of their
  30. own. Let them here practice self-denial and manifest kindness, courtesy, and
  31. Christian sympathy. Thus love will be kept warm in the heart, and he who
  32. goes out from such a household to stand at the head of a family of his own
  33. will know how to promote the happiness of her whom he has chosen as a
  34. companion for life.
  35. 24
  36. Marriage, instead of being the end of love, will be only its beginning.—Patriarchs
  37. and Prophets, 176.
  38. I beg of you, yes, I warn you in the name of my Master, do not enter the
  39. marriage relation and take upon yourself the responsibilities and obligation
  40. of the marriage vows until you are changed in heart and life. When you can
  41. make your own home happy, be a blessing to your father and mother, your
  42. brothers and sister, then you can understand the duties involved in the marriage
  43. relation.—Ms 2, 1871.
  44. 3. Individuality
  45. Individuality of the Wife. A woman that will submit to be ever dictated to
  46. in the smallest matters of domestic life, who will yield up her identity, will
  47. never be of much use or blessing in the world, and will not answer the purpose
  48. of God in her existence. She is a mere machine to be guided by another’s will
  49. and another’s mind. God has given each one, men and women, an identity, an
  50. individuality, that they must act in the fear of God for themselves.—Letter 25,
  51. 1885.
  52. Separate Identity of Husband and Wife. I was shown that although a couple
  53. were married, gave themselves to each other by a most solemn vow in the
  54. sight of heaven and holy angels, and the two were one, yet each had a separate
  55. identity which the marriage covenant could not destroy. Although bound to
  56. one another, yet each has an influence to exert in the world, and they should
  57. not be so selfishly engrossed with each other as to shut themselves away from
  58. society and bury their usefulness and influence.—Letter 9, 1864.
  59. A Passive Wife. Let the wife decide that it is the husband’s prerogative to
  60. have full control of her body, and
  61. 25
  62. to mold her mind to suit his in every respect, to run in the same channel as his
  63. own, and she yields her individuality; her identity is lost, merged in that of her
  64. husband. She is a mere machine for his will to move and control, a creature of
  65. his pleasure. He thinks for her, decides for her, and acts for her. She dishonors
  66. God in occupying this passive position. She has a responsibility before God,
  67. which it is her duty to preserve.
  68. When the wife yields her body and mind to the control of her husband,
  69. being passive to his will in all things, sacrificing her conscience, her dignity,
  70. and even her identity, she loses the opportunity of exerting that mighty
  71. influence for good which she should possess, to elevate her husband.—The
  72. Review and Herald, September 26, 1899.
  73. Love for Christ, Love for Each Other. Neither the husband nor the wife
  74. should merge his or her individuality in that of the other. Each has a personal
  75. relation to God. Of Him each is to ask, “What is right?” “What is wrong?”
  76. “How may I best fulfill life’s purpose?” Let the wealth of your affection flow
  77. forth to Him who gave His life for you. Make Christ first and last and best in
  78. everything. As your love for Him becomes deeper and stronger, your love for
  79. each other will be purified and strengthened.
  80. The spirit that Christ manifests toward us is the spirit that husband and
  81. wife are to manifest toward each other. “As Christ also hath loved us,” “walk
  82. in love.” “As the church is subject unto Christ, so let the wives be to their own
  83. husbands in everything. Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ also loved
  84. the church, and gave Himself for it.”
  85. No Arbitrary Control. Neither the husband nor the wife sh

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