THE CHRISTIAN WIFE
It is a high honour for a woman  to be chosen from among all womankind, to be the wife of a godly and true man.  She is lifted up to be a crowned queen. Her husband's manly love laid at her  feet, exalts her to the throne of his life. Great power is placed in her hands.  Sacred destinies are reposed in her keeping. Will she wear her crown  beneficently? Will she fill her realm with beauty and with blessing? Or will  she fail in her holy trust? Only her married life can be the answer.
  A woman may well pause before she gives her hand in marriage,  and inquire whether he is worthy, to whom she is asked to surrender so much;  whether he can bring true happiness to her life; whether he can meet the  cravings of her nature for love and for companionship; whether he is worthy to  be lifted to the highest place in her heart and honoured as a husband should be  honoured. She must ask these questions for her own sake, else the dream may fade with the bridal  wreath—and she may learn, when too late, that he for whom she has left all, and  to whom she has given all—is not worthy of the sacred trust, and has no power  to fill her life with happiness, to awaken her heart's chords, to touch her  soul's depths.
  But the question should be turned  and asked from the other side. Can she be a true wife to him who asks for her  hand? Is she worthy of the love that is laid at her feet? Can she be a blessing  to the life of him who would lift her to the throne of his heart? Will he find  in her all the beauty, all the tender loveliness, all the rich qualities of  nature, all the deep sympathy and companionship, all the strengthful, uplifting  love, all the sources of joy and help, which he seems now to see in her? Is  there any possible future for him, which she could not share? Are there needs  in his soul, or hungers, which she cannot answer? Are there chords in his life  which her fingers cannot awaken?
  Surely it is proper for her to  question her own soul for him—while she bids him question his soul for her. A  wife has a part in the song of  wedded love—if it is to be a harmony. She holds in her hands on her wedding  day—precious interests, sacred destinies, and holy responsibilities, which, if  disclosed to her sight at once, might well appal the bravest heart. Her opportunity  is one which the loftiest angel might covet. Not the happiness only of a manly  life—but its whole future of character, of influence, of growth, rests with  her.
  What is the true ideal of a  godly wife? It is not something lifted above the common experiences of life,  not an ethereal angel feeding on ambrosia and moving in the realms of  imagination. In some European cities they sell to the tourist models of their  cathedrals made of alabaster, whiter than snow. But so delicate are these  alabaster shrines that they must be kept under glass covers or they will be  soiled by the dust; and so frail that they must be sheltered from every crude  touch, lest their lovely columns may be shattered. They are very graceful and  beautiful—but they serve no lofty purpose. No worshipers can enter their doors.  No melody rises to heaven from their aisles. So there are ideals of womanhood  which are very lovely, full of graceful charms, pleasing, attractive—but which  are too delicate and frail for this wearisome, storm-swept world of ours. Such  ideals the poets and the novelists sometimes give us. They appear well to the  eye—as they are portrayed for us on the brilliant page. But of what use would  they be in the life which the real woman of our day has to live? A breath of  earthly air would stain them! One day of actual experience in the hard toils  and sore struggles of life would shatter their frail loveliness to fragments!  We had better seek for ideals which will not be soiled by a crude touch, nor  blown away by a stiff breeze, and which will grow lovelier as they move through  life's paths of sacrifice and toil. The true wife needs to be no mere poet's  dream, no artist's picture, no ethereal lady too fine for use—but a woman  healthful, strong, practical, industrious, with a hand for life's common  duties, yet crowned with that beauty which a high and noble purpose gives to a  soul.
  One of the first essential  elements in a wife is faithfulness,  in the largest sense. The heart of her husband safely trusts in her. Perfect  confidence is the basis of all true affection. A shadow of doubt destroys the  peace of married life. A true wife, by her character and by her conduct, proves  herself worthy of her husband's trust. He has confidence in her affection; he knows that her  heart is unalterably true to him. He has confidence in her management; he confides to her  the care of his household. He knows that she is true to all his interests, that  she is prudent and wise, not wasteful nor extravagant. It is one of the  essential things in a true wife—that her husband shall be able to leave in her  hands the management of all domestic affairs, and know that they are safe.  Wifely wastefulness and extravagance have destroyed the happiness of  many a household, and wrecked many a home. On the other hand, many a man owes  his prosperity to his wife's prudence and her wise administration of household  affairs.
  Every true wife makes her  husband's interests her own. While he lives for her, carrying her image in his  heart and toiling for her all the days—she thinks only of what will do him  good. When burdens press upon him—she tries to lighten them by sympathy, by  cheer, by the inspiration of love. She enters with zest and enthusiasm into all  his plans. She is never a weight to drag him down; she is strength in his heart  to help him ever to do nobler and better things.
  All wives are not such blessings  to their husbands. Woman is compared sometimes to the vine, while man is the  strong oak to which it clings. But there are different kinds of vines. Some  vines wreathe a robe of beauty and a crown of glory for the tree, covering it  in summer days with green leaves and in the autumn hanging among its branches  rich purple clusters of fruit. Other vines twine their arms about it—only to  sap its very life and destroy its vigour, until it stands decaying and  unsightly, stripped of its splendour, discrowned and fit only for the fire!
  A true wife makes a man's life  nobler, stronger, grander, by the omnipotence of her love, turning all the  forces of manhood upward and heavenward. While she clings to him in holy  confidence and loving dependence, she brings out in him whatever is noblest and  richest in his being. She inspires him with courage and earnestness. She  beautifies his life. She softens whatever is crude and harsh in his habits or  his spirit. She clothes him with the gentler graces of refined and cultured  manhood. While she yields to him and never disregards his lightest wish, she is  really his queen, ruling his whole life and leading him onward and upward in  every proper path.
  But there are wives also like the  vines which cling only to blight.  Their dependence is weak, indolent helplessness. They lean—but impart no  strength. They cling—but they sap the life. They put forth no hand to help.  They loll on sofas or promenade the streets; they dream over sentimental  novels; they gossip in drawing rooms. They are utterly useless—and being  useless they become burdens even to manliest, tenderest love. Instead of making  a man's life stronger, happier, richer—they absorb his strength, impair his  usefulness, hinder his success and cause him to be a failure among men. To  themselves also the result is wretchedness. Dependence is beautiful when it  does not become weakness and  inefficiency. The true wife clings and leans—but she also helps and inspires.  Her husband feels the mighty inspiration of her love in all his life. Toil is  easier, burdens are lighter, battles are less fierce—because of the face that  waits in the quiet of the home, because of the heart that beats in loving  sympathy whatever the experience, because of the voice that speaks its words of  cheer and encouragement when the day's work is done. No wife knows how much she  can do to make her husband honoured among men, and his life a power and a  success, by her loyal faithfulness, by the active inspiration of her own sweet  life!
  The good wife is a good housekeeper. I know well how  unromantic this remark will appear to those whose dreams of married life are  woven of the fancies of youthful sentimentality. But these frail dreams of sentimentality will not last long amid the stern  realities of life, and then that which will prove one of the rarest elements of  happiness and blessing in the household, will be housewifely industry and diligence.
  When young people marry they are  rarely troubled with many thoughts about the details of housekeeping. Their  dreams are high above all such common place issues. The mere mention of such  things as cooking, baking, sweeping, dusting, mending, ironing—jars upon the  poetic rhythm of the lofty themes of conversation. It never enters the brains  of these happy lovers—that it will make every difference in the world in their  home life—whether the bread is sweet or sour; whether the oatmeal is well  cooked or scorched; whether the meals are punctual or tardy. The mere thought  that such common matters could affect the tone of their wedded life, seems a  desecration.
  It is a pity to dash away such exquisite dreams—but the truth  is, they do not long outlast the echo of the wedding peals—or the fragrance of  the bridal roses! The newly married are not long within their own doors, before  they find that something more than tender sentimentality is needed to make  their home-life a success. They come down from the clouds—when the daily routine  begins and touch the common soil on which the feet of other mortals walk. Then  they find that they are dependent, just like ordinary people, on some quite  commonplace duties. One of the very first things they discover is the intimate  relation between the kitchen and wedded happiness. That love  may fulfil its delightful prophecies and realize its splendid dreams—there must  be in the new home, some very practical elements. 
  The palace that is to rise into  the air, shooting up its towers, displaying its wonders of architecture,  flashing its splendours in the sunshine—to the admiration of the world, must  have its foundation in commonplace earth, resting on plain, hard, honest rock.  Love may build its palace of noble sentiments and tender affections and sweet  romances—rising into the very clouds, and in this splendid home two souls may  dwell in the enjoyment of the highest possibilities of wedded life; but this palace, too, must stand on the  ground, with unpoetic and unsentimental stones for its foundation. That  foundation is good  housekeeping. In other words, good breakfasts, dinners and suppers, a  well-kept house, order, system, promptness, punctuality, good cheer—far more  than any young lovers dream—does happiness in married life depend upon such  commonplace things as these!
  Love is very patient, very kind,  very gentle; and where there is love no doubt the plainest fare is ambrosia;  and the plainest surroundings are charming. I know the wise man said:  "Better is a dinner of herbs where love is, than a good roast-beef dinner,  with hatred!" But herbs as a constant diet will pall on the taste, even if  love is ever present to season them. In this day of advanced civilization, it  ought to be possible to have both the stalled ox—and love. Husbands are not  angels in this mundane state, and not being such they need a substantial basis  of good housekeeping, for the realization of their dreams of blissful  home-life!
  There certainly have been cases  in which very tender love has lost its tenderness, and when the cause lay in  the disorder and mismanagement of the housewifery. There is no doubt that many  a heart-estrangement, begins at the table where meals are slipshod, and food is  poorly prepared or served. Bad  housekeeping will soon drive the last vestige of romance out of any home! The illusion which love weaves  about an idolized bride, will soon vanish if she proves lazy or incompetent in  her domestic management. The wife who will keep the charm of early love  unbroken through the years, and in whose home the dreams of the wedding day  will come true—must be a good housekeeper!
  In one of his Epistles Paul gives  the counsel that young wives should be "workers at home," signifying  that home is the sphere of the  wife's duties, and that she is to find her chief work there. There is a  glory in all the Christian charities which Christian women, especially in these  recent days, are founding and conducting with so much enthusiasm and such  marked and abounding success. Woman is endowed with gifts of sympathy, of  gentleness, of inspiring strengthfulness, which peculiarly fit her to be Christ's messenger of mercy to human woe and sorrow and pain.
  There is the widest opportunity  in the most fitting service for every woman whose heart God has touched to be a  ministering angel to those who need sympathy or help. There are many who are  free to serve in public charities, in caring for the poor, for the sick in  hospital wards, for the orphaned and the aged. There are few women who cannot  do a little in some one or more of these organizations of Christian  beneficence.
  But it should be understood, that  for every wife the first duty is the making and keeping of her own home! Her  first and best work should be done there—and until it is well done—she has no  right to go outside to take up other duties. She is to be a "worker at home!"  She must look upon her home as the one spot on earth, for which she alone is  responsible, and which she must cultivate well for God—even if she never does  anything outside. For her the Father's business is not attending benevolent  societies, and missionary meetings, and mothers' meetings, and bible  conventions, or even teaching a Sunday-school class—until she has made her own  home all that her wisest thought and best skill can make it!
  There have been wives who in  their zeal for Christ's work outside, have neglected  Christ's work inside their own doors! They have had  eyes and hearts for human need and human sorrow in the broad fields lying far  out—but neither eye nor heart for the work of love close about their own feet.  The result has been that while they were doing angelic work in the lanes and  streets—the angels were mourning over their neglected duties within the  hallowed walls of their own homes! While they were winning a place in the  hearts of the poor or the sick or the orphan—they were losing their rightful  place in the hearts of their own household. Let it be remembered that Christ's  work in the home is the first  that he gives to every wife, and that no amount of consecrated activities in  other spheres, will atone for neglect or failure there.
  The good wife is generous and warm-hearted. She does not  grow grasping and selfish. In her desire to economize and add to her stores—she does not  forget those about her who suffer or are in poverty. While she gives her wisest  and most earnest thought and her best and most skilful work to her own home,  her heart does not grow cold toward those outside who need sympathy. I cannot  conceive of true womanhood ripened into mellow richness, yet lacking the  qualities of gentleness and unselfishness. A woman whose heart is not touched  by the sight of sorrow, and whose hands do not go out in relief where it is in  her power to help—lacks one of the elements which make the glory of womanhood.
  This is not the place to speak of  woman as a ministering angel. If it were, it would be easy to fill many pages  with the bright records of most holy deeds of self-sacrifice. I am speaking  now, however, of woman as wife;  and only upon so much of this ministry to the suffering—as she may perform in  her own home, at her own door and in connection with her housewifely duties—is  it fit to linger at this time. But even in this limited sphere, her  opportunities are by no means small.
  It is in her own home—that this  warmth of heart and this openness of hand are first to be shown. It is as wife  and mother—that her gentleness performs its most sacred ministry. Her hand  wipes away the teardrops when there is sorrow. In sickness she is the tender  nurse. She bears upon her own heart every burden that weighs upon her husband.  No matter how the world goes with him during the day—when he enters his own  door he meets the fragrant  atmosphere of love. Other friends may forsake him—but she clings to him  with unalterable fidelity. When gloom comes down and adversity falls upon  him—her faithful eyes look ever into his like two  stars of hope shining in the  darkness. When his heart is crushed, beneath her smile it gathers itself again  into strength, "like a wind-torn flower in the sunshine." "You  cannot imagine," wrote De Tocqueville of his  wife, "what she is in great trials. Usually so gentle, she then becomes  strong and energetic. She watches me without my knowing it; she softens, calms  and strengthens me in difficulties which distract me—but leave her  serene." An eloquent tribute—but one which thousands of husbands might  give.
  Men often do not see the angel in the plain, plodding woman who  walks quietly beside them—until the day of trial comes; then in the  darkness—the glory shines out. An angel ministered to our Lord when in Gethsemane he wrestled with his great and bitter sorrow.  What a benediction to the mighty Sufferer, was in the soft gliding to his side  of that gentle presence, in the touch of that soothing, supporting hand laid  upon him, in the comfort of that gentle voice thrilling with sympathy as it spoke  its strengthening message of love! Was it a mere coincidence that just at that  time and in that place, that the radiant messenger came? No, it is always so. Angels choose such occasions to pay  their visits to men.
  So it is in the dark hours of a  man's life, when burdens press, when sorrows weigh like mountains upon his  soul, when adversities have left him crushed and broken,  or when he is in the midst of fierce struggles which try the strength of every fibber  of his manhood—that all the radiance and glory of a true wife's strengthful  love shine out before his eyes! Only then does he recognize in her—God's angel  of mercy!
  In sickness—how thoughtful, how skilful,  how gentle a nurse is the true wife! In struggle with temptation or adversity or difficulty—what an inspirer she  is! In misfortune or disaster—what lofty heroism  does she exhibit and what courage does her bravery kindle in her husband's  heart! Instead of being crushed by the unexpected loss, she only then rises to  her full grandeur of soul. Instead of weeping, repining and despairing, and  thus adding tenfold to the burden of the misfortune—she cheerfully accepts the  changed circumstances and becomes a minister  of hope and strength. She turns away from luxury and ease—to the plainer  home, the simpler life, the humbler surroundings, without a murmur!
  It is in such circumstances and  experiences, that the heroism of woman's soul is manifested. Many a man is  carried victoriously through misfortune and enabled to rise again—because of  the strong inspiring sympathy and the self-forgetting help of his wife! And  many a man fails in fierce struggle, and rises not again from the defeat of  misfortune—because the wife at his side proves unequal to her opportunity.
  But a wife's ministry of mercy  reaches outside her own doors. Every true home is an influence of blessing in  the community where it stands. Its lights shine out. Its songs ring out. Its  spirit breathes out. The neighbours know whether it is hospitable or  inhospitable, warm or cold, inviting or repelling. Some homes bless no lives  outside their own circle; others are perpetually pouring out sweetness and fragrance. 
  The ideal Christian home is a  far-reaching blessing. It sets its lamps in the windows, and while they give no  less light and cheer to those within, they pour a little beam upon the gloom  without, which may brighten some dark path and put a little cheer into the  heart of some poor passer-by. Its doors stand ever open with a welcome to  everyone who comes seeking shelter from the storm, or sympathy in sorrow, or  help in trial. It is a hospice, like those blessed refuges on the Alps, where the weary or the chilled or the fainting are sure always of refreshment, of warmth, of kindly friendship, of gentle ministry of mercy. It is  a place where one who is in trouble may always go confident of sympathy and comfort. It is a place where  the young people love to go, because they know they are welcome and because  they find there inspiration and help.
  And this atmosphere of the home,  the wife makes; indeed, it is her own spirit filling the house and pouring out  like light or like fragrance. A true wife is universally beloved. She is  recognized as one of God's angels scattering blessings as far as her hand can  reach. Her neighbours are all blessed by her ministrations. When sickness or  sorrow touches any other household, some token of sympathy finds its way from  her hand into the shadowed home. To the old she is gentle and patient. To the  young she is inciting and helpful. To the poor she is God's hand reached out. To  the sufferer she brings strength. To the sorrowing she is a consoler. There is  trouble nowhere near—but her face appears at the door and her hand brings its  blessing!
  Some wife, weary already, her  hands over-full with the multiplied cares and duties of her household life—may  plead that she has no strength to spend in sympathy and help for others. But it  is truly wonderful how light these added burdens seem—when they are taken up in  love. Always the duties we perform out of love for Christ  and his suffering ones—become easy and pleasant as we take them up. Heaven's  benediction rests ever on the home of her who lives to do good.
  Scarcely a word has been said  thus far of a wife's personal relation to her husband and the duties which  spring out of that relation. These are manifold, and yet they are so sacred and delicate—that it seems hardly  fit to speak or write of them. A few of the more important of these duties  belonging to the wife's part may be merely touched upon. A true wife gives her  husband her fullest confidence. She hides nothing from him. She gives no pledge  of secrecy which will seal her lips in his presence. She listens to no words of  admiration from others, which she may not repeat to him. She expresses to him  every feeling, every hope, every desire and yearning, every joy or pain.
  Then while she utters every  confidence in his ear—he is most careful to speak in no other ear any word  concerning the sacred inner life of her home. Are there little frictions or grievances in the wedded life? Has her  husband faults which annoy her or cause her pain?  Does he fail in this duty or that? Do differences arise which threaten the peace of  the home? In the feeling of disappointment and pain, smarting under a sense of  injury—a wife may be strongly tempted to seek sympathy by telling her trials to  some intimate friends. Nothing could be more fatal to her own truest interests,  and to the hope of restored happiness and peace in her home. Grievances  complained of outside—remain unhealed sores. The wise wife will share her  secret of unhappiness with none but her Master, while she strives in every way  that patient love can suggest—to remove the causes of discord or trouble.
  Love sees much in a wife which  other eyes see not. It throws a veil over her blemishes; it transfigures even  her plainest features. One of the problems of her wedded life—is to retain this  charm for her husband's eyes as long as she lives, to appear lovely to him even  when the colour has faded from her cheeks and when the music has gone out of  her voice. This is no impossibility; it is only what is done in every true  home. But it cannot be done by the arts of the dressmaker, the milliner and the hair-dresser, only the arts of love can do it! The wife who would  always hold in her husband's heart the place she held on her wedding day—will  never cease striving to be lovely. She will be as careful of her words and acts and her whole bearing toward  him—as she was before marriage. She will cultivate in her own life whatever is beautiful, whatever is winning, whatever is graceful. She will scrupulously  avoid whatever is offensive or unwomanly.
  She will look well to her personal appearance; no woman  can be careless in her dress, slovenly and untidy—and long keep her place on  the throne of her husband's life. She will look well to her inner life. She must have  mental attractiveness. She will seek to be clothed in spiritual beauty. Her  husband must see in her ever-new loveliness, as the years move on. As the  charms of physical beauty may fade in the toils and  vicissitudes of life, there must be more and more beauty of soul to shine out to replace the  attractions which are lost. It has been said that "the wife should always  leave something to be revealed only to her husband, some modest charm, some  secret grace, reserved solely for his delight and inspiration, like those  flowers which give of their sweetness only to the hand which lovingly gathers  them." She should always care more to please him—than any other person in  the world. She should prize more highly a compliment from his lips—than from  any other human lips. Therefore she should reserve for him the sweetest charms;  she should seek to bring ever to him some new surprise of loveliness; she  should plan pleasures and delights for him. Instead of not caring how she  looks—or whether she is agreeable or not when no one but her husband is  present, she should always be at her best for him! Instead of being bright and  lovely when there is company, then relapsing into languor and silence when the  company is gone—she should seek always to be brightest and loveliest when only  he and she sit together in the quiet of the home. Both husband and wife should  ever bring their best things to each other!
  Again let me say, that no wife  can over-estimate the influence she wields over her husband, or the measure in  which his character, his career and his very destiny are laid in her hands for shaping. The sway which she  holds over him is the sway of  love—but it is mighty and resistless. If she retains her  power, if she holds her place as queen of his life—she can do with him as she  will! Even unconsciously to herself, without any thought of her responsibility,  she will exert over him an influence which will go far toward making or marring all his future! If she has no  lofty conception of life herself—if she is vain and frivolous—she will only chill  his ardour, weaken his resolution and draw him aside from any earnest endeavour. 
  But if she has in her soul noble  womanly qualities, if she has true thoughts of life, if she has purpose,  strength of character and fidelity to principle—she will be to him an unfailing  inspiration toward all that is noble, manly and Christ like! The high  conceptions of life in her mind—will elevate his conceptions. Her firm, strong  purpose—will put vigour and determination into every resolve and act of his.  Her purity of soul—will cleanse and refine his spirit. Her warm interest in all  his affairs and her wise counsel at every point—will make him strong for every  duty and valiant in every struggle. Her careful domestic management, will  become an important element of success in his business life. Her bright,  orderly, happy home-making, will be a perpetual source of joy and peace, and an  incentive to nobler living. Her unwavering fidelity, her tender  affectionateness, her womanly sympathy, her beauty of soul—will make her to him God's angel indeed—sheltering, guarding,  keeping, guiding and blessing him! Just in the measure in which she realizes  this lofty ideal of wifehood—will she fulfill her mission and reap the rich  harvest of her hopes.
  Such is the "woman's  lot" which falls on every wife. It is solemn enough to make her very  thoughtful and very earnest. How can she make sure that her influence over her  husband will be for good—that he will be a better man, more successful in his  career and more happy, because she is his wife? Not by any mere moral posturing  so as to seem to have lofty purpose and wise thoughts of life; not by any weak  resolving to help him and be an uplifting inspiration to him; not by perpetual  preaching and lecturing on a husband's duties and on manly character! She can  do it only by being in the very depths of her soul, in every thought and  impulse of her heart, and in every fibber of her nature—a true and noble woman.  She will make him not like what she tells him he ought to be—but like what  she herself is!
  So it all comes back to a  question of character. She  can be a good wife only by being a good woman. And she can be a good woman in  the true sense only by being a Christian woman. Nowhere but in Christ—can  she find the wisdom and strength she needs, to meet the solemn  responsibilities of wifehood. Only in Christ can she  find that rich beauty of  soul, that gemming of the character, which shall make  her lovely in her husband's sight, when the bloom of youth is gone, when the  brilliance has faded out of her eyes, and the roses have fled from her cheeks.  Only Christ can teach her how to live so as to be  blessed, and be a blessing in her married life!
  Nothing in this world is sadder  than to compare love's early dreams, what love meant to be, with the too  frequent story of the after-life; what came of the dreams, what was the outcome  of love's venture. Why so many sad disappointments? Why do so many bridal  wreaths fall into dust? Is there no possibility of making these fair dreams  come true, of keeping these flowers lovely and fragrant through all the years?  Yes—but only in Christ! The young maiden goes  smiling and singing to the marriage altar. Does she know that if she has not Christ with her—she is as a lamb going to the sacrifice? Let  her tarry at the gateway until she has linked her life to Christ,  who is the first and the last. Human love is very precious—but it is not enough  to satisfy a heart. There will be trials,  there will be perplexities,  there will be crosses and disappointments, there will be solicitudes and sorrows. Then none but Christ will be sufficient! Without him, the way will be  dreary. But with his benediction and presence—the flowers which droop today will bloom fresh  again tomorrow! And the dreams of early love will build  themselves up into a palace of peace and joy for the solace, the comfort and  shelter of old age!

