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              The Ministry of Healing
            
            
              The God of the whole earth shall He be called.”
            
            
              “Leave thy fatherless children, I will preserve them alive;
            
            
              And let thy widows trust in Me.”
            
            
              Psalm 68:5; Isaiah 54:5,
            
            
              A.R.V.; Jeremiah 49:11.
            
            
              Many a father, when called upon to part from his loved ones,
            
            
              has died resting in faith upon God’s promise to care for them. The
            
            
              Lord provides for the widow and the fatherless, not by a miracle in
            
            
              sending manna from heaven, not by sending ravens to bring them
            
            
              food; but by a miracle upon human hearts, expelling selfishness,
            
            
              and unsealing the fountains of Christlike love. The afflicted and
            
            
              bereaved ones He commits to His followers as a precious trust. They
            
            
              have the very strongest claim upon our sympathy.
            
            
              In homes supplied with life’s comforts, in bins and granaries
            
            
              filled with the yield of abundant harvests, in warehouses stocked
            
            
              with the products of the loom, and vaults stored with gold and silver,
            
            
              God has supplied means for the sustenance of these needy ones. He
            
            
              calls upon us to be channels of His bounty.
            
            
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              Many a widowed mother with her fatherless children is bravely
            
            
              striving to bear her double burden, often toiling far beyond her
            
            
              strength in order to keep her little ones with her and to provide for
            
            
              their needs. Little time has she for their training and instruction, little
            
            
              opportunity to surround them with influences that would brighten
            
            
              their lives. She needs encouragement, sympathy, and tangible help.
            
            
              God calls upon us to supply to these children, so far as we can,
            
            
              the want of a father’s care. Instead of standing aloof, complaining
            
            
              of their faults, and of the trouble they may cause, help them in every
            
            
              way possible. Seek to aid the careworn mother. Lighten her burdens.
            
            
              Then there are the multitudes of children who have been wholly
            
            
              deprived of the guidance of parents and the subduing influence of
            
            
              a Christian home. Let Christians open their hearts and homes to
            
            
              these helpless ones. The work that God has committed to them as
            
            
              an individual duty should not be turned over to some benevolent
            
            
              institution or left to the chances of the world’s charity. If the children
            
            
              have no relatives able to give them care, let the members of the