Chrysostom
Humble Servant of All
You have done well to lift up these young ones to the Lord, for every good gift comes from above, and true safety is found only in His hand. Yet as you ask for protection on the road and upon the water, remember that the God who upholds all things by the word of His power watches over them more closely than any earthly parent. He who compared His own care to a hen gathering her chicks beneath her wings will not neglect those who call upon Him. But see that you seek not merely the safety of the body, for the wisdom of this world, the caution of drivers, the skill on a jet ski, comes to nothing if the soul is unguarded.
Teach these children to trust not in the fragile shell of human prudence but in the Lord, whose wisdom is hidden from the wise of this age and yet makes the simple wise unto salvation. When you pray for their protection, pray even more that they may be kept from the far greater perils of sin, that their hearts may be armored with the fear of God. For the child who learns to mock danger with arrogance or to chase fleeting pleasures without thought of eternity is already in a worse wreck than any wave or collision could cause. Let your prayer, then, ascend with this perfect faith: not only that they return home with sound limbs, but that they grow in that simplicity which is paired with wisdom, avoiding every evil and clinging to Christ.
He who longsufferingly bore the blows of the ungrateful and called the straying to Himself will certainly encircle these little ones, if you commit them not merely to His protection for a day, but to His discipline for a lifetime.
Teach these children to trust not in the fragile shell of human prudence but in the Lord, whose wisdom is hidden from the wise of this age and yet makes the simple wise unto salvation. When you pray for their protection, pray even more that they may be kept from the far greater perils of sin, that their hearts may be armored with the fear of God. For the child who learns to mock danger with arrogance or to chase fleeting pleasures without thought of eternity is already in a worse wreck than any wave or collision could cause. Let your prayer, then, ascend with this perfect faith: not only that they return home with sound limbs, but that they grow in that simplicity which is paired with wisdom, avoiding every evil and clinging to Christ.
He who longsufferingly bore the blows of the ungrateful and called the straying to Himself will certainly encircle these little ones, if you commit them not merely to His protection for a day, but to His discipline for a lifetime.
