Religious Education in the 
Family 
 
The Project Gutenberg eBook, Religious Education in the Family, by 
Henry F. Cope 
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Title: Religious Education in the Family 
Author: Henry F. Cope 
 
Release Date: January 21, 2006 [eBook #17570] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RELIGIOUS 
EDUCATION IN THE FAMILY*** 
E-text prepared by Stacy Brown Thellend, Kevin Handy, John 
Hagerson, and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading 
Team (http://www.pgdp.net/)
RELIGIOUS EDUCATION IN THE FAMILY 
by 
HENRY F. COPE 
General Secretary of the Religious Education Association 
 
The University of Chicago Press Chicago, Illinois Copyright 1915 by 
The University of Chicago All Rights Reserved Published April 1915 
Second Impression September 1915 Third Impression March 1916 
Fourth Impression June 1917 Fifth Impression August 1920 Sixth 
Impression July 1922 Seventh Impression September 1922 Composed 
and Printed By The University of Chicago Press Chicago, Illinois, 
U.S.A. 
The University of Chicago Press Chicago, Illinois 
The Baker and Taylor Company New York 
The Cambridge University Press London 
The Maruzen-Kabushiki-Kaisha Tokyo, Osaka, Kyoto, Fukuoka, 
Sendai 
The Mission Book Company Shanghai 
 
PREFACE 
In the work of religious education, with which the present series of 
books is concerned, the life of the family rightly occupies a central 
place. The church has always realized its duty to exhort parents to bring 
up their children in the nurture and admonition of the Lord, but very 
little has ever been done to enable parents to study systematically and 
scientifically the problem of religious education in the family. Today 
parents' classes are being formed in many churches; Christian
Associations, women's clubs, and institutes are studying the subject; 
individual parents are becoming more and more interested in the 
rational performance of their high duties. And there is a general desire 
for guidance. As the full bibliography at the end of this volume and the 
references in connection with each chapter indicate, there is available a 
very large literature dealing with the various elements of the problem. 
But a guidebook to organize all this material and to stimulate 
independent thought and endeavor is desirable. 
To afford this guidance the present volume has been prepared. It is 
equally adapted for the thoughtful study of the father and mother who 
are seeking help in the moral and religious development of their own 
family, and for classes in churches, institutes, and neighborhoods, 
where the important problems of the family are to be studied and 
discussed. It would be well to begin the use of the book by reading the 
suggestions for class work at the end of the volume. 
With a confident hope that religion in the family is not to be a wistful 
memory of the past but a most vital force in the making of the better 
day that is coming, this volume is offered as a contribution and a 
summons. 
The Editors 
New Year's Day, 1915 
 
CONTENTS 
CHAPTER PAGE 
I. An Interpretation of the Family 1 
II. The Present Status of Family Life 10 
III. The Permanent Elements in Family Life 27 
IV. The Religious Place of the Family 37
V. The Meaning Of Religious Education in the Family 46 
VI. The Child's Religious Ideas 60 
VII. Directed Activity 75 
VIII. The Home as a School 87 
IX. The Child's Ideal Life 101 
X. Stories and Reading 110 
XI. The Use of the Bible in the Home 119 
XII. Family Worship 126 
XIII. Sunday in the Home 145 
XIV. The Ministry of the Table 164 
XV. The Boy and Girl in the Family 173 
XVI. The Needs of Youth 183 
XVII. The Family and the Church 198 
XVIII. Children and the School 212 
XIX. Dealing with Moral Crises 218 
XX. Dealing with Moral Crises (Continued) 231 
XXI. Dealing with Moral Crises (Continued) 240 
XXII. Dealing with Moral Crises (Concluded) 249 
XXIII. The Personal Factors in Religious Education 259 
XXIV. Looking to the Future 268
Suggestions for Class Work 281 
A Book List 290 
Index 297 
CHAPTER I 
AN INTERPRETATION OF THE FAMILY 
§ 1. TAKING THE HOME IN RELIGIOUS TERMS 
The ills of the modern home are symptomatic. Divorce, childless 
families, irreverent children, and the decadence of the old type of 
separate home life are signs of forgotten ideals, lost motives, and 
insufficient purposes. Where the home is only an opportunity for 
self-indulgence, it easily becomes a cheap boarding-house, a 
sleeping-shelf, an implement for social advantage. While it is true that 
general economic developments have effected marked changes in 
domestic economy, the happiness and efficiency of the family do not 
depend wholly on the parlor, the kitchen, or    
    
		
	
	
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