
The first question God puts to the soul is, "Adam, where art thou?" The next,  "Where is Abel thy brother?" We are our brothers' keepers. Each within our  reach, all who need our help, all related to us by the ties of the family, have  a claim on us. We must not take an advantage over them; their weakness and need  are strong claims on our resources of every kind; we are bound to keep them so  far as we can; we may at any moment be called to give an account of their  whereabouts. To dispute this is to' betray the spirit of Cain, who was a  murderer.
God keeps an inventory of His saints. - In His book their names  are written. Their names, abode, and circumstances; their fathers, mothers, and  brothers; their occupation, whether they keep the sheep or till the land: all  are known to Him, because fixed by His providence. Whatever touches them is,  therefore, instantly known to Him. It is as though they were part of His very  being, and a stab of pain to them thrills His heart.
God calls us to help  Him in keeping one another. - We are to watch for each other's souls; to  consider one another to provoke to good works; to bear one another's burden; to  exhort each other, to convert the wanderer from the path of the destroyer, and  to wash stains from his feet. The cure of souls is the work of all the saints.  But this is only possible to those who have been baptized into the Spirit of  Christ. Remember that you have just as much love toward God, as you are willing  to show toward the brother whom you have seen. "This commandment have we from  Him, That he who loveth God love his brother also."