Discipline and Other Sermons by Charles Kingsley
page 78 of 186 (41%)
page 78 of 186 (41%)
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that they might conquer it by fulfilling Isaiah's prophecy. They
were going forth, with their feet shod with the good news of Peace; to treat all men, not as their enemies, not as their slaves, but as their brothers; and to bring them good news, and bid them share in it,--the good news that God was at peace with them, and that they might now be at peace with their own consciences, and at peace with each other, for all were brothers in Jesus Christ their Lord. Shod with that good news of peace, these Christians were going to conquer the world, and to penetrate into distant lands from which the Roman armies had been driven back in shameful defeat. To penetrate, too, where the Roman armies never cared to go,--among the miserable and crowded lanes of the great cities, and conquer there what the Roman armies could not conquer--the vice, the misery, the cruelty, the idolatry of the heathen. The shield, again, guarded those parts of the soldier which the armour did not guard. It warded off the stones, arrows, and darts-- fiery darts often, as St. Paul says, which were hurled at him from afar. And the Christian's shield, St. Paul says, was to be Faith,-- trust in God,--belief that he was fighting God's battle, and not his own; belief that God was over him in the battle, and would help and guide him, and give him strength to do his work. To believe firmly that he was in the right, and on God's side. To believe that, when he was wounded and struck down,--when men deserted him, cursed him, tried to take his life--perhaps did take his life--with torments unspeakable,--to have faith to say in his heart, 'I am in the right.' When he was writhing under the truly fiery darts of misrepresentation, slander, scorn, or under the equally fiery darts of remorse for his own mistakes, his own weaknesses, still to say |
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