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pastorfrin
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Joined: 2006/1/19
Posts: 1406


 Re: WAR IS UNWISE

WAR INCONSISTENT WITH THE
RELIGION OF JESUS CHRIST

by David Low Dodge

Part 2

________________________________________

WAR IS UNWISE

That the principles and practice of war are unwise I argue:

5. War is unwise, as it diminishes the happiness of mankind

Happiness is the professed object that most men are striving to obtain. Alas! Few, comparatively, seek it where it is alone to be found. But that happiness which flows from the benevolent spirit of the gospel is to be prized far above rubies. It is a treasure infinitely surpassing anything that can be found merely in riches, honors, and pleasures.
But war always diminishes the aggregate of happiness in the world. When nations wage war upon each other, all classes of their inhabitants are more or less oppressed. They are subjected to various privations: prosperity declines, and external sources of happiness are mostly dried up. Anxiety for friends, loss of relations, loss of property, the fear of pillage, severe services, great privations, and the dread of conquest keep them constantly distressed. They are like the troubled sea that cannot rest, whose waters cast up mire and dirt.
Those actually engaged in war generally suffer privations and hardships of the severest kind. Even the sage counselors who declare wars are often in so great anxiety and pain as to the result of their enterprises as to be unable quietly to refresh themselves with food or sleep.
All the rejoicings occasioned by military success are fully counterbalanced by the pain and mortification of the vanquished and, in short, all the interest and happiness resulting from war to individuals and nations are dearly bought, and are at the expense of other individuals and nations.
It is because war has no tendency to increase, but does in fact greatly diminish, happiness that it is so universally regarded and lamented as the greatest evil that visits our world. Hence fasting has generally been practiced by warlike Christian nations to deplore the calamity, to humble themselves before God, and to supplicate his mercy in turning away the judgment.
Though fasting and deep humility before God are highly suitable for sinners, with a hearty turning away from their sins and humble supplication for God’s mercy through the mediation of Christ, yet those fasts of nations, who have voluntarily engaged in wars and are determined to prosecute them until their lusts and passions are gratified, do not appear to be such fasts as God requires.
Does it not appear absurd for nations voluntarily to engage in war, and then to proclaim a fast to humble themselves before God for its evils, while they have no desire to turn away from those evils, but, on the contrary, make it an express object to seek the divine aid in assisting them successfully to perpetuate the very evils for which they are fasting?
We often see contending nations, all of whom cannot be right on any principle, proclaiming fasts, and chanting forth their solemn Te Deums,as each may occasionally be victorious. Though such clashing hymns cannot mingle in the golden censer, yet few Christians seem to question the propriety of quarreling and fighting nations each in their turn supplicating aid in their unhallowed undertakings and returning thanks in case of success. Doubtless many would consider it as solemn mockery to see two duelists before their meeting, supplicatingGod’s blessing and protection in the hour of conflict, and then to see the victor returning thanks for his success in shedding the blood of his brother; and yet, when nations carry on the business by wholesale (if I may be allowed the expression) it is considered a very pious employment. The Lord has said, “And when ye spread forth your hands, I will hide mine eyes from you. Yea, when ye make many prayers, I will not hear, for your hands are full of blood.”
Penitent Christians may weep and mourn with propriety for their own sins and the sins of the nations, with a hearty desire not only to forsake their own iniquities, but that the nations may be brought to confess and forsake their sins and turn from them to the living God. It is true that war is a judgment in God’s providence. It is also a sin of the highest magnitude and ought to be repented of. It is a crime so provoking to Heaven that other calamities generally attend it. The famine, fire, and pestilence often attend its horrors and spread distress through a land. War, with its attending evils, unquestionably diminishes the aggregate of happiness in the world, and is therefore unwise.

continued:

 2007/10/12 15:44Profile
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    Re: WAR IS UNWISEpastorfrin2007/10/14 13:43:08
        Re: WAR IS UNWISEpastorfrin2007/10/17 18:58:19
            Re: WAR IS UNWISEpastorfrin2007/10/20 17:05:19
                Re:c522007/10/24 23:29:07
                    Re:ginnyrose2007/10/25 12:37:30
                Re:pastorfrin2007/10/26 20:01:19
                    Re:pastorfrin2007/10/31 17:19:15
                        Re:ginnyrose2007/11/1 19:21:22
                            Re:2007/11/1 19:36:09
                                Re:ginnyrose2007/11/1 19:47:44
                            Re:pastorfrin2007/11/1 20:21:36
                                Re:ginnyrose2007/11/1 23:28:44
                                    Re:2007/11/2 6:08:42
                                    Re:pastorfrin2007/11/2 20:15:44
                        Re:pastorfrin2007/11/5 17:38:57
                            Re:pastorfrin2007/11/10 9:54:17
                                Re:pastorfrin2007/11/14 21:08:12
                                    Re: WAR IS CRIMINALpastorfrin2007/11/16 18:46:57
                                        Re:ginnyrose2007/11/16 22:07:08
                                            Re:pastorfrin2007/11/17 18:17:25
                                        Re: WAR IS CRIMINALpastorfrin2007/11/24 13:32:56
                                            Re: WAR IS CRIMINALpastorfrin2007/11/28 4:57:54
                                                Re: WAR IS CRIMINALpastorfrin2007/12/1 17:59:15
                                                    Re: OBJECTIONS ANSWEREDpastorfrin2007/12/5 17:31:28
                                                        Re: Fears relieved -2007/12/5 17:49:06
                                                        Re: OBJECTIONS ANSWEREDpastorfrin2007/12/8 21:05:31
                                                            Re:OBJECTIONS ANSWEREDpastorfrin2007/12/11 17:33:46
                                                                Re: OBJECTIONS ANSWEREDpastorfrin2007/12/17 18:09:32
                                                                    Re: OBJECTIONS ANSWEREDpastorfrin2007/12/21 14:23:48
                                                                        Re: OBJECTIONS ANSWEREDpastorfrin2007/12/28 19:37:19
                                                                            Re: OBJECTIONS ANSWEREDpastorfrin2008/1/3 4:40:55
                                                                                Re: OBJECTIONS ANSWEREDpastorfrin2008/1/10 16:36:19
                                                                                    Re:ginnyrose2008/1/10 17:52:34
                                                                                        Re: Two Swordspastorfrin2008/1/11 8:01:00
                                                                                    Re: OBJECTIONS ANSWEREDpastorfrin2008/1/18 6:20:09
                                                                                        Re: OBJECTIONS ANSWEREDpastorfrin2008/1/22 18:08:50
                                                                                            Re: OBJECTIONS ANSWEREDpastorfrin2008/1/27 14:48:14
                                                                                                Re: OBJECTIONS ANSWEREDpastorfrin2008/2/3 18:24:13
                                                                                                    Re: OBJECTIONS ANSWEREDpastorfrin2008/2/7 19:47:03
                                                                                                        Re:2008/2/8 0:08:53


PosterThread
pastorfrin
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Joined: 2006/1/19
Posts: 1406


 Re: The Protection of the Lord

“For I was ashamed to require of the king a band of soldiers and horsemen to help us against the enemy in the way: because we had spoken unto the king, saying, The hand of our God is upon all them for good that seek him; but his power and his wrath is against all them that forsake him.”
— Ezra 8:22

A convoy on many accounts would have been desirable for the pilgrim band, but a holy shame-facedness would not allow Ezra to seek one. He feared lest the heathen king should think his professions of faith in God to be mere hypocrisy, or imagine that the God of Israel was not able to preserve his own worshippers. He could not bring his mind to lean on an arm of flesh in a matter so evidently of the Lord, and therefore the caravan set out with no visible protection, guarded by him who is the sword and shield of his people. It is to be feared that few believers feel this holy jealousy for God; even those who in a measure walk by faith, occasionally mar the lustre of their life by craving aid from man. It is a most blessed thing to have no props and no buttresses, but to stand upright on the Rock of Ages, upheld by the Lord alone. Would any believers seek state endowments for their Church, if they remembered that the Lord is dishonoured by their asking Caesar’s aid? as if the Lord could not supply the needs of his own cause! Should we run so hastily to friends and relations for assistance, if we remembered that the Lord is magnified by our implicit reliance upon his solitary arm? My soul, wait thou only upon God. “But,” says one, “are not means to be used?” Assuredly they are; but our fault seldom lies in their neglect: far more frequently it springs out of foolishly believing in them instead of believing in God. Few run too far in neglecting the creature’s arm; but very many sin greatly in making too much of it. Learn, dear reader, to glorify the Lord by leaving means untried, if by using them thou wouldst dishonour the name of the Lord.

Spurgeon, C. H.

 2007/9/24 5:01Profile
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