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A28353 The souldiers march to salvation wherein is shewn the lawfulness of voluntary serving upon the assured knowledge of a just cause, how it is lawful and necessary for prest souldiers to obey authority in case of doubting ... Bland, Francis. 1647 (1647) Wing B3156; ESTC R13075 31,824 51

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men which they could not otherwayes extort out of them and at the last some part of the goods that were confiscated might accrew to the Informer for their labour and for the hire of such information Thirdly they must be content with their wages such pay as was allowed unto them by the Emperor for their labor pains taken in war for the defence of the commonwealth or with such proportion of victualls as was appointed them for in times past souldiers had not their pay in mony but in victualls and with this Iohn teacheth them to be content and not to extort mens goods from them or to grate giftes out of them or to borrow any thing or buy it of them and pay them either slowly little or nought at all Thus the words are expounded by divers Authors of great learning and famous in the Church from all which we learne how innocent souldiers ought to be and to offend or wrong no man in body name or goods Not in body They must do violen●e to no man not in name They must not accuse any falsely nor in goods by force or fraud for injuries may be done either by open force or cunning subtility but they must be content with their wages That I may drive this nayle as Solomon cals the words of the wise to the head give me leave to beate it home with some reasons or Argument And first because I speak unto Christians this may be learned from Christ who commands us to be innocent or harmlesse as Doves This we are taught to be the foundation of our spirituall building up in a Christian practice and upright living by an Ancient Father thus speaking Whilst thou art building thy spirituall house let the foundation be first layd not upon light sand but upon the solid Rock upon which thou maiest more easely reare up the high top of Righteousnesse for he fulfilleth the greatest part of righteousnesse that hurts no body and he which shall lay the foundation of innocencie and proceed on the high topp of Righteousnesse howsoever he shall be tossed in tumultuous warres and troubles for a short while in this life yet shall hee be sure to find rest and peace at the last if not in his life yet at least in his death as we learne from Davids words Keep innocency and take heed unto the thing that is right for that shall bring a man peace at the last or as the other Translation reades it Marke the perfect man and behold the upright for the end of that man is peace or as another reade● the last thing that shall be given to such a man is peace A second Argument to induce souldiers to innocencie shall be the same that Abigail used to restraine David from plundring and destroying Nabal as he had resolved in revenge of a discourtesie in Nabals refusing to send him some small provision which he requested of him in his great necessity My Lord said shee fighteth the Lords battels and evill hath not been found in thee all thy dayes it is thus read by a learned Translatour If my Lord fight the Lords battels and evil should not be sound in thee And another thus Seeing thou my Lord wagest the Lords warres therefore let not iniquity bee found in thee Teaching us that those that fight the Lords battels as all those doe who fight under a just Authority in a good and just cause should be carefull to be free from violence and iniquity It is a disgrace to an honest man to have wicked persons lodge in his house and to a School-master to have Rakehells under his tuition and to a Generall to harbour villains under his command but most of all it is a dishonour to the Majesty of the Lord of hosts that wickednesse and villany should march under his colours and take up quarters in his leaguers and garrisons A third reason may be collected also from other words of Abigail in the pursuit of her businesse unto David This shall be no griefe unto thee nor offence of heart to my Lord saith shee either that thou hast shed blood causelesse or that my Lord hath avenged himselfe if her former argument will not move her latter surely will prove effectuall though a man respect not the glory of God yet surely he will even of selfe-love have respect to his owne comfort and freedom from a tormenting conscience which by innocencie is conserved and know all men assuredly that those who now lay siege to Townes and Castles shall one day either in warre or peace in bed or battel be besieged with the memory of their sinnes and then This unto him shall be a Brazen Wall His Conscience to fear no sinn at all A strong Fort I say it shall be and impregnable to all the Hellish Furies to have a Conscience void of offence before God and man when innocent and causlesse blood plundered Goods and unjust Booty shall be unto the Actors thereof as the Elephants blood unto the Dragons that sucking the blood of the Elephants do kill them and they themselves being drunk therewith oppressed not able to digest it die also So those that by violence rapine and injustice have killed and undone others shall by such deeds be utterly and eternally undone themselves A fourth reason recalling souldiers from violence may be taken from the malignant effect or consequence hereof that it makes the expedition unsuccessefull and prepares discomsiture to the whole Army and that by these particulars First hereby the accesse of their prayers unto God his acceptance of them is hindered according to the menace of the Prophet Isaiah VVhen you spread out your hands I will hide mine eyes yea when you make many prayers I will not hear your hands are full of blood The necessity of innocent hands to be presented to God in prayer those that had onely naturall Theologie well perceived and therefore the Persians arriving at Delphos with a Navy of a thousand Ships did present in Apolloes Temple rather religious then rapicious hands And for the practice and efficacy of prayers in Armies we have the examples of Jehoshaphat assaulted by the Moabites and Ammonites and of the Christian Emperours Constantine who appointed prayers unto his souldiers and taught them to ascribe the Victories unto God and to crave his blessing and assistance for the time to come and Theodosius who counted his prayers his best and accustomed Forces Besides our own Chronicles relate the effect of prayer in the Army of King William the Conquerour who the night and morning before the Battell with Harold did give themselves to acknowledge their sins prayer and communicating the Lords Body whilest Harold and his Forces spent the whole night in drinking singing and dancing 2. The conscience wherin remains the memory of former violence injustice makes men Cowards and afraid to grapple with death which they
must encounter together with their enemies in the field and so afraid of their enemies as Deaths messengers The reward of an evill Conscience is to fear those unto whom a man might be a terrour and this makes them to be as swift as Harts in time of warre that are as stout as Lyons in time of peace whereas a candid and clear conscience that is not terrified with the memory of by-past sins makes them that expedite a good cause as bold as Lyons It was a noble saying of one Dercyllidas a Senatour of Lacedemonia hearing that Pyrrhus lead a great Army against them and threatned sore If he be a God that threatens us let us not fear for we do nothing amisse but if he be a man let him know that he threatens men This I say is the fruit of a guiltlesse conscience which may encourage the possessor to say of his enemies Kill me they may hurt me they cannot But the evill conscience fearing death not onely as the dissolution of Nature but as Gods Provost-Marshall to arrest him binde him hand and foot neck and heels and so cast him into utter darknesse and eternall torments no wonder it is if it beget a cowardize the heart of Souldiers and so they become either Runawayes from their Colours or in hot service to hang back which giveth advantage to the enemie discourageth their fellows disorders the Army and hazzards all Thirdly violence rapine and injustice in some Souldiers causeth God to withdraw himself from the whole Army and so for wicked and impious men the rest are destitute of the help of God and beaten of their enemies yea although they otherwise prosecute a good Cause as is apparent in the case of Achan whereunto I referr you and of the Jewes affairs in their warrs it is observed by Chrysostome that they were conquered not of the weaknesse of Body but of their wickednesse and further notes how the Midianites understanding that the Israelites could not be vanquished by the sword cunningly sought to bring them into sin by sending their daughters to commit whoredome with them and then after they fell into sin they became easie to be subdued of all and those whom Arms and Horses and Souldiers and so many enemies could not take the nature of sin betrayed them bound unto their enemies And not unlike to this observation of this Ancient Father is the observation and sad complaint of the impiety and wickednesse of some souldiers by a learned Author of latter times what fruit I pray you reap we from such seed we are conquered of the Turks we are a scorn to all Nations Kingdoms perish and are subdued to Mahometisme and wee are daily involved in inexplicable miseries Thus by violence rapine and other sinns in souldiers whilest their prayers are rejected their courage abated and Gods favour and help alienated are whole Armies routed and discomfited and thereby Kingdoms overthrown and ruinated A fourth reason and that a very forcible one to disswade souldiers and indeed all manner of men from violence rapine and injustice may be taken from the unfruitfulnesse of such Acts and consideration of what benefit is gotten by such deeds suppose a man could get into his hands all the wealth of the world and bring the Kingdoms under his dominion when he shall thinke to sing a Requiem to his soule and to take his ease having goods laid up for many years at last hee must heare or feele what is spoken to the Richman Thou fool this night shall they fetch away thy soule from thee then whose shall those things be that thou hast gotten Those Kingdoms which thou hast subdued those Lands and Houses which thou now possessest having expelled the old inhabitants those clothes and jewells wherewith thou now arrayest and adornest thy selfe whilest the ancient owners goe fortorne and distitute whose shall they be thine they shall not be for thy soule shall be fetched away from thee and for thy body naked camest thou out of thy mothers wombe and naked shalt thou returne thither All thy high Trophies and rich prizes and booties left behind thee ●nd thou if thy desires were as boundlesse as Alexanders of whom it was said that One world doth not the Pellaean youth suffice Yet Then with a Cophine thou must be content But if thy Ashes after thy death shall have the honour of a Statue or a rich Monument yet time will consume it or malice breake it downe As Scipio Africanus his Statue was broken downe and removed from the place where it was first set and the brazen urne wherein his ashes were put with an Epitaph inscribed of which these verses were a part Whom neither Europe could resist nor Afrique in times past See mens Affayres how him doth hold a little ●●rn at last But might they so part with on even hands their acts of violence plundering and injustice happy were they but then comes their mischiefe that 〈◊〉 S. Austen sayth This is the unhappinesse of men that the thing for which they sin when they die they leave here behind them But their sinnes themselves they cary along with them and an heavy burthen will such a carriage be unto their soules A●hans heape of stones which were cast upon him were heavier sure then the Babylonish garments and all the Gold and Silver that he had plundered at Hiericho But if those stones were poysed they would be found lighter by much then the guilt of those sinnes which by violence plundering rapine and other Acts of injustice men doe contract unto their soules ●o heavy is it as they are not able to beare it and yet so adhering that they were not able to shake it of Oh who is able to expresse with what unwillingnesse the soul at death doth undertake its necessitated departure being loath to leave the things that were precious to it and appear before God with a conscience blotted with innocent blood and other acts of cruelty and injustice which if it might it would now cast away with as much disdaine and anguish of spirit as Iudas did the thirty peeces of silver gotten for betraying Christ and through the terrour of an accusing conscience despairing cry out I have sinned in shedding the blood cheating extorting and plundering the goods and in slandering and defaming the credits and causes of just and innocent persons There is an excellent passage in S. Bernard which we will borrow being very profitable to the pursuance of this Argument When the soul with great feare and mighty griefes is separated from the body then do the Angels command arrest it and bring it before the Throne of the dreadfull Judge and then the silly soule remembring all the evil yea the worst deeds which day or night it wrought shal tremble crave sparing or as wee say cry quarter saying give me leave spaning if it be but for an hours space but then his sinnes as it were