During the Revolutionary War
A Discource Commemorative of the Distinguished Service Rendered By Rev. Jeremy Belknap, D.D.
To the Cause of American Independence
Preached By
Rev. George B. Spalding
July 9, 1876.
DISCOURSE.
And with them were the prophets of God helping them. —Ezra 5
The popular mind looks upon the historic page as a child looks at a painting. It is the few
imposing forms standing in the foreground, which hold the exclusive gaze of each. Neither has an
eye for perspective. They both fail to catch those more refined and really nobler figures upon which
the Divine Wisdom or the artist’s genius has most busied itself. It is the military hero, with his
waving plume and his gleaming sword, who fills the eye and the imagination of both children and
men, while the poet and the thinker, in their common garb, are left unnoticed. Where the page of
history is one simply of military conquest, as where it records the triumph of Alexander over the
Persians, of necessity the one shining figure is the great Grecian soldier, and the only study of the
history of his period is the study of his campaigns and battles. So, too, to almost an equal degree, it
may be said of that period in French history where Napoleon riveted upon himself the gaze of an
affrighted world. It was a drama through which one passion moved, and where one colossal form
filled the stage. There was no perspective, no background of great principles, no sublime characters
living and dying in the inspiration of spiritual truths and ideas, —none of these looming up even
obscurely behind the scenes of smoke and slaughter. The history of France, and I might almost say
the history of Europe, from 1796 to 1815, a period of about twenty years, is simply a history of
Napoleon and his generals.
But there are other pages of history, which, though they too record the progress and result of
battle and siege, and recount the exploits of generals and soldiers, yet must needs give their largest
space to the more important narrative of the rise and movement of those great ideas and sentiments
which are first sown by Heaven in the souls of prophets, scholars and thinkers, which then reach out
to seize upon and influence the heart of a people. and finally find their issue and victory upon the
field of battle.
This truth has its many illustrations, but there is none so brilliant and conspicuous as that found
in the true history of the American War for Independence. “Lives of Washington and his Generals,”
narratives of those seven years of heroic courage, vast suffering, and unconquerable faith, on the
part of their half disciplined, starving, and almost always defeated armies, —these furnish us but a
small part of the real material of that mighty epoch. On the great canvas, these hold the foreground,
and first challenge the attention. They are worthy to be had in everlasting remembrance. There is
little danger of their ever failing of this. But to him who has any eye for perspective, there are other
forms filling the spaces of the canvas beyond: scholars, orators, statesmen, seers, whose faces glow
with even a purer light, in whose great thoughts and words had already been fought out the mighty
victory which the sword did afterward only confirm. For the calm, dispassionate voice of history has
declared, “The Revolution was an accomplished fact before the war commenced.”
Behind the towering form of Washington; behind his noble confreres, Gates, Green, Knox,
Schulyer, Stuben, Sullivan, Lee, Ward; behind those ranks of starved, bleeding, dying, but
unconquerable soldiers, there rises an immortal group: the Adames, Hancock, Otis, Jefferson,
Henry, Franklin, Robert Treat Paine, accomplished lawyers, sagacious statesmen, eloquent speakers.
Before the insurrection of arms, there had been insurrection in the thoughts and words of these
great civilians. Some of these men in way of philosophical treatise, others through legal argument,
others still in fiery, irresistible appeal, had for years before open rebellion began, been pointing the
people to the steady encroachments of England upon their liberties, and arousing them to the
needed pitch of indignant protest, and at last deadly resistance.
But look again; gaze deeper into the receding canvas, and you will see behind these great political
leaders, other forms, faces attenuated to a higher spirituality, to a finer scholarship, and to a more
sacred passion. Before Adams or Hancock, or Franklin or Jefferson had uttered their denunciations
of British tyranny, before even the possibility of resistance to arbitrary power had been thought of
by them, before they had even dreamed of independence and of a union of the colonies in a great
nationality, —these men, in the inspiration of a gospel which is that of liberty, had been laying bare
the falsity of royal assumptions, expounding the principles of good government and of manhood in
the state, and schooling legislators, judges and people to an understanding of those civil rights which
are the offspring of religious freedom, —and, as events thickened, in advance of all others, they
were ever narrowing the issue between the colonies and the home government, concentrating more
and more the aroused indignation of an oppressed people into the idea of resistance, and pointing
out to the sagacious statesmen of the day the principles and method of a vital union and cooperation among the provinces. Who are these men who hold the background in the picture, whose
very obscurity serves to make more prominent these others? They were Congregational ministers!
The principles of our civil liberty and of our national independence, which forty millions of
people in these days are celebrating, did not find their first utterance in the great Declaration. They
did not spring to life in the debates of the Provincial Congress. They did not originate in the
elaborate papers of Adams and Jefferson. They did not leap forth to their first light in the
impassioned eloquence of James Otis, or the vehement appeal of Patrick Henry. They had their
birth in the Election Sermons, in the Fast and Thanksgiving Discourses of the Congregational
ministers of New England.
When and where did the American Revolution begin? The question can be variously answered.
The children in the schools have been taught to say, “At Lexington, April 19, 1775.” But the
question has been better answered by John Adams, who, speaking of the argument of James Otis,
delivered in 1761, in the old Town-house of Boston, now the old state-house, against the Writs of
Assistance, exclaimed, “James Otis breathed into this nation the breath of life. Then and there the
child Independence was born. In fifteen years, i.e., in 1776, it grew up to manhood and declared
itself free.” But a better and a truer answer awaits us. Robert Treat Paine, the great lawyer and
statesman, one of the signers of the Declaration, called Dr. Jonathan Mayhew “The Father of civil
and religious liberty in Massachusetts and America.” Twenty-five years before those guns were fired
in the streets of Lexington, eleven years before Otis launched the bolts of his fiery argument at the
Royal Court in Boston, —eleven years before this, the young preacher, just then in his thirtieth year,
from his pulpit of the West church, in that city, preached a sermon which a historian has called,
“The Morning Gun of the Revolution.” It was a sermon concerning which the elder Adams said, “It
was read by everybody, celebrated by friends. and abused by enemies. It was seasoned with wit and
satire superior to any in Swift or Franklin.”
I have read through this famous discourse, and have been astonished not only at the grand
sweep of its argument, but especially at the fearlessness of its entire spirit. The preacher says: “When
once magistrates act contrary to their office and the end of their institution, —when they rob and
ruin the public, instead of being guardians of its peace and welfare, —they immediately cease to be
the ordinance and ministers of God, and no more deserve that glorious character than common
pirates and highwaymen.” This certainly was a sharp arrow in the side of the King’s defenders, who
so stoutly affirmed that “The King can do no wrong,” and that “Submission, clear, absolute, and
without exception, is the duty of the subject.” But the preacher went on to assert another duty of the
subject than this. “A people,” he says, “really oppressed in a great degree by their sovereign, cannot
well be insensible when they are so oppressed; and such a people, —if I may allude to an ancient
fable, —have, like the Hesperian fruit, a dragon for their protector and guardian. Nor would they
have any reason to mourn if some Hercules should appear to dispatch him. For a nation thus to
arise unanimously and resist their prince, even to the dethroning him, is not criminal, but a
reasonable way of vindicating their liberties and just rights. It is making use of the means, and the
only means which God has put into their power for mutual and self-defense. And it would be highly
criminal in them not to make use of this means. It would be stupid tameness and unaccountable
folly for whole nations to suffer one unreasonable, ambitious and cruel man, to wanton and riot in
their misery. And in such a case it would, of the two, be more rational to suppose that they that did
not resist, than that they who did, would receive to themselves damnation.
Here was a lesson set for the men and the boys to learn. How well they learned it, may be seen
in the words of John Adams, twenty-five years afterward, when he exclaimed in 1775, “We are not
exciting rebellion. Opposition, nay, open, avowed resistance by arms against usurpation and lawless
violence, is not rebellion by the law of God or the land.”
“To draw the character of Mayhew,” writes Adams, “would be to transcribe a dozen volumes.”
“This transcendent genius,” he adds, “threw all the weight of his great fame into the scale of his
country from the first, and maintained it there with zeal and ardor to his death.” It was this
Congregational minister who suggested to James Otis the idea of committees of correspondence, a
measure of greatest efficiency in producing concert of action between the colonies, a thing of vital
importance. Thus he writes to Otis, in June, 1766, “You have heard of the communion of churches, and I
am to set out to-morrow morning for Rutland, to assist at an ecclesiastical council. Not expecting to
return this week, while I was thinking of this in my bed, the great use and importance of a communion
of colonies appeared to me in a strong light; which has led me immediately to set down these hints to
transmit to you.”
I speak at this stage of my discourse with such special emphasis of Mayhew, because he was first
in order of time of these evangels of American liberty. Later on, and yet some of them preceding the
great political leaders of the Revolution, were Dr. Chauncy, pastor of the first church in Boston,
who ,with the calmness and precision of the statesman, discussed in his Thanksgiving sermon, in
1766, the dangers in which the Stamp Act involved both English and American liberty; and Samuel
Cook, of the second church in Cambridge, who, in an election sermon preached in 1770, before
Thomas Hutchinson, Esq., Lieutenant-Governor and Commander-in-Chief, and the Honorables,
His Majesty’s Council, protested in calm but unmistakable language against the increasing despotism
of British rule, suggesting precedents for curing present ills in the body politic, if quieter remedies,
such as petitions and remonstrances proved to be insufficient; and William Gordon, of the third
church in Roxbury, the pastor and friend of Hancock, whose impetuous patriotism pouring into his
great sermon of Dec. 15, 1774, fired that statesman’s cooler blood; and Dr .Langdon, formerly of
Ports mouth, but President of Harvard College when he preached his stirring election sermon at
Watertown before the Congress of the Colony of Massachusetts Bay, just previous to the battle at
Bunker Hill, and West, and Payson, and Howard, and President Stiles, and the Baptists Stillman and
Manning. It was these men and others of like religious faith with them, Congregational ministers,
who were among the very foremost in the cause of American independence, discussing with the
sagacity of disciplined statesmen, and the fervor of liberty loving Christians the true principles of
government, and the mutual relations between the citizen and the state, protesting against the first
and every successive step of England’s invasion of personal right and liberty, arousing the apathetic,
rebuking the corrupt, intensifying the zeal of the most ardent, furnishing in their sermons the
material of thought and the very language which afterwards were wrought into the states-papers of
Adams, and the immortal Declaration of Jefferson, and presenting in their ecclesiastical polity, in the
democratic form of their church meeting, the very plan upon which Jefferson, as he himself
affirmed, modeled his entire idea of a republican government. The truth is, the seed of our great
republic was brought over in the Mayflower. As the keen student of American history, De
Tocqueville, declared, “The Puritans brought with them to the New World a form of Christianity,
which I cannot better describe than by styling it a democratic and republican religion. This
contributed powerfully to the establishment of a republic and a democracy in public affairs.” The
church was a seminary of liberty. Civil liberty was born of religious liberty.
Among the preachers of the Revolutionary period, this ancient church furnished one whose
patriotism, whose faith, whose abilities, whose services in the cause of liberty were surpassed by
none of these eminent ones whom I have named. His ministry here, which continued for nearly
twenty years, covered the entire time of the war. The sermons which he here preached, the letters
which he here wrote to the distinguished men of his times, the communications which he here
prepared for the newspapers in various places, relating to the great question which was agitating all
hearts, were very numerous. Many of them have been preserved, just as they were originally written,
and are counted among the very chief treasures of the Massachusetts Historical Society.* Dr.
Franklin, in speaking of Dr. Belknap and his services to the cause of American Independence,
declared that no one had done more for that cause than he , and no one deserves a higher tribute of
praise from those who are enjoying its blessings.
The first utterance which I find from Dr. Belknap, bearing upon the subject which was
beginning to enlist the thoughts of our fathers, occurs in a sermon which he preached Nov. 10,
1772, before His Majesty’s Governor, John Wentworth, Esq., at a review of the Second Regiment of
Foot here in Dover. New Hampshire had been inured to military service through its long period or
war with the Indians. I would acknowledge the courtesy extended to me by the officers of this
Society, in affording me free access to the papers of Dr. Belknap. An old law required every male
inhabitant from sixteen to sixty years of age, to own a musket, bayonet, knapsack, cartridge box, one
pound of powder, twenty bullets and twelve flints. This militia was organized into companies and
regiments, and subject to frequent drills. The muster day, and the review was a great occasion.
Dover was a center of this military stir. At this gathering here in Nov., 1772, the Royal Governor,
John Wentworth, came up from Portsmouth. Capt. Waldron, a member of this church, and a
staunch friend of his pastor, had invited Dr. Belknap to preach to the troops. The subject chosen by
the preacher was Military Duty. In the course of the sermon he spoke as follows, on the necessity of
self-defense.
Has the All-wise and merciful Parent of the Universe furnished the brute and reptile creation
with the necessary instruments of defense, and does the instinct which he has implanted in them
prompt them to make use of these weapons for their own subsistence and security; and has He not
implanted in mankind a natural courage or martial spirit and given them skill and power to provide
themselves with all the necessary instruments of defense, and can it be supposed that we must make
no use of these gifts of Nature, even when Providence points out the necessity? Do we guard our
fields from devouring beasts, our houses and bodies from the rigors of the weather, and shall we not
have the privilege of defending our lives, our liberties, our property, our families, our civil
government, from hostile invaders? Must we tamely yield to every lawless usurper and suffer tyrants
to sport with the lives and estates of mankind? Must all these laws which the wisdom and experience
of ages have founded, must the sacred bonds of society. the peace, the welfare, the happiness of
mankind, be sacrificed to the impetuous rage of a foreign conqueror? Forbid it, reason and
conscience; forbid it, ye heroic worthies of old, who through faith subdued kingdoms, wrought
righteousness, obtained promises, stopped the mouths of liars [sic], quenched the violence of fire,
escaped the edge of the sword, out of weakness were made strong, waxed valiant in fight, turned to
flight the armies of the aliens.”
The Officers of the Second Regiment of Foot were so pleased with this Address that they asked
a copy for the press. I fail to find anywhere that His Majesty’s Governor joined in this request.
In the following year, Dr. Belknap, in a letter to a dissenting clergyman in London, wrote thus:
The paper on which I write is the manufacture of this country, where many valuable arts and
manufactures unknown, till of late, are now gaining ground, and yield a pleasant prospect of our
future wealth and greatness. If the present despotic system formed on your side of the waters
continued, we expect to see our sea-port towns diminished; but our inland territories will be vastly
improved, and a foundation laid for a considerable empire in time to come. Your ministry and
parliament are undesignedly taking the most direct steps to accomplish this end. * * * The tyranny
formerly established in Great Britain drove our forefathers hither, and began the settlement of this
valuable country. Wiser princes, who succeeded, reaped the benefit thereof, in the commerce,
bravery, and affection of this people. The tyranny now establishing will, while it subsists, hinder our
being serviceable to the British Kingdom, but will cause such a vast increase of power as will make
future monarchs esteem American loyalty the brightest jewel in their crown.
The year 1774 was a memorable one in the history of the se provinces. England, under their
resistible pressure of opposition which her attempts to force a revenue from these colonies had
produced not only here in America, but in England herself on the part of some of her ablest
statesmen, had repealed the Stamp Act, and yet the repeal was followed by another act declaring that
Parliament had a right “to bind the colonies in all cases whatsoever.” Later still she had repealed the
act imposing duties on certain articles, but an exception was made in the article of tea. Lord North
in this second surrender which he made to the “rebel spirit” of America said, “A total repeal cannot
be thought of till America is prostrate at our feet.” He wanted to save the principle, that is the right
of the home government to bind the colonies, but it was the principle that our fathers were alone
concerned about. It was this naked abstract matter of right, that they were most bent on denying.
And so, on the arrival of the tea, they seized it by force and scattered it over Boston harbor. This
was followed by the act of Parliament closing the port of Boston. The law was to take effect June 1,
- Then began to be put into operation those Letters of Correspondence, that first idea of union
which Parson Mayhew, eight years before, had suggested to James Otis. The General Assembly of
New Hampshire was in session in May, this year, 1774. Conformably to the proceedings of the
Assemblies of other colonies, the Representatives in this Province appointed a Committee of
Correspondence. Governor Wentworth interfered. He adjourned the Assembly. The members met
again. The Governor with a sheriff came among them. He declared their meeting illegal. The sheriff
made proclamation for all persons to disperse and keep the King’s peace. The members met again,
and determined to send letters to all the towns and parishes in the Province, requesting them to send
Deputies to a convention at Exeter, who should choose delegates to a General Congress to meet at
Philadelphia. This was the first movement for rallying the whole of the people of New Hampshire in
the great contest. Attached to this most important letter to the several towns was this brief
proclamation: “Considering the Distressing situation of our public affairs, Thursday, the 14th inst., is
recommended to be kept as a day of Fasting, Humiliation, and Prayer, through this Province.”
The day was observed here in Dover with special religious solemnity. On that occasion, July 14,
1774, Dr. Belknap preached a sermon which bears this title: “On Account of the Difficulties of the
King.” The text was from I S am. 8:18, “And ye shall cry out in that day because of your King which
ye shall have chosen you; and the Lord will not hear you in that day.” A most pertinent text! In this
sermon he says:
Perhaps the most remarkable passage in this noble sermon is the following:
Would it not be astonishing to hear that a people who are contending so earnestly for liberty, are
not willing to allow liberty to others? Is it not astonishing to think that there are at this day, in the
several colonies upon this continent, some thousands of men, women and children, detained in
bondage and slavery for no other crime than that their skin is of a darker color than our own? Such is
the inconsistency of our conduct! As we have made them slaves without their consent and without
any crime, so it is just in God to permit other men to make slaves of us.
Here was a man, who from this Dover pulpit, one hundred and three years ago, anticipated not
only the Declaration of Independence, but the greater Emancipation Proclamation of our own day!
One thing is very noticeable in this arraignment of British despotism. The solemn impeachment
is not of the King, but of his Ministry and Parliament. And this is characteristic of all the papers
which were at first issued against the arbitrary measures of the home government. Dr. George E.
Elliot, of Boston, has recently called attention to the fact that during the ten first years of the great
controversy, there was in all the written papers of the American patriots a studious “avoidance of
any utterance or statement that could be personally offensive to the King. The whole blame and
censure were laid at the door of the ministers and prompting and goading the King to turn away
from our humble remonstrances and petitions, and to harden his heart and hand against us.”
I find that Dr. Belknap. in the very next year, after hostilities had commenced, even while he was
acting as chaplain to the revolution a ry troops in camp at Cambridge, remembered the King of
England with due affection in his prayers. With what tremendous suddenness and volume the tide
of feeling turned against His Majesty, is seen in the famous Declaration of 1776. Then and there, as
Dr. Ellis has pointed out, the long indictment drawn with such labored severity of language was
from first to last against the King alone. In the paper as first penned and presented by Jefferson, the
British people was joined to the King in the crimes and outrages committed against these colonies.
Congress promptly struck out that portion relating to the people of England, leaving the whole
fearful weight of reproach and invective to fall upon the King, and the King only. Perhaps the best
reason which Dr. Ellis gives for this remarkable change in the tone and temper of both state papers
and sermons is, that it became evident to all that a time had come when a great and decisive step
must be taken, when the breach between the colonies and the home government should be made
final and irreparable, when a line should be clearly drawn between Patriots and Tories all over the
American Continent. After the Declaration was made, Dr. Belknap no more prayed for the King.
While the New Hampshire Convention was in session at Exeter, appointing delegates to attend
the coming Congress at Philadelphia, a correspondence from the Committee of Massachusetts was
received, setting forth the destitute condition of the people of Boston under the execution of the law
shutting up its port. The act was characterized by the clerk, Samuel Adams, “as designed to suppress
the Spirit of liberty in America.” The New Hampshire Convention recommended to the respective
towns, “to liberally contribute towards the Relief of the Poor of the Town of Boston.”
On Nov. 6, 1774, Dr. Belknap preached a sermon “On Commiserating.” The Text was from
Heb. 13:3: “Remember them that are in bonds as bound with them; and them which suffer
adversity, as being yourselves also in the body.”
Coming to the subject before him, Dr. Belknap said:
The case of the people of Boston is extremely singular, nothing like it having ever, so f.- as I can
learn, been known since the first settlement of America. That town and that Province of which it is
the capital, have always been among the foremost in vindicating the liberty of this country from the
encroachments of arbitrary power. By which means they have exposed themselves to the fiercest
resentment of those who have assumed the power of disposing of our property at their pleasure. It is
not any private quarrel in which they have become engaged, and in which they are now suffering. It
is a cause common to this whole continent, a cause which, if once given up, we and our posterity
must be miserable.
The grand question to be decided is not whether we are to submit to the powers which are in
being, and which God has placed over us, but where that power is, —for if the question be once
determined where the supreme power lies, then we know ,according to the Gospel, if obedience be
due. The controversy is whether that supreme power is in the King and Parliament of Great Britain
enacting laws without the consent of those who are to be governed by them, or whether we
ourselves ought to have a share of the legislative authority to which we are to submit. The King and
Parliament have determined that they have a Right to make laws binding upon us in all cases
whatsoever, and this whole continent in their respective assemblies have expressly denied that Right,
and each side seem determined to stand by their Resolutions. On the one hand, they have sent a large
and formidable force to terrify us into submission. They have shut up one of the finest ports in
America, and there by reduced twenty thousand people to a state of suffering, because they have
been foremost in asserting the Right and Privilege of the w hole continent; and on the other hand,
shall we not determine to stand by our suffering brethren, and lend them all the aid we can to
support them through the struggle? How long the struggle will last, or how it will end, we cannot
foresee. The cause is too sacred to be deserted in this time of extremity, and if, by contributing a
small part of our substance, we should prevent the miseries of slavery from being the lot of our
posterity, who would not be willing to do this? Who can hesitate one moment whether to choose the
blessings of liberty or the horrors of tyranny for himself and his children? This I take it, my brethren,
is the point before you, and I doubt not that you will all agree.
There is not a true American who wishes not well to the noble cause in which we are engaged,
and it is a great pity that any difference of opinion about smaller matters which may arise in the
course of this controversy should divert us from pursuing this great object, to secure and preserve
the Rights which our forefathers labored and bled to obtain and transmit to us.
Viewing the matter in this light, which I humbly apprehend is just and true, you are not to look
upon what you give on this occasion as a bounty to the town of Boston, but as contributing to lay a
foundation for the liberty and prosperity of this country. It is so much given to your children. It is to
secure to yourselves an inheritance far more valuable than any estate s which you can get for
yourselves and leave to them. For what will it signify to leave them in possession of that which
another has power to take from them at pleasure” If you are to give them anything for their own, this
is the time to secure it for them. This is the way to make them as free as you would wish yourselves
to be. Do this, and they will bless your memory for it to the latest generation.
On the 19th of April, 1775, the controversy of ideas closed, the war of arms began. The fire of
British guns glared over all the colonies, and every soul beneath these skies knew that the die was
cast. With a courage that seemed like madness, with a faith in God that a corrupt age would call
fanaticism, the feeble, dissevered colonies accepted the gage which the mightiest kingdom of earth
cast down before them.
The tidings of the battle of Lexington reached Belknap at Dover Point as he was on his way
home from Portsmouth. He sent from the Point the following note to his wife:
Before you receive this, you will hear the awful news by the Express I met just now at the ferry,
of the devastation the troops have made at Concord, and the commencement of a Civil War, which
makes it absolutely necessary that I should proceed immediately to Boston. if it is not in ashes before
I get there. I shall try and get a chaise at Greenland. As necessity has no law, the people must excuse
my absence next Sabbath, if I should not return before it.
He arrived at Cambridge in due time, and found himself “among ten thousand armed men who
had gathered from every quarter,” to take part in the next battle. From there he writes to his wife in
Dover: “Don’t let my gun and munition get out of the house if you can help it.” The brave parson
knew his gun well. I found among his papers a very precise description of it. He doubtless thought it
most probable that he should be called to fight, in which case no “carnal weapon” could have served
him better.
While at Cambridge, he preached in the morning in the street, and in the afternoon in the
meeting-house to the Provincial Army there assembled. He soon returned home with his parents.
Dover for the next few months was astir with military preparations. There was a company at once
enlisted here by Capt. Benj. Titcomb. On the 14th of June, three days before fire opened on Bunker
Hill, Dr. Belknap preached to these soldiers, on the Nature of True Courage. He said:
It is a very fashionable doctrine, especially among the British troops, that the soldier has nothing
to do with the conscience of war, or to enquire whether it be just or not. He has only to obey orders.
If soldiers had no consciences, if they were horses instead of men, this doctrine might be propagated
with the utmost safety. But, my brethren, you are reasonable creatures. You are accountable to a
higher tribunal than any earthly power, and you have a right to examine and it is your duty to
examine whether the cause in which you are engaged is just, and if you find that it is so, you can fight
with a good conscience, and with a hope in the Divine Providence for liberty and success. Let then
every man behave himself in his proper station according to the duty required of him, and serve his
country to the utmost of his power.
Four days after, news having been received that a battle had commenced at Charlestown, this
company, under Capt. Titcomb, marched to the scene of battle.
The 22d day of this month of June, 1775, was observed throughout the colonies as a day of
Fasting and Prayer, at the recommendation of the Provincial Congress. It was a day of more than
usual solemnity. The battle at Bunker Hill, with all that there was in the bravery of our troops as
exhibited there, to stir the blood of every patriot, brought to every home” in America an awful sense
of the horrors of war. Dr. Belknap felt the solemnity of the occasion, but his heart was strong and
his faith high. He came into this pulpit on the morning of the 22d, while yet the smoke wreathed the
not distant battle-field, and messengers were riding through these streets with orders for hastening
on ward men and supplies, —he came here with no note of lamentation, but with one of lofty cheer.
“Let thy mercy, O Lord, be upon us, according as we hope in thee.” That was his text. I will give
you the keynote of that discourse. Said he:
The case has come to this extremity, that we either shall be reduced to slavery and ruin, or nobly
exert ourselves in defense of our dearest rights and liberties and be forevermore free. Who that has
any feelings of a man can hesitate one moment as to what to do? Who can doubt that it is his duty to
defend, to the utmost of his power, this mighty country and all in it that is clear to us against this
hostile invasion of arbitrary power? We strike for the liberties not of ourselves alone, but for the
liberties of Englishmen everywhere. * * * * They at home are as much in danger as we here. Their
liberty is as much in peril as ours. If the experiment made here against freedom succeeds, it will soon
be practiced upon them. * * * The interests of Britain and her colonies are so inseparably
connected that they stand or fall together.
How clearly now is this mighty truth seen by every true son of England. In the British Parliament
Pitt had declared the controversy in America to be a great common cause, and that “America, if she
fell, would fall like a strong man. She would embrace the pillars of the state, and pull down the
constitution along with her.” And after this, when the war had ceased, General Burgoyne, in the
House of Commons affirmed that he was now convinced “the principle of the American war was
wrong, * * only one part of a system leveled against the Constitution and the general rights of
mankind.”
Dr. Belknap was chosen by the Committee of Safety of New Hampshire, Chaplain to their
troops at Cambridge. His duties here prevented him from accepting this office, and yet we find that
in his frequent visits to the camps around Boston he many times preached to the soldiers.
His sermons through the whole period of the war, and far on until the settlement of the form of
the state and national government, were numerous. They are still in existence, making a great mass
of finely written manuscript. They embraced in their discussion all the more important questions
which engaged the statesmanship as well as the military science of the times. He saw as clearly, as we
in this period have been made to see, the fatal consequences which follow when a people proposes
to pay its debts with promises. In a Fast Day sermon preached April 22d, 1778, he emphasized
among the peril s which threatened the country its false and destructive system of finance. He
painted in true colors “the depreciating nature of paper currency,” “an evil,” he declared, “which this
country has been plagued with in both former and later times.” He saw, as we have seen, how in this
limitless supply of manufactured money, great wealth would flow into the treasury of a few, but its
worthlessness would soon even these be made manifest. “Some,” said the preacher, “are growing
rich. But such riches will prove a curse and not a blessing.” And then he uttered a warning which it
would be well, if every financial trickster of our day might hear: “He that thrives upon the ruin of his
country is as great an enemy to it as he that takes up arms against it!”
What a profound Christian philosophy is shown in a sermon preached at the close of the war!
God was pleased to bring our enemies upon us, who began by their impositions on our trade,
and restrictions on our liberty; then openly invaded our country, killed our people, pillaged and burnt
our houses, and spread havoc and destruction with a cruel and relentless hand; thus obliging us to
arm ourselves, to learn the art of war, to open new sources of supply, to seek foreign aid, to form
new confederacies among ourselves, and in short, to effect a complete revolution—in the doing of
which we have put every nerve to the stretch and have suffered all the sorrows and hardships of war.
By such severe disciplines God has been teaching us the value of these liberties and possessions
which He has given us. we have or ought to have learned by this time how dearly to prize them.
But already I have quoted enough to give you a true idea of the character of this man of God. In
all the stress and trial of that awful period, when defeat followed defeat, when our armies were
scattered, starved and frozen in times of hope, when friends were hastening to our relief, and victory
perched upon our banners; in times when war had ceased, but when perils hung around the not yet
delivered nation, this prophet of our Israel , this lion-hearted patriot, this lover of mankind, this
unflinching believer in God, stood through all the years on this spot where now I stand, encouraging
the brave, rebuking the cowardly, rallying once more, and once more, and yet again to the very end,
the fathers and sons of freedom, mingling with all his stirring appeals, exhortations for purity of life,
fear of God, and faith in the right, and giving forth counsels and advice touching every point of state
affairs which, to a much greater extent than many are aware of, helped to guide this New Hampshire
province through its thousand perplexities, and molded both state and nation into their enduring
form. This ancient town in its centuries of history, has had men of distinguished merit, men of
heroic courage, of lofty virtue and unalloyed patriotism. This venerable Church, in its long line of
prophets, has had men of unblemished Christian character, of great spiritual boldness and faith and
prevailing prayer, men of persuasive speech, large understanding and fruitful service; but who is
there among the dead or the living who will challenge the meed of praise which I give to JEREMY
BELKNAP, our Revolutionary Preacher, as leading in all this host of the good and great, himself
crowned with a superior excellence?
And now, fellow citizens, what better tribute, after the loftiest eulogies have broken from our
lips, and true patriotism which beat in every pulse of his life?
I catch his words attuned to the same deep, sweet rhythm of Christian love for his country,
when years after, having left Dover, he preached upon national affairs from his pulpit in the old
Federal Street Church of Boston. May the lofty prayer of his concluding appeal answered in us and
our children. “May we,” he said, “conduct ourselves as a people who prove themselves worthy of
such a history. May America rise in her importance to be a resplendent example to the world, that
the liberty and prosperity of a nation are best promoted by the cultivation of public and private
virtue, by a diffusion of useful knowledge, by gratitude to benefactors, and by a humble and devout
acknowledgement of Him, ‘who ruleth in the armies of heaven, and among the inhabitants of the
earth.’”
APPENDIX.
A hundred years ago, DR. BELKNAP preached a patriotic sermon on this spot. On that occasion he
read Psalms 34,35, 82, 83. And the people sang as follows:
PSALM 77. Second Part. Common Metre.
Comfort derived from ancient providence; or Israel delivered from Egypt and brought to Canaan.
“How awful is thy chastening rod”
(May thy own children say)
The great, the wise, the dreadful God,
“How holy is his way!”
I’ll meditate his works of old;
The King that reigns above;
I’ll hear his ancient wonders told,
And learn to trust his love.
Long did the house of Joseph lie
With Egypt’s yoke opprest;
Long he delayed to hear their cry,
Nor gave his people rest.
The sons of good old Jacob seem’d
Abandon’d to their foes;
But his almighty arm redem’d
The nation that he chose.
Israel, his people and his sheep,
Must follow where he calls;
He bids them venture through the deep,
And makes the waves their walls.
The waters saw thee, mighty God!
The waters saw thee come;
Backward they fled, and frighted stood,
To make thine armies room.
Strange was thy journey through the sea,
Thy footsteps, Lord, unknown;
Terrors attend thy wondrous way,
And bring thy mercies down.
PSALM 76. Common Metre.
Israel saved, and the Assyrians destroyed; or, God’s vengeance against his enemies proceeds from his church.
In Judah God of old was known;
His name in Israel great;
In Salem stood his holy throne,
And Zion was his seat.
Among the praises of his saints,
His dwelling there he chose;
There he receiv’d the just complaints,
Against their haughty foes.
From Zion went his dreadful word,
And broke the threatening spear;
The bow, the arrows, and the sword,
And crushed the Assyrian war.
What are the earth’s wide kingdoms else,
But mighty hills of prey?
The hill on which Jehovah dwells
Is glorious more than they.
’Twas Zion’s King that stopp’d the breath
Of captains and their hands;
The men of might slept fast in death,
And never found their hands.
At thy rebuke O, Jacob’s God,
Both horse and chariot fell;
Who knows the terrors of thy rod?
Thy vengeance who can tell?
What power can stand before thy sight,
When once thy wrath appears?
Heaven shines round with dreadful light,
The earth lies still and fears.
When God in his own sovereign ways
Comes down to save th’opprest,
The wrath of man shall work his praise,
And he’ll restrain the rest.
PSALM 74. Common Metre.
The Church pleading with God under sore persecution.
What strange deliverance hast thou shown
In ages long before?
And now no other God we own,
No other God adore.
Thou didst divide the raging sea,
By thy resistless might,
To make thy tribes a wondrous way,
And then secure their flight.
Is not the world of nature thine,
The darkness and the day?
Didst thou not bid the morning shine,
And mark the sun his way?
Hath not thy power form’d every coast,
And set the earth its bounds,
With summer’s heat, and winter’s frost,
In their perpetual rounds?
And shall the sons of earth and dust
That sacred power blaspheme?
Will not thine hand, that form’d them first,
Avenge thine injured name?
Think on the covenant thou hast made,
And all thy words of love;
Nor let the birds of prey invade,
And vex thy mourning dove.
Our foes would triumph in our blood,
And make our hope their jest,
Plead thy own cause, Almighty God,
And give thy children rest.