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        <title><emph>Address of the Baptist General Association [of] Virginia: June 4th, 1863:</emph>
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        <head>ADDRESS<lb/>
OF THE BAPTIST GENERAL ASSOCIATION <gap n="two letters" desc="OF" reason="missing text"/><lb/>VIRGINIA, JUNE 4TH, 1863.</head>
        <p>DEAR BRETHREN:—Again have we assembled in our annual convention
with the cloud of war still darkening the land. We humbly
recognize in this desolating scourge the tokens of God's just displeasure
against us for our sins; and although we have reason to adore his
goodness, that in the midst of deserved wrath He hath remembered
mercy, and saved us from the hand of those who hate us, not humbling
us before our enemy, yet, how grievous has been our chastening—
Thousands of once happy homes are made desolate; at thousands of
hearth-stones tears are falling and anguished hearts are breaking;
our country has become the land of Rama; throughout its borders is
heard a voice of “lamentation and weeping and great mourning, Rachel
weeping for her children and will not be comforted because they
are not.” Still, whilst we “despise not the chastening of the Lord,”
we take courage, and, in reference to the public welfare and the common
cause, can  say with his servant of old, “We are troubled on every
side, yet not distressed; we perplexed, but not in despair; persecuted,
but not forsaken; cast down, but not destroyed.” We behold
in the fiery trial, through which we are passing, that baptism of
offerings by which men and nations are disciplined for the work
appointed to them.</p>
        <p>We have thought it meet, at this momentous crisis of our history,
in which the interest of our country and of the church are so deeply
involved, to address you, somewhat at length, upon the state of the
country, the character of the war, and our duties as patriots and Christians.</p>
        <p>Though God in scourging us has used the hand of a wicked nation
as His avenging instrument, we are daily more convinced of the righteousness
of our cause, and have abiding faith, through His favor, of
ultimate, and we trust not distant deliverance from our ruthless enemy.
We are contending not only for political liberty, but for rights
of conscience, assailed by fanaticism in the name of religion. The
cause and purpose of  this atrocious war are no longer disguised. The
mask is thrown aside and the long-cherished purpose of the foe is openly avowed. We would speak here of the origin of this war, because
<pb id="baptis2" n="2"/>
its history is so intimately connected with that of the church, and
teaches such a fearful lesson of the danger of spiritual pride and religious
intolerance.</p>
        <p>Not designing politicians, but those who claim to be the followers of
the meek and lowly Jesus—ministers of the reconciliation—heralds of
the gospel of peace, have sown the seeds of the whirlwind which is
devastating the land. It is now many years since our Northern
brethren, in their fierce hostility to the institution of domestic slavery,
deaf alike to the voice of reason and the authority of Scripture, to the
pleadings of patriotism and the claims of Christian charity, by their
fiery and intolerant fanaticism, furrowed deep and broad the line of
separation—thrusting us from their communion as unworthy to labor
with them in the fields of Christian benevolence and gospel enterprise.
Thus was planted the germ of certain and inevitable disunion. For,
how can a people harmonize as fellow citizens, who, because of discordant
moral standards, cannot co-operate either as fellow Christians or
fellow-philanthropists? Even the political philosopher could have
taught them that there is a sense of honor, a sentiment of self-respect,
which is with nations as with men, the strongest motive of action, and
an insult to which admits of no atonement;—that no ties of kindred
blood, no common inheritance of glorious memories, no community of
political traditions and ideas, no dreams of empire, no earthly interest
can induce sovereign and independent States to remain in intimate
league with those who have pronounced against them a decree of
moral outlawry. But to the Christian, who is proclaimed a <sic corr="felon">fellon</sic> in
the house of his God, smitten with at the very horns of the altar—his name
cast out as evil,—the dear old Zion itself in which he claims his heavenly
birth, denounced as a synagogue of Satan—there remains but the
alternative, either to sit in sackcloth as a penitent for sin, or in conscious
innocence, casting from him the shackles of such a spiritual
bondage, to “stand fast in the liberty wherewith Christ has made him
free.” It were treason to the Lord that bought him to “give place
by subjection” for an hour to such false brethren; nay, it is a paramount
duty to sever every tie which unites him with those who, in
calumniating him, dishonor the name of the Lord Christ.</p>
        <p>At length the evil seed bore its bitter fruit—the natural and necessary
catastrophe came.  But when Southern Christians, already repelled
from the fellowship of their Northern brethren, asking themselves,
“how shall two walk together unless they be agreed,” sought
by a peaceful political separation, and a new confederacy of homogeneous
States, to end the ceaseless and mischievous agitation, and secure
to themselves the unmolested enjoyment of their institutions, their
rights of conscience, and Christian liberty, the Northern churches rose
in anger, and, with united voice proclaimed, like the Egyptian task-masters,
“We will not let this people go.” Yes, those who for long
years had, from pulpit, press and platform, denounced the Union as a
“league with sin,” the Constitution as “covenant of death,” and
<pb id="baptis3" n="3"/>
groaned over the national flag itself as an emblem of the “stripes of
bondage,” and who declared their consciences burdened because a common citizenship with us made them partakers of our sin of slavery, now
enshrine that union, that constitution, and that flag, as the very gods
of their idolatry, and refusing to let us, by a peaceful separation, relieve
at once their consciences and our own, incite against us a bloody,
relentless and unscrupulous war.</p>
        <p>Dear <sic corr="brethren">blethren</sic>, we record these things more in sorrow than in anger,
and under a sense of profound humiliation, at such an example of the
deceitfulness of the human heart. The history of Christian nations,
we believe, furnishes no parallel. When hereafter, as apologists for
our holy religion, we shall site the French revolution with its reign of
terror, to show how all the philanthropic schemes of godless philosophers
and humanitarians are but a delusion and snare, the sneering
infidel will point us to this atrocious war, waged in the name of Christ,
by <sic corr="descendants">decendants</sic> of the Puritans, by high-priests of philanthropy, the
once meek advocates of peace, who would scarce admit the lawfulness
of defensive war.</p>
        <p>Let us study this lesson with heart-searchings for ourselves, striving
to know what manner of spirit we are of; let us, whilst we condemn,
pity the delusion of our brethren who have become our persecutors,
—not in the spirit which says, “Stand aside, for I am holier
than thou,” but, with humble hearts, earnestly praying for them and
for ourselves, lest we be also tempted and overcome of evil. “Let
us not be high-minded, but fear.”</p>
        <p>In addressing you upon our duties as Christians in the present crisis,
we turn <sic corr="first">fist</sic> to our brethren in the army.</p>
        <p><hi rend="italics">Soldiers—Brethren</hi>: Our hearts burn within us when we think of
you, our brave defenders, who have so often stood, a living wall of
fire, between us and the ruthless invader. <hi rend="italics">We</hi> cannot forget—a
grateful country can never forget, your faithful services. When we
think of you, as with scant and coarse soldier's fare, in tattered garments,
with unshod and bleeding feet; you toil along the weary march,
scaling rugged mountains, threading tangled forests, fording rivers,
struggling through miry marshes, shivering at the comfortless bivouac,
or tossed with fever on the hospital couch; and know that you
endure all this toil, privation and suffering, with a faith and patience
more heroic even than your dauntless daring amid the storm of battle,
we thank God and take courage; for we say, surely He hath caused
His presence to go with our armies. Brethren, you have place in
our hearts. We remember you in the sanctuary, and at the family
altar, mingling our prayers with the loved ones at home, that God will
have you in His holy keeping; that your health and lives may be
precious in His sight; and that every battle-field shall inscribe your
banners with such victories, as we shall wring a peace from our reluctant
foes, and restore you to your homes. But far more earnestly than for
all these, do we beseech Him to keep you in the way of
<pb id="baptis4" n="4"/>
righteousness, and cause you to “walk worthy of the Lord unto all
pleasing.”</p>
        <p>Soldier of the cross! remember that you have a victory to achieve,
a reward to gain, an inheritance to enter upon, transcendently more
glorious than any to which your country calls you. The captain of
our salvation has enlisted us for a warfare whose “weapons are not
carnal, but mighty through God to the pulling down of strongholds;
casting down imaginations and every high thing that exalteth itself
against the knowledge of God, and bringing into captivity every
thought to the obedience of Christ. And there is no discharge in
that war; neither does it allow any relaxation of discipline. Religion
makes the same demands upon us in the camp as at home. The perils
which environ us, far from lessening the obligation of Christian duty,
rather require us to walk more “circumspectly, not as fools, but
as wise, redeeming the time, because the days are evil.”</p>
        <p>But, farther, dear brethren, have you seriously considered what a
field of labor has been providentially appointed to you? how great a
work lies before you? No pastor throughout the land has access to
such a plenteous harvest. Think of it; the ends of the Confederacy
meet together in the army congregation—it is as it were a gathering
of nations for you to plead with, and the missionary field lies around
your camp-fires. Not to the army chaplain, the occasional preacher,
or <sic corr="colporteur">colporter</sic>, is it exclusively or chiefly given to leaven this great mass.
The task is yours; upon you mainly will rest the responsibility: and
if the eyes of the world are upon you as the champions of your country's
cause; much more are you “made a spectacle to angels and men”
as witnesses for Christ.  As soldiers, your individuality, your merits
or demerits, may be merged in the corps to which you belong; as
Christians, on the contrary. you are “like a city set on a hill
which cannot be hid.” You profess to “have been with Jesus,” and men
will note what you “have learned of him.” for you are his “living
epistles, to be known and read of all men.” Seeing then that you have
received such a charge, and that your daily life is surrounded by a
cloud of witnesses, what manner of persons ought you to be in all holy
conversation and godliness? Watch therefore unto prayer, giving all
diligence that you may approve yourselves the servants of Christ, “by
pureness, by knowledge, by long-suffering, by kindness, by the Holy
Ghost, by love unfeigned, by the word of truth, by the power of God,
by the armor of righteousness on <sic corr="the">th</sic> right hand and on the left,” It 
is not enough that you abstain from evil; you must do good: your
piety should be active and aggressive. You can efficiently aid the
minister of Christ and the tract distributor in their labors of love;
and, more intimately and unobtrusively than they, can you speak a
word in season to your comrade, in the mess or on the march, by the
camp-fire or beside the sick-bed,—speak to him when his heart is 
grateful in joy, or subdued in sorrow: when his dewy eye tells you 
that the letter from home has awakened touching memories, thoughts
<pb id="baptis5" n="5"/>
perhaps of that holy thing, a mother's love and prayers. Many are
your opportunities to speak, as others cannot, the fitting word at the
right time. Have you a prayer-meeting in your company or regiment?
If not, seek till you have found, if it be but two or three, who can
solemnly meet together in the name of Jesus, to commune with each
other and with their Lord at the throne of the heavenly grace. God
has already greatly blessed this instrumentality among our soldiers,
and if it more abounded, we doubt not the Spirit of glory and of God
would descend in Pentecostal seasons upon our army.</p>
        <p>Finally, brethren, we exhort you in the words of a holy apostle,
“Be strong in the Lord, and in the power of his might. Take unto
you the whole armor of God, that ye may be able to stand in the evil
day, and having done all, to stand.”</p>
        <p>It is sad to think that this address may find many of you prostrate
with disease, or disabled by wounds, in the hospital, or among strangers,
far from home. This is among your sorest trials. The sense of
duty, the active employments and responsibilities of the service,
which, in health, buoy up your spirits to endure cheerfully privations
and toils, stay not the languor and helplessness of the sick-bed. And
though kind nurses may attend you, though some of those many noble
hearted women, who have relieved the darkest scenes of this hour
of trial by the beauty of their love, may hover like ministering angels
around your couch, still you feel a void is there. It is now that you
would lean your head again, as in the hour of childhood's weakness,
upon a fond mother's arm, or upon that tender bosom which has hid
its life and love in yours; you long for a sister's gentle touch and
sweet soothing voice; or to hear the little prattlers at your bedside:
calling you father and brother. And yet, dear Christian brother,
there is one standing by who loves you more than all these, saying to
you, “Be of good cheer, it is I, be not afraid;” one who will place
around you his everlasting arms, and press you to his great loving
heart—the heart that bled for you. The Crucified One draws nigh to
you. Oh! lean upon Him, for He is a “friend that sticketh closer
than a brother.” It is He “who forgiveth all thy iniquities; who
healeth all thy diseases; who redeemeth thy life from destruction.” He
speaks to you in such words as these: “Can a woman forget her suckling
child, that she should not have compassion on the son of her womb?
yea, they may forget, yet, will I not <sic corr="forget">for get</sic> thee.” Why then should
you doubt or fear? In the absence of earthly comforts find them all
in Jesus; and leave all with Him; assured that He will richly supply
your every need. Say to your troubled heart: “Why art thou
cast down, O my soul? and why art thou disquieted within me? hope
thou in God: for I shall yet praise him, who is the health of my
countenance, and my God.” If the Shepherd and Bishop of your
soul be with you, the couch of affliction may be made to glorify Him in
you, and if He goes before, you can say with the Psalmist: “Yea,
though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear
<pb id="baptis6" n="6"/>
no evil: for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff, they comfort
me.”</p>
        <p>Whilst our much-enduring brethren in the army are standing between
us and the foe, we who remain at home have duties no less serious
and imperative to fulfill. We, too, have trials to endure, sacrifices
to make, abuses to abate, and evils to encounter. Physical suffering,
the discomforts of the camp, and carnage of the battle-field, are
not the most grievous evils of war. History teaches us the mournful
lesson, that seasons of great public calamity are usually signalized also
by great public demoralization. Nor is this war destined to furnish
an exception to the rule. The worldly-mindedness, relaxation of
morals, and self-seeking which are wont to characterize scenes of civil
war, pestilence, and famine, are rife among us. Painfully prominent
among the evils of the times is the eager greed of gain, fostering a
wide-spread and unscrupulous spirit of extortion. With emphasis,
does the experience of to-day testify to the truth of the apostolic warning,
that “the love of money is the root of all evil; which while
some coveted after, they have erred from the faith, and pierced themselves
through with many sorrows.” Christian brethren, can nothing
be done to rebuke this spirit, which is causing so many to “fall into
temptation and a snare,” and thereby lessen those <sic corr="exorbitant">exhorbitant</sic> prices
of articles of prime necessity, which are menacing greater danger
to us than the arms of the invader? It is evident that, whilst there
is no lack of <sic corr="provisions">provisons</sic> in the land, yet this exaction is embarrassing
the government, impairing the public credit, depreciating the currency,
and creating distress among the people which may even result in
disaffection, for hunger knows no allegiance. There is a miserable
fallacy about the inexorable “law of trade,” with which men strive to
quiet their conscience—a law wholly inapplicable to a <sic corr="beleaguered">beleagered</sic> city,
or a blockaded country. We will not discuss here, however, the
laws of political economy. We urge rather the claims of Christian
<sic corr="philanthropy">philantropy</sic> and patriotism. What are our obligations? Have we
not pledged each other “our lives, fortunes, and our sacred honor,”
in the public defence? It is a solemn compact—a partnership of national
defence, in which the duties are divided. A half million of
our able-bodied men, the elect of the land, in the flower of youth and
vigor of manhood, have agreed to leave their all, their pleasant homes,
wives and children, and the endearments of domestic life, to forego
the pursuit of gain, abandon the occupation which to multitudes was
the sole means of livelihood for themselves and families, to go forth,
not as mercenary soldiers for their pittance of pay suffices not for their
expenses, but as self-sacrificing patriots, enduring  all the hardships
and dangers of an ill equipped army against <gap n="one word" reason="missing text"/> foe whose number
<sic corr="triples">tripples</sic> theirs—all this they agree to do, that they may stand upon
the borders of our country as a protecting wall, enabling you who remain
at home to provide in security the means of subsistence for yourselves
and them. Well and nobly have they redeemed their pledge
<pb id="baptis7" n="7"/>
at the cost of thousands of precious lives; and now, brethren, will you
meet <hi rend="italics">your</hi> part of the obligation, and share the burden? Or does the
“law of trade” mean that, because these half million of producers,
by abandoning their pursuits and withdrawing from competition with
you, have left all the production in your hands, you will make gain of
their necessities? Does this “law of trade” mean, that when you
pay your brave defenders their miserable pittance, they shall receive
their $11 per month in Confederate money as at par with gold, but
when they or their families would purchase the means of subsistence,
the $11 shall be worth only $1? Is not this coining the blood of our
martyr-heroes and the tears of their widows and orphans into sordid
gold—or rather, into the Nemesis of this grasping avarice may yet
<sic corr="convert">convent</sic> into bundles of worthless rags? Brethren, these things ought
not so to be; and a conviction both of their unrighteousness and impolicy
should induce every Christian and patriot to seek a remedy. It
is <sic corr="demonstrably">demonatrablv</sic> for the interest of all, that by a reduction of prices our
currency should be approximated to a par value. Many of our brethren
have amassed fortunes during the war in the legitimate enterprise
of business<corr sic=",">.</corr> May we not ask of them, as the part of wisdom and
Christian charity, and as a thank offering to God, to seriously consider
how their capital may be used to check the monopolist, and restore
in our market something like a fair valuation of articles! Will not
our brethren engaged in agriculture take this subject into prayerful
consideration, and consult together for the attainment of this end? So
wide-spread is the sense of the grievance that we are confident an
earnest effort made even by a few would find many helpers, and have
great results. Men of the world will pronounce an appeal like this
to be a sheer utopian scheme; but we make it in the confidence that
out of 200,000 Christians in our State, many will be found both able
and willing to put forth an effort which cannot fail to draw down upon
it a blessing from the great Head of the church who loveth us
all.</p>
        <p>We know that we need not solicit your sympathy and hospitality
towards the homeless and <sic corr="penniless">pennilesss</sic> refugee who has given up all
rather than desert the cause of his country; nor invoke your kind attention
to the sick and wounded, nor your generous contributions to
supply the want of our soldiers in the field. Towards all these your
liberality has abounded, and among the many glorious deeds which
the history of this war shall chronicle, there will be no brighter page
than that which records the story of this beneficence: and especially
will millions of hearts, in coming generations, glow within them as
they read of the labors of love and do homage to the virtues of the
women of Virginia. We feel sure that not only will you continue to
give out of your abundance, but that, should straitened circumstances
come, you will share your scanty store with the needy patriot—
Whilst you thus honor the claims of philanthropy and patriotism, forget
not our Christian obligations. We need not tell you that your
<pb id="baptis8" n="8"/>
pastor will require for his support greatly enlarged contributions—
Even an increased salary may be found inadequate. Let us then, in
the fluctuating and uncertain state of things which characterizes these
present evil times, recur to the primitive apostolic rule, and the former
usage of our churches; and simply determine that the wants of our
ministry shall be supplied. Let each church authorize and by its
bounty enable its <sic corr="deacons">deacous</sic> to provide for the comfortable support of its
pastor, that he may freely and “continually give himself to prayer and
the ministry of the word.”</p>
        <p>In conclusion, brethren, while we trust none of our enterprises or
benevolence will be neglected, we especially solicit your liberal support
for the work army colportage, in giving the word of life and a
religious literature to our soldiers. And to this end, as we know of
no more efficient organ for disseminating Christian influence, we recommend
large subscriptions to our religious journals for distribution in
the army. Let every church determine that the soldiers who have
gone from its neighborhood shall be regularly supplied with a package
of this healthy literature. At home, let the most strenuous efforts be
made to sustain your Sunday schools, more needed now than ever to
supply the want of other instruction, and to guard youth against the
evils of the times. Forsake not the assembling of yourselves together,
but esteem it of the last importance to maintain sanctuary privileges,
the regular preaching of the gospel, and the ordinances of God's
house, that you may “dwell in the secret place of the Most High
and abide under the shadow of the Almighty.” And may great
grace be upon us all, both to do and to suffer His will in all things<corr>.</corr></p>
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