A SERMON PREACHED TO THE Artillery-Company, AT S. MARY LE BOW, OCTOBER 21. 1679. AND Published at their earnest Request. By EDW. PELLING, Rector of S. Martin Ludgate, and Chaplain to his Grace the Duke of Somerset. LONDON, Printed for Jonathan Edwin, at the Three Roses in Ludgate-street, 1679. S. LUKE III. 14. And the Soldiers likewise demanded of him, saying, And what shall we do? WHat shall we do? is an old and general Question, which many times will puzzle even a wise man to answer. In this Chapter we find, first the People facing John the Baptist with this Question in their mouths. He had told them of an Axe that was now laid to the root; and presently the people (who are commonly frighted at the noise of such fatal and edged Instruments) came unto the Baptist, like a Forlorn Hope, and desired him to tell them, what they should do then? v. 10. Then came the Publicans; which were Officers under the Romans, that did Farm and Collect the Customary Taxations; but not content with their ordinary Profits and Pay, used all manner of Oppression, racking and pillaging the people; so that the Name and Office of a Publican was infamous even among the Romans themselves; and in the Scripture, Publicans and Sinners commonly go together in Files. As soon as they heard of an Axe coming, 'tis no wonder if they should be alarmed too; they put the same Question to the Baptist which the rest did, Master, What shall we do? v. 12. In the Rear of all came these Soldiers in my Text, a sort of men that had been used to the Sword, but yet were apt, as others, to be afraid of an Axe, and as unwilling to be hewn down. These Soldiers are thought to have been Jews, that listed themselves under the Romans, and quartered up and down in Garrisons for the security of the Nation; who, though they thought themselves obliged in Conscience not to undertake any Military Expeditions, or to engage in an open War, and pitched Battle, against their Countrymen, yet were a rapacious sort of Infantry, (as sordid Auxiliaries for the most part are) and not so over-kind to their Brotherhood, but that upon occasion they would plunder and Forage in an Hostile way, or screw Booties out of them by Accusations, after the manner of Delators and Pickthanks. But as stout and insolent as they were, it seems that S. John's Sermon took down their Courage, when they heard that the Judgement of God was at their Heels, ready to cut its way, so that no Shield or Buckler could be their defence against it, their hearts sunk (like men desirous of Quarter) and hereupon they follow their Leaders, the Publicans and People, and beseech the Baptist to give them their Charge likewise, they demanded of him, saying, And what shall we do? From the Occasion and Connexion of the Words, I might proceed to entertain you with John's Resolution of the Soldier's Question. Do Violence to no man, neither accuse any falsely, and be content with your Wages; which was a very seasonable Charge then, considering, first, that the Jews at that time were yoked and kept under by the Roman Forces, and were subject to be oppressed and harrassed, and made a Prey of, whensoever the Roman Eagle should invade them with her Talons and her Bill. And considering too the insolent and base behaviour of these Soldiers, that not content with their ordinary Pay, lived like Harpies and Sycophants, upon Rapine and Spoil. To them the Baptist spoke home, aiming at the proper mark, and levelling his Admonition at their sin, and darting his Arrow that way where he was sure to hit and to wound deepest. But these directions may not seem so proper for this place, and for this Auditory, there being a vast disparity and difference in respect both of Persons and Times. 1. In respect of Persons. These Soldiers in the Text were not so much as Listed into the Christian Religion, nor very well Disciplined in their own: but men who followed the Conduct of their own impetuous Appetites, and minded no Law so much as that of Arms. But You have not so learned Christ, the Captain of your salvation; You, that are clad in the Armour of God; You, that have Truth for a Military Girdle, and Righteousness for a Breastplate, and Charity for a Marching-Shoe, and Faith for a Shield, and Hope for an Helmet, and the Word of God for a Sword, as S. Paul describes a Christian that is armed Cap-a-pe, and that is strong in the Lord, Ephes. 6. 2. There is difference too in respect of the Times; things being with us (though to the great dissatisfaction of some Renegadoes abroad, and some Mutineers at home) in a quiet and peaceable state, and those two dear Darlings of men's Affections, Liberty and Property, being in our actual and plenary possession. Indeed S. John's Admonition would be pertinent, were the Times such as they were not so long ago that we should forget them, when the Pulpit was the Drum, and Curse ye Meroz, and Rebellion, was the Beat; when the whole Land was sequestered into the Claws of our mortified Saints, after they had lustily squeezed the Public Faith, and when an Information was the Price of the greatest Estate; then 'twas a seasonable Command to our Masters, those Ruffians in Buff, Do no violence to no man, neither accuse any falsely. But considering the posture of our Affairs, that (God be blessed) it is yet undisturbed, so that your Arms are not for Terror, but for Show only, I must be pardoned, if I do not tie myself strictly to the Baptist's Answer, but resolve the Soldiers Question in such a way as may suit with our Times, and in some measure answer the purport of this Solemnity. The general design of S. John, was to Train these Soldiers into good Manners; and so my first business shall be to advise you to have a good Conscience. I do not speak of a cheap Humour, or an Opinion that is easily taken up, or a perverse Persuasion; much less do I mean the acting upon lose Principles; Principles which among honest men will not pass Muster; for such a Conscience is nothing else but the Colour of a Knave, or the Trumpet of a Rebel. But by a good Conscience, is understood a Judgement that is rightly informed, and that is faithfully obeyed, so that the result thereof is Virtue, and Religion, and Righteousness, which is indeed the Breastplate of every good Christian. Let such a Conscience as this be your Armour; a Conscience that will endure the Shock, that will stand by a man undaunted in the day of Battle, and that will be a Guard and a Comfort to him at the Onset of Death. We read of that Centurion, Cornelius, that he was a devout man, and one that feared God, with all his house, Act. 10. 2. Piety, and a Religious Dread of offending God, is a necessary Qualification in a Soldier; whether we consider, First, the Quality of his Office; or, Secondly, the Dangers which do attend his Employment; or, Thirdly, the Issue which he expecteth by his Achievements. 1. A good Conscience is necessary in respect of his Office; for so it makes him the more Honourable. Those Military Exploits, with which Great and Noble Spirits have made all Histories to swell, were so far from being any Blot in their Escutcheons, that they have been a Lustre to their Families and Names, and were many times the Foundation, sometimes an Addition, always an Ingredient of their greatest Honours: And generally the beginning of the most splendid Fortunes, and the Originals of the highest Titles and Names of Renown, were fetched from the Camp, as the just Reward of Fortitude and Gallantry, of Gore and Blood. Upon which score, the Greek Hero's, the Roman Consuls and Dictator's, and (who have been as matchless as any) our English Worthies, have been Great and Honourable at Home, because they were Faithful, Valiant, and Victorious in the Field. Now, what a disparagement is it to your Coat, that a Noble and Brave Spirit should Cashier his Honour, and slain his Name and Blood with Vice, which is even a stain to the Dunghill? What a blemish is it, that he should drink himself out of the shape of a Man into the similitude of a Beast, that you would think you saw a Swine in Buff, or a dead Ass in a Lion's skin? what a dishonour is it, that he should take up the Porter's sin, and discharge Oaths instead of other Ammunition? and let fly upon the Cross, which has been the Ornament of Sceptres and Banners? and imitate the impertinent Malice of that Infidel that stuck Christ's side with a Spear? In a word, what a shame is it, that men, for whom States and Empires cannot afford Trophies enough, should be Beleaguered and Vanquished by their Lusts; and that they who fear not the threats of a Cannon, or the face of Death, should not be so much as Beauty-proof, but captivated by the very Looks of a Female Enemy? When you see a Samson putting off his Laurels of Victory, and yielding up his Locks to the Scissors of a Dalilah: When you see an Hercules submitting to carry Omphale's Slippers; an Athanericus stooping down to tie his Mistress' Shoes, a Sardanapalus exchanging his Sword for a Distaff; a Caesar and an Anthony led in Triumph by a Defenceless Cleopatra; and the Flower of all Greece taking up Arms for the sake of a Noble Whore; what shameful Instances do you not see of folly and degenerous Natures, which are so far from becoming the Chieftains and Masters of the Artillery, that they are reproachful to the rudest Tyro, and to the meanest Rank of Drudges that attend the common Baggage. So that were only the Grandeur of your Society concerned, Virtue and a Good Conscience is necessary in a Soldier, to make him the more Honourable and Illustrious. 2. But, secondly, If he doth consider the Dangers which meet him in the Face, he will find another necessity for it, to make him the more Valiant. The Apostle, speaking of those Religious Champions of old, tells us, That through Faith they subdued Kingdoms, out of weakness were made strong, waxed valiant in Fight, and turned to flight the Armies of the Aliens, Heb. 11. A firm Belief in God, when 'tis Harnessed with Good Works, is a sturdy, puissant, and victorious thing. But Vice makes men Sneaks and Cowards; and a Wing of Miscreants have just Reason to flee, when Death is coming out of the Muzzle of a Gun, or upon the Point of a Sword; because the formidable appearance of Hell is coming too; and then the hearts of Irreligious men will Recoil, and evil Consciences will run into Pits, or Woods, or into any Corners on this side the Territories of the damned, and out of the reach of him whose Name is Legion. It is not to be denied, but there is a sort of audacity and fool-hardiness, which is a resemblance of true Valour, and which the vilest of men are capable of, either by reason of the heat of a sanguine Constitution, or through the prevalency of wrong Principles, which hurry them headlong upon danger, or through Malice and Spite against Government, or through a necessity of Effrontery, when their Fortunes are desperate, or their Persons are environed with straits and inconquerable difficulties, or the like: And so Turks, and Jesuits, and Heathens themselves have been bold; and our own Histories of the late Times afford us Instances of many who did not dare to be loyal and good Subjects, but yet did dare to be Traitors, Regicides, and Devils in the shape of men. But this is a brutish sort of Bravery, like the Valour of an Horse, that rusheth into the Battle without fear or wit, or consideration of a Spears point. But let the Impetus be once over, let the Wretch come soberly to debate his present Affairs, and to take a true prospect of his future state, than his spirits will Flag, and his stoutness will be Crest-faln; and take it for a general Rule, that none shall undertake an Enterprise with so much readiness, or engage in a Rencounter with so much fortitude, or maintain his Ground with so much constancy, or defy the Roar of the Field with such a fixed resolution, as the man who is Girt about with Integrity, and to whom a Good Conscience is a Coat of Mail: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Maximus Tyrius, the Pagan Philosopher, said, He that loves God receives death willingly, and is not cowed at its approaches, but keeps his Station, and his Post, with a Steeled Courage. 3. Let me add, thirdly, that none shoulders off an Enemy with such success, or Crowns his Feats of Arms with such prosperity; because his whole life is a Prayer, whereby he offers Violence to Heaven, quasi manu facta, (as Tertullian speaks) Besieging and Battering it, as it were with a mighty Host: And on this score too, Virtue and a good Conscience is necessary in a Soldier, because it maketh him the more Victorious. 'Tis true; a good Cause, and good Men, and good Soldiers do not always succeed. A Senacherib, or a Nero, or a Cromwell may win the day, when Providence intends to bring a People under the Harrow and the Saw: Then indeed God passeth Sentence, as a Judge; but generally with good men he helpeth as a Confederate and a Party. The care of good Joshua was, that himself, and his whole house, and all Israel might serve the Lord, and Victory still waited at his Heels, and, like that Centurion's Servant, Mat. 8. 'twas at his beck and command; so that within the compass of a few years, more Conquests were made, more Kings vanquished, more Crowns won, and more Sceptres were broken by that one General, than, perhaps, the twelve Caesars at Rome ever saw. So also we read of David, that he was a man according to God's own heart, and from the Age of a Stripling all-a-long he got Victories after Victories, (over the Philistines, the Amalekites, the Moabites, the Ammonites, the Syrians, and the rest) some by his Sling, some by his Sword, some by the Terror of his Arms, all by the Blessing of God, as the Brabium and Prize which he obtained by his Zeal for Religion. Not to speak of other Victorious Captains among the Jews (who were therefore Victorious Commanders, because Pious Men;) it is clear, that in the Infant-times of Christianity, though the Holy Professors of it were hated, harrassed, and great numbers of them cut off by the Heathens, yet were they so serviceable to them in their Wars, that the Brunt of the Battle was wont to lie upon them. Whereas others were Lions in Peace, but Hearts in War, (as * Tert. de Cort. Mil. Tertullian speaks,) the Christian was their only trusty Soldier; so that though the Infidels hated them for their Religion, yet did they make use of them for their good service; witness the Army under Julian, which was most of them Christians; and the Theban Legion under Maximian, which were Christians; and the Fulminatrix Legio, under Antoninus, which were Christians; to whose Piety the Romans were so indebted, that the Emperor, writing to the Senate, told them in his Letter (a Copy whereof we have in Justin Martyr,) that the Christians Apol. 2. saved his whole Army from destruction at that time, when he was in the bowels of Germany. For all being ready to perish for want of water, the Christians fell down upon their Knees to Prayer; and thereupon plenty of Rain fell down strait, which preserved the Roman Forces; but Hail mingled with Fires fell down in abundance on the Heads of their Enemies. And thence it was (as some conceive) that That Legion of Christians was called, the Lightning-striking Legion. You see by this time, how necessary Religion and a good Conscience is for a Soldier: It makes him the more Honourable in his Office, the more Valiant in his Expeditions, and the more Victorious in the Event. And when I have said this, you may think that in effect I have said all. But yet, to come somewhat closer home in the Resolution of this Question in my Text, there are some particular things which must fall under the Consideration and Care of a Soldier, that the Formidable Issues of his Warlike Undertake may be legitimated. No doubt, but upon certain Occasions, and in certain Cases, Wars may be lawfully Levied. These Soldiers which came to John here, were not ordered to lay down their Arms, but to do no Wrong, and to be content with their Wages: And Cornelius, that was made a Christian by the Ministry of S. Peter, was not directed to lay down his Commission, but continued a Centurion still. And the Truth is, Wars between States are of the same Nature with Lawsuits between Private Persons, only the Charges and Cost are much more considerable, by how much Blood is more valuable than Money. Now as Appeals to the Magistrate are lawful, so are Appeals to the Sword, when the Accounts and Considerations are weighty, and there is no other possible way of redress. Yet the lawfulness of War notwithstanding, there are three things chief which every Military man is bound in Conscience to have a careful Eye unto. 1. The Authority, by Virtue whereof he enters into the Field. 2. The End, to which he employeth his Arms. 3. That Obedience and Fealty which he oweth to the Magistrate, throughout the whole course of his Actions. Of these briefly, that I may not hinder your March. 1. For the Authority: it must be just and lawful. All they that take the Sword shall perish with the Sword, saith our Saviour, Mat. 26. 52. meaning such as take it of themselves, and snatch it into their hands, being not called unto it by due and competent Authority. For God being the sole Author of our lives, the Power of life and death is Originally in him alone; but Derivatively in those to whom he hath delegated this Power by special Commission; and they are those whom S. Paul calleth the Higher (or the Supreme) Powers, Rom. 13. 1. where he meaneth the Person of the Magistrate in chief, who is legally constituted, and hath gotten the Authority into his hands not by Usurpation, but by Law and Right; the Independent and Rightful Magistrate in every Nation, whether it be the King as Supreme, 1 Pet. 2. 13. Now he is called the Minister of God, because the Sword which he beareth is put into his hands by the Authority of God alone, to be drawn by him, and to be put into the hands of his Subjects by his Warrant; so that whosoever shall enter into dangers of his own life, upon his own head, is a Murderer of himself; or shall take away the life of his Neighbour, without the Command or leave of his Sovereign, is a Murderer of another. And upon this score, I stick not to say, That the Unnatural War which was raised lately by the Long and Disloyal Parliament, was a direct Rebellion; and (they having not the Power of War legally in their hands) all such as did engage by pretended Commissions from them, were (notwithstanding their Saintships) so many Formal Murderers, and were actually guilty of all that Bloodshed, for which, for aught I know, the Axe is now laid to the Root of the Tree; which as it ought to be a Terror to all Representatives of the People for the future, so it ought also to be a warning-piece to every Subject (especially to every Soldier) to take diligent care (as he will answer it to the Lord of Hosts, who will one day make Inquisition for Blood) that he Sound not to the Battle, or run into it, but by the Commands of due and lawful Authority. 2. A second thing he is to do, is to consider the Ends of his Martial Undertake, whether they be lawful and good too; for the End serveth very much to denominate an Action either good or bad. Now if a man enters himself into the Musterroll out of a sincere design to serve his King, to preserve Peace, and to defend his Country from Foreign Invasion, or Domestic Insurrections, either by preventing, or by suppressing the Hostilities of evil men, the End is good, and the Action is just, honourable and excellent. But then, first, for a man to aim at men's lives for Spoylsake, to Trail for Plunder, and to Advance for Pay, as the main end of his Military Services, is a vile and a base thing; because Violence is not to be a man's ordinary Trade for a Livelihood; nor is it to be imagined, that he was born into the World, that he should live only by slashing and wounding, and cutting men's Throats. To which purpose some learned men have noted upon my Text, That had these been V Grot. in Loc. such Soldiers of Fortune, as lead a Mercenary and Belluine life, and rove up and down, hewing and hacking merely for Booty sake, the Baptist would have given them another kind of Answer, and sent them from their Quarters, as a sort of Inhuman and Barbarous Villains. So, secondly, for men to Rendezvous with a design to make Havoc of the true Religion, is a most Wicked and Damnable thing; for the Charge here, Do Violence to no man, does rather restrain Soldiers from doing Violence to the Men of God, and to the Faith of Christ. None can, but with a most guilty and seared Conscience, be a Pioneer in this sense, to Blow up Religion, or to Undermine the Church, which is the Pillar and Ground of Truth, 1 Tim. 3. 15. These Jewish Soldiers, though they were men of large Consciences, and of Iron Hearts, yet they abhorred the very thoughts of turning the Point of their Swords upon their Countrymen, and would choose to endure any Punishments, rather than they would strike a Blow to the prejudice of their Native Religion. Nay, Josephus Antiq. l. 20. c. 4. tells us, that, When an Heathen Soldier had by chance found the Books of Moses, and tore them in pieces, the Roman Procurator, Cumanus (a man that hated the Jews sufficiently, but) was so ashamed of the Fact, that to revenge the Affront which had been offered to God himself, ordered the profane Wretch presently to be beheaded. What an horrid thing would it be, should You that have been Trained up in the best Reformed Church upon the Earth, (a Church, which, though Militant, was never yet the Mother of Rebels, should You at last) espouse a Quarrel against her Bible, against her Sacraments, against her Faith, or against her Members? When the Thebean Legion of old was commanded by the Emperor to fall upon their Fellow-Christians, rather than they would wound their own Consciences by such an Act of Impicty, they were content first to lay down their Arms, and then to offer up their own Necks for a Sacrifice. In those times more or braver Martyrs were not to be found, than what were bred in the Field. They were a Safeguard to their Prince, and an Honour to Religion, and counted it Honourable to die for Religion; but if once Religion was to be persecuted, no Inducements in the World could prevail with them o lift up a Weapon, or so much as a Finger against it. I have the more insisted upon this, because the Axe is now laid to the root of Tree: Not only the Axe of God's Judgements, but the Axe of some men's Malice too, who design to extirpate our true Religion, to Hue it all down at once, and to make destruction of Root and Branch. To assist and join with such Engineers, is a most impious and sacrilegious thing. And let me add, thirdly, That to take up Arms rashly, and without or against due Authority, merely for the Defence of the true Religion, is unwarrantable and unlawful. For Christ's Kingdom is not of this World; and for that Reason his servants are not to fight for him, because his Kingdom is not from hence, Job. 18. 36. He left the Power of the Militia in the same hands where he found it. And Christians are not to snatch that Power into their own hands, to maintain the Cause of Religion, and to decide Controversies in Divinity by the Edge of the Sword. Though some have fought for an Alcoran, others for a Legend, and others for a COVENANT, yet no Pretences, no Cause, no Church can justify such violent and arbitrary Proceed, no, not for the sake of the Gospel; For we do not war after the flesh, neither are the Weapons of our Warfare carnal, saith S. Paul, 2 Cor. 10. And elsewhere showing the Christians Arms, he mentions Truth, Righteousness, Charity, Faith, Hope, the Word of God, and Prayer; and of these he saith twice together, that it was the Armour, and the whole Armour of God, Ephes. 6. That Soldier then that will keep a good Conscience as his Sentinel and Guard, must consider first the Authority by which, and then the Ends for which he undertaketh a Martial Employment. And according as those Ends are either. Good or Evil, so are his Undertake either honest or sinful. 3. There is now but one thing more you are to consider of; viz. That Obedience and Fealty you own to the Supreme Power under whom you act. For it is required, as in a Steward, so in a Soldier, that he be found faithful: Neither a Desertor, nor a Traitor. Let every Soul be subject, faith the Apostle, Rom. 13. 1. where he taketh in men of all Ranks and Qualities, whether in an Ecclesiastical, or in a Civil, or in a Military Station: and whosoever resisteth (either the Authority or Person of the King) shall receive to himself damnation. A dreadful Sentence: because Subjection is a most necessary Duty. And this the Primitive and best Christians were so careful to observe, that notwithstanding the impious Persecutions, and the unheard of Cruelties of their Princes; though some of them were Infidels, some Heretics, one of them an Apostate, and most of them Oppressors and Persecutors of Religion, yet Christians (and even those who had Swords in their hands) resolved to undergo all Miseries and Torments, and a thousand Deaths, rather than they would make any the least Resistance. Nay, notwithstanding the prodigious numbers of Christians too; though (as Tertullian tells us expressly) Christians filled the Roman Empire, their Cities, Apolog. c. 37. Islands, Castles, Towns, Councils, Palaces, Senates, Courts, and their very Camps too, so that they could have ruined their Enemies even without the use of Arms, and merely by holding off from their services; yet so true were they for Conscience sake, that not so much as one Christian did ever offer (in those days) to Rebel. And of this we have two very memorable Instances: The one in Julian's Army, which consisted for the most part of Christians; who, notwithstanding those intolerable usages, which they, and the whole Christian Religion, received at his hands, yet never so much as attempted to use those advantages they had, either to attack his Person, or to invade his Prerogatives, nor lifted up their hands, but in Prayer for the Emperor, when a Pagan, an Apostate, and their inveterate Enemy. The other is in the Thebean Legion (I mentioned before) consisting of six thousand six hundred sixty six Soldiers, and all of them Christians, and, had they not been so, enough to have been successful Traitors. But after too several Decimations, each Tenth ●ucker. L … d. man being killed upon the spot, for refusing Maximian's most unjust Commands, they meekly yielded up themselves (the whole Body of them) to be cut in pieces at their Enemy's Feet, thereby showing unto all men, and especially to men of War, how necessary it is for such, as are once Matriculated into the Service of Christ, to live good Subjects, and, if need be, to die Martyrs. By this time, Beloved, you cannot but see your Duty, if you inquire, as those Soldiers did in my Text, And what shall we do? When the Axe is laid to the root, the best way to keep the Tree from falling, is to prevail with God to take his hand off; and the way to that, is not to murmur and complain of the Danger, but for every man to do his Duty in his Place, and to move regularly in that Sphere where Providence hath set him. You are Christians, Citizens, and Soldiers, and your Society is a Nursery of Valour: Men, in whom our Sovereign doth repose much Trust, and on whom the whole Nation may at this time have fixed their Eyes, observing your Motions, and which way you will lead others, whether to the Right, or Left. Your care ought to be the greater, in the prudent and Christian Government of yourselves, that you give not Fire to those, who are ready to receive any little Spark. Herein then Exercise yourselves principally, as good Soldiers of Jesus Christ, to keep a Conscience void of Offence both to God and Man. The Word of God is the great Standard whereby your Consciences must be guided; and that Word tells you, that you are to render to Caesar the things that are Caesar's. That Word tells you, That Sedition is a work of the Flesh, and that Rebellion is as the sin of Witchcraft: That Word gives them the Character of Reprobates, and ranks them in Jannes and Jambres' Society, that resist the Truth. That Word calls them the Enemies of God, who have evil will at Zion, and are Enemies to the Church, to whom Kings are bound to be Nursing-fathers'. And that Word requires you, as to Fear God, so to Honour the King, and not to meddle with them who are given to Changes. Take heed therefore that you leap not over your Lines, or break your Ranks, or run cross to the Laws of your great Commander, lest you be found even to Fight against God. Beware that for the sake of Liberty, you engage not against Authority; that you plead not Conscience to destroy Obedience; and that you pawn not your Souls as Hostages, under a pretence of Redeeming Religion: But let the Faith of Christ be your Buckler, and Trust in God be your Helmet, and whatsoever is just, and pure, and honest, and lovely, and of good report, be the rest of your Accoutrements; and then will the Spirit of God be your Strength, and the Providence of God will be your Banner, and a Crown of Righteousness will be your Prize, and the Kingdom of Heaven the Place of your Everlasting Triumphs. To which Kingdom, God of his mercy bring us all, for Christ Jesus his sake, the Prince of Peace, and the Captain of our Salvation: To whom be Glory and Dominion, world without end. Amen.