
In this stirring mid‑nineteenth‑century sermon, a clergyman confronts the moral weight of England’s role on the Indian sub‑continent. He paints a vivid picture of the suffering wrought by famine, disease, and the brutal conflicts of the time, urging listeners to feel the anguish of mothers, children, and soldiers caught in the turmoil. The address moves from graphic descriptions of siege and starvation to a broader call for national humility and prayer.
Beyond the harrowing scenes, the speaker frames England’s presence in India as a divine stewardship, comparing the nation’s duties to those of a parent or a minister entrusted with a sacred trust. He challenges the audience to examine how wealth, power, and influence should be wielded for the greater good, suggesting that true repentance must begin with acknowledging the nation’s responsibilities abroad. The sermon invites listeners to reflect on the intertwining of faith, duty, and the pressing ethical questions of empire.
Full title
England's Stewardship The Substance of a Sermon Preached on the Fast-Day, in Trinity Church, Tunbridge Wells
Language
en
Duration
~36 minutes (35K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2016-08-08
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1812–1894
An evangelical Church of England clergyman and religious writer, he spent much of his ministry in Tunbridge Wells and published books and sermons aimed at ordinary readers. His life later appeared in a memoir built around his own autobiographical notes.
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