Famous and Historical Sermon by the Rev. Henry Ward Beecher Plymouth Church Brooklyn, NY - Sunday Morning July 17, 1870 Warring Turbulence of Man George Villiers, by Peter Paul Rubens, 1625 “From whence come wars and fightings among you? come they not hence, even of your lusts that war in your members? Ye lust, and have not; ye kill, and desire to have, and cannot obtain; ye fight and war, and yet ye have not, because ye ask not.” — JAMES IV. 1, 2. This is a description of the turbulence of man, regarded simply as an animal. There is a dormant implication here, also, of man as a spiritual being. As an animal, he is restless, avaricious, dishonest, plundering, murdering, forever desiring, and yet unsatisfied in his desires, because his lower nature never can be at rest, but, like the troubled sea, casts up grime and dirt. “Because ye ask not.” Because the spiritual side of man, which derives its being from God, and all the plentitude of its enjoyment from spiritual things, th...
Stories from Brooklyn's historical Plymouth Church and Henry Ward Beecher, America's most famous Abolitionist Preacher during the Civil War era.