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Saturday, 13 September 2014

Sunday 13th September 1914


Rev. W.J. Gomersall
Tunstill’s meetings were suspended on the Sunday, but the effort to persuade men to take up their part in volunteering was carried on from the pulpit. Preaching at Langcliffe, the Rev. W. J. Gomersall**, curate of St John’s, Kensal Green, London and a native of Otterburn in Craven, said that the present war brought a call for prayer, patience and patriotism. There was, he said,

“patriotism and there was patriotism. By patriotism he did not mean pewter-pot patriotism, or profit-making patriotism, or the patriotism that did all the shouting, but none of the soldiering. True patriotism was none of those things. It was not vindictive, but brought calmness, courage and charity to the great struggle. Above all true patriotism never committed the sin of shirking – never shirked the call of duty. The sin of shirking in such a crisis as the present was neglect of duty. It was a sin of omission. Those who did not come to the help of their country were guilty of the sin of Meroz, who “did not come to the help of the Lord” and brought down a curse upon themselves. Meroz was a little place, so was Otterburn, but he would remind them that this “Benjamin of Craven”, had, by the mouth of one of its inhabitants – Mr.H.G. Tunstill – made an appeal for 99 men and that more than half had already responded. The Settle District had, equally with Bolton Abbey and other parts of Craven, always been loyal to the core. History was repeating itself in this crisis and the story of Bible wars presented a philosophy of history applicable to the present time. We were learning our lessons just as the Israelites had learnt theirs and God’s purpose still held good for the training of the human race. We have only shifted the ground of conflict. The particular sin had changed its name, but not its nature, and military despotism had provided the occasion for God’s visitation. But in this, as in all life’s other battles, duty was the great law of the moral world, and there must be no sin of shirking either on the part of those who are left at home, or those who have gone to the front. The curse of Meroz lives in the conscience of those who neglect the call of duty".
 
** For further information on William Joseph Gomersall see:   http://www.gomersall.info/myf/WJG.htm

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