Jamestown - Timeline (Expand All)
The Principall and Maine ends . . . weare first to preach, and baptize into Christian religion, and by propagation of the Gospell, to recouer out of the armes of the Diuell, a number of poore and miserable soules wrapt vpp vnto death, in almost invinceable ignorance, to endeauor the fulfilling and accomplishment of the number of the elect. . . . Secondly . . . by trans-planting the rancknesse and multitude of increase in our peoples of which there is left no vent, but age. . . . Lastly, the apparance and assurance of Private commodity to the particular vndertakers, by recouering and possessing to them-selves a frutifull land. . . . These being the true; and essentiall ends of this Plantation, and corresponding to our first rule, of Religious, Noble, and Peaceable. . . .
our confidence against any enemy, is built vppon solid and sunstantiall reason: And to giue some taste thereof; our enemies must bee eyther the Natiues, or Strangers: Against the first the war would be as easie as the argument. . . .
Who can avoid the hand of God, or dispute with him? Is he fit to undertake any great action, whose courage is shaken and dissolved with one storm?
We doubt not, but by examination of what is said, our first ends are yet safe, and the waies vnto them in no sort so difficult, as should more affright and deter us now, then at the first meditation of them. But if these bee not sufficient to satisfie . . . wee haue concluded and resolved to set forth the Right Honorable: the Lord de la Warre. . . . a Baron and Peere of this kingdom . . . [who] shall expose him-selfe for the common-good to al these hazards and paines which we feare and safely talke off, that sitt idle at home. . . .
Let euery man look inward, and disperse that clowd of auarice which darkenth his spirituall sight, and hee will finde there, that when hee shall appeare before the Tribunall of Heaven, it shall be questioned him what hee hath done? Hath he fed and cloth'd the hungry and naked?