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Discipline of War, The 
 
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Title: The Discipline of War Nine Addresses on the Lessons of the War 
in Connection with Lent 
Author: John Hasloch Potter 
Release Date: November 1, 2005 [EBook #16979] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE 
DISCIPLINE OF WAR *** 
 
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THE DISCIPLINE OF WAR
Nine Addresses on the Lessons of the War in Connection with Lent 
FROM ASH WEDNESDAY to EASTER SUNDAY 
WITH AN APPENDIX CONTAINING 
SUGGESTED SUBJECT FOR MEDITATION, AND SUITABLE 
PASSAGE OF SCRIPTURE, FOR EACH DAY IN LENT 
BY THE REV. 
J. HASLOCH POTTER, M.A. 
_Hon. Canon of Southwark and Vicar of St. Mark's, Surbiton, Surrey_ 
London SKEFFINGTON & SON 34, Southampton Street, Strand, W.C. 
Publishers to His Majesty the King 1915 
 
AUTHOR'S PREFACE 
The war has introduced into countless lives new conditions, and has 
strangely modified, or emphasised, those already existing. These 
Addresses, prepared under much stress of other work, are intended to 
supply, in very simple fashion, hints for conduct and points for thought 
along the lines of our fresh or deepened responsibilities. An Appendix 
gives a suggested subject and a passage of Scripture for each day 
during Lent. May God the Holy Ghost, without Whom man's best 
labours are in vain, bless this little book to its purpose. Please say a 
prayer for the writer, who, as much as any, needs grace that he may try 
to practise what he preaches. 
J. HASLOCH POTTER. 
Surbiton. The Conversion of St. Paul. 1915. 
 
FOREWORD
Kingston House, Clapham Common. 
_January 19th, 1915._ 
My dear Canon,-- 
You have invited me to say a few words introductory to the little book 
you are putting forth, and of which you have sent me the advance 
proofs. 
From the great excellence of that which I have read, I am convinced 
that your Lenten meditations on the Discipline of War, will be of 
pre-eminently spiritual value in a time when publications on the subject 
are multiplied. That the war is to leave us on a higher plane of 
self-discipline, and with higher ideals of citizen life and responsibility, 
every Christian must acknowledge. Your little Lenten scheme is just 
that which is needed to give reality and action to what might otherwise 
be left in the realm of theory. May the Holy Spirit make use of your 
work to the benefit of us all and for the Glory of God. 
Your sincere friend, 
CECIL HOOK, _Bishop._ 
 
CONTENTS 
I PAGE 
The Discipline of the Will 1 
II 
The Discipline of the Body 9 
III 
The Discipline of the Soul 18
IV 
The Discipline of the Spirit 27 
V 
Discipline through Obedience 35 
VI 
The Discipline of Sorrow 44 
VII 
Discipline through bereavement 52 
VIII 
Discipline through Self-sacrifice 62 
IX 
Discipline through Victory 70 
* * * * * 
Appendix 81 
 
THE DISCIPLINE OF WAR 
I 
=The Discipline of the Will= 
ASH WEDNESDAY 
Isaiah lviii. 6
"Is not this the fast that I have chosen?" 
Discipline is the central idea of the observance of Lent. An opportunity, 
rich in its splendid possibilities, comes before us this year. Much of the 
discipline of this Lent is settled for us by those tragic circumstances in 
which we find ourselves placed. 
God seems to be saying to us, in no uncertain tones, "Is not this the fast 
that I have chosen?" 
Our amusements are already to a large extent curtailed, maybe by our 
own individual sorrows or anxieties; maybe by the feeling of the 
incongruity of enjoying ourselves while anguish and hardship reign 
supreme around us. 
Our self-denials are already in operation, under the stress of straitened 
means, or the vital necessity of helping others less favoured than 
ourselves. 
Our devotions have already been increased in frequency and in 
earnestness, for the call upon our prayers has come with an insistence 
and an imperiousness that brook no denial. 
To this extent, and further in many directions, our Lent has been taken 
out of our own hands; ordered and pre-arranged by that inscrutable, yet 
loving, Providence which has permitted the War to come about. 
Thus, at the very outset, we are brought into harmony with the central 
idea of discipline--not my will, but God's will. 
Broadly, discipline is defined as "Mental    
    
		
	
	
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