Tag Archives: history

“…and keep your powder dry.”

Oliver’s Advice is a poem written by William Blacker in 1834, memorializing the words of Oliver Cromwell to his men before he led them into battle in the English Civil War (1642-1651).

Cromwell’s admonition was succinct: “Put your trust in God, but keep your powder dry.” It’s a simple maxim to remember and encourage us as the vileness of the world weighs on us.

Too many people are weak and cowardly and turn a blind eye to the objective evils in our midst and fail to speak out boldly against them for fear of being “cancelled,” or shunned, or mocked. We should not fear from standing up for those things that are good, beautiful, and true. Cromwell echoed the message of Proverbs 21:31 (“The horse is made ready for the day of battle, but victory rests with the Lord”), in that God will ultimately prevail, but we are to actively fight and oppose those things that are vile and corrupt. From abortion to the trans movement; from sex-trafficking to porn; from the racist BLM campaign, to ineffective government shutdowns. There is so much evil in this world and as the saying by Edmund Burke goes, “The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.”

I encourage you to read Blacker’s poem linked above. It opens thusly:

The night is gathering gloomily, the day is closing fast—
The tempest flaps his raven wings in loud and angry blast;
The thunder clouds are driving athwart the lurid sky—
But, “put your trust in God, my boys, and keep your powder dry.”

Combatting Evil

Aboard a recent flight I watched the current Oscar Winner for Best Picture, Darkest Hour, about Winston Churchill’s role in World War II and the defence of the British Empire. While there are many things from the film that can be written about, I was struck by the difference in resolve between those that did not want to fight and negotiate peace and Churchill’s unwavering conviction that there could be no appeasement with evil as it approached them.

Politicians, for the most part, are weak men, and seek power out of lust and greed. Neville Chamberlain and Viscount Halifax wanted to sit down and make a deal with Hitler and the Germans that would have assured the subservience of the British people for generations, and their own well-being. With 300,000 British troops trapped on the beach at Dunkirk and the Germans bearing down on their position, Churchill ordered civilian boats to do what they could to rescue as many men as possible. Almost all were saved.

We live in a world full of evil and I think that if any of us truly knew the depths to which the heart of man can stoop most would be shocked. From the open sex trafficking in Asia and other parts of the world to the Muslim grooming and rape gangs in Rotherham, to the suppression of thoughts and beliefs and religious freedoms, to the carnage of disposed baby parts at every abortion clinic across so-called civilized nations, evil is abundant and prolific. Good men know that evil must not be negotiated with, for that is the domain of the weak.

Strong men and strong leaders will punch back twice as hard as they are hit, and that is the type of men we need in this day to fight against the rot and decay of a modern society.