The Curse of Cowardice: A Sermon Preached to the Militia of Hanover County, Virginia… May 8, 1758

1758 sermon urging Virginia militia to take up arms against French and Indian attacks, condemning cowardice as sinful and framing military defense as a God‑sanctioned duty.

Samuel Davies (1723–1761) was an influential evangelical Presbyterian pastor and educator who played a key role in spreading the Great Awakening in colonial Virginia, where he built licensed meetinghouses and attracted large congregations with his powerful preaching. He also traveled to London to raise funds for the College of New Jersey and later became its fourth president, strengthening the institution before his early death at age thirty-seven. Davies was one of the first colonial Americans to compose hymns and was buried in the presidents’ plot at Princeton Cemetery.

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