Thursday, August 27, 2009

"What We Did On Our Summer Vacation"




At the end of May, when the youth group took their summer break, we had no idea how productive our summer would actually be. We envisioned a laid back, well deserved break from all youth and children's ministry activities. God had other ideas!

Contact from Caitlan Davis, Allawayne and Gordon Carr's granddaughter, was our first sign from God that things were going to happen. Caitlan was interested in volunteering time for a church related project in order to complete her Girl Scout Gold Award. Next, Barbara Hale became aware of monies available via the youth fund CD. A plan was born! Dave Stice and Brian Scheller graciously donated their time and expertise with construction, while Amanda Frame and the youth practiced their God-given talent of art and interior decorating. All of this transpired in about a four week period of time.

What resulted was a hip, new youth room doubled in size just waiting for those 20+ kids to hang out and learn about Jesus on Wednesday evenings! The room is also being used by the youth Sunday School class and could host other meetings and groups. Everyone is anxiously awaiting the September 9th start up of youth group. Amanda and Scott Frame have great plans for reaching the kids of our community.

If you think the youth room renovation is a grand God orchestrated project, just wait until you hear what He is doing with the children's ministry!

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Special Class for Children


Last Sunday Pastor Judy and Barbara Hale led a special class for children on the meaning of The Lord's Supper. Jesus told us to eat the bread and drink of the cup to remember his death for us.
We used sign language to say, "Communion is a special time for followers of Jesus to talk to and listen to God."





Tuesday, August 25, 2009

A Summer of Expansion

Sunday, August 9, we dedicated the expanded and renovated youth ministries space in the former telephone office west of the church. Scott and Amanda Frame continue as leaders of the Wednesday evening program. They will be joined by Eddie Keever who will also lead the Sunday morning youth program.


When we arrived Sunday, August 23, we found the work nearing completion on opening up the chancel area (the front of the sanctuary) so that there will be more flexible space for worship dramas, musical presentations, and the like.

Then, following the morning worship, the Board voted unanimously to devote the former Cornerstone building to children's ministry. Dave and Jill Stice will lead Sunday morning and Wednesday evening sessions there. Many of you have offered pledges of additional giving to cover the loss of rental income from that building.

Moving the children to the Cornerstone building frees the present children's space (adjacent to the youth space in the old telephone office) to be revamped for middle school space. We are just beginning to think about how we will best utilize this opportunity.

In the meantime, your Mission/Vision Task Force and their Prayer Support Team are at work contemplating where we are heading together. Soon, you will be invited to offer your feedback and input to their initial thoughts. We are looking for a God-sized vision with practical steps. Talk about expanding!

I believe that we are seeing God at work in our midst and that all of this is adding up to something good. Let's see what God will do next!

Jesus: The King and His Kingdom

Sermon by John Turner
August 23, 2009
Matthew 6:19-34

“Do not lay up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy and where thieves break in and steal, but lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust destroys and where thieves do not break in and steal. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also. “The eye is the lamp of the body. So, if your eye is healthy, your whole body will be full of light, but if your eye is bad, your whole body will be full of darkness. If then the light in you is darkness, how great is the darkness! “No one can serve two masters, for either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and money. “Therefore I tell you, do not be anxious about your life, what you will eat or what you will drink, nor about your body, what you will put on. Is not life more than food, and the body more than clothing? Look at the birds of the air: they neither sow nor reap nor gather into barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not of more value than they? And which of you by being anxious can add a single hour to his span of life? And why are you anxious about clothing? Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow: they neither toil nor spin, yet I tell you, even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these. But if God so clothes the grass of the field, which today is alive and tomorrow is thrown into the oven, will he not much more clothe you, O you of little faith? Therefore do not be anxious, saying, ‘What shall we eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’ For the Gentiles seek after all these things, and your heavenly Father knows that you need them all. But seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these things will be added to you. “Therefore do not be anxious about tomorrow, for tomorrow will be anxious for itself. Sufficient for the day is its own trouble."


The Praise and Worship Movement

Slowly in the 1960’s, then rapidly in the 1970’s and following, came one of the greatest outbreaks of Christian musical creativity in history, the praise and worship movement. Its early phase was marked by simple choruses. The great strength of praise and worship choruses is that the good ones have the power to encapsulate simple, but profound truths that can get inside our souls and change our lives, and then give us a language, often the language of Scripture itself, for expressing our devotion to God.

Karen Lafferty

Karen Lafferty, from New Mexico, with a music education degree from New Mexico State, was first runner-up in the Miss New Mexico pageant, which set aside scholarship money that she could use for continuing education at an accredited university. She was eager to work on her career as a professional singer and so let the prize money sit for a time. She was a believer all her life, but while she was earning her living singing in a New Orleans night club, a Christian friend challenged her that she was not taking a Christian lifestyle seriously. Karen moved to California, still singing in clubs, but now trying to witness to customers. She began to attend the founding Calvary Chapel congregation in Cosa Mesa. Calvary Chapel was an outreach mission to Jesus People, fresh converts from the false spiritualities and other sins of the day who were in need of grounding in the word. By the time Karen arrived, Calvary Chapel was drawing crowds from around the world. Soon, Karen called her mother and told her that she had quit her club job to pursue ministry. After a pause,

Mom: This does mean that your church is paying you, doesn’t it?
Karen: Well, no, I’m sort of living by faith.
Longer pause. Karen: Mom, I thought you would be happy for me.
Mom: “You do remember that I co-signed your car loan, don’t you?”
Karen wasn’t earning much money teaching guitar lessons. Without the clubs, she could not see where the rent money or car money was going to come from. Karen had already learned an important truth. Say it after me: “When we have problems/we do not run from God/we run to God.” The text at church was the one I read at the beginning of this sermon. The part that struck Karen’s heart was, “Seek ye first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these things shall be added unto you.” She decided to seek God’s full will for her life and to trust his provision. She went back to her apartment and began to play on her guitar a melody that was coming into her head. She suddenly recognized that the meter of the melody exactly fit the text she had just heard. She added an Alleluia refrain and descant and recorded it.

For the moment the chorus simply reinforced that she had decided to seek God’s will and to trust God’s provision.
The first step in provision was that a few days later she received a letter from the Miss New Mexico pageant. For some time she had been pleading with them to let her use her scholarship money on non-accredited training for missions and ministry. The letter said that they were making their first exception to their policy, that she could pursue her non-accredited training, and that the money could also be used for her living expenses while she did so.
The second step in provision was that “Seek Ye First” made her career. Karen soon had a job helping produce records for Calvary Chapel’s spin-off Maranatha! Music, the most influential force in introducing praise and worship music to the world. Her song went on their first Praise and Worship album. “Seek Ye First” still provides for about forty per cent of Karen’s living and missions expenses.

Karen began to see the worldwide evangelistic potential of praise and worship music. She trained with Youth with a Mission (Y-WAM) in their Amsterdam center and founded Musicians for Missions International as a ministry of that center. Calling herself a “musicianary,” she seeks and trains musicians in other countries who can help evangelize their own people. In 1995, she moved her headquarters to Santa Fe, but she continues to travel the world in her work. Karen remembers a time in Europe when she was discouraged, lonely, and homesick. A group of nuns passed her, singing in French “Seek Ye First.” She knew then that her work was not fruitless, nor was she ever really alone anywhere in the world. “When we have problems/we do not run from God/we run to God.”


Leona Von Brethorst


Most of us have seen David Bell enthusiastically urging us to clap to the chorus “He Has Made Me Glad.” This praise and worship chorus was not written by a young person. Leona Von Brethorst was born in 1923 in the Smoky Mountains of East Tennessee and was raised in abject poverty, going to school without shoes and walking three miles to church.
Von Brethorst's childhood faith faded as she took a job in the World War II defense plants of Detroit, then marrying and giving birth to two children. When her toddler became critically ill with polio-related seizures, she cried out to God, "If You don't let him die, I'll give the rest of my life to You." God did heal the child, and doctors confirmed the miracle that awakened Leona’s hibernating faith. Her husband laid down an ultimatum: “Choose between me and Jesus.” Leona chose Jesus. As a single mom, battling exhaustion and clinical depression, she worked odd jobs and raised her children to know the Lord.
As worship leader in her church, she wrote dozens of praise songs. She says, "I don't know a note of music or how to play any instrument, but God gives me the melodies!" "He Has Made Me Glad" sprang out of one last trial, the loneliness of an empty nest. She put into song her learning that we can enter God’s presence with thanksgiving in our hearts even when we are lonely and sad. When we have problems/we do not run from God/we run to God.

Leonard “Lenny” Smith, Jr.

Leonard “Lenny” Smith, Jr., was an English teacher in the public schools, where, among other things, he taught the Bible as literature, but he could not confine himself to the official neutral approach to the material. He kept taking students to the river to baptize them. He lost three teaching jobs in three years and became unemployable as a public school teacher. He ended up painting houses, but was not patching an adequate living together for his growing family.
Discouraged, he read his Bible, happening on Isaiah 52:7, which, abbreviated, says, “How beautiful on the mountains are the feet of him who brings good news that our God reigns.” Encouraged, Lenny turned the passage into the chorus, “Our God Reigns.” A few years later, he added four verses relating the passage to the death and resurrection of Jesus. The song took off.
In fact, it is so widely known that it became one of the favorite hymns of Pope John Paul II. Lenny enjoyed processing requests from the Vatican to use it on the Pope’s trips.
Lenny says, “[The real message of this song is not just that] God reigns over great events, but also that he reigns over the details of what we call accidents and coincidences. His permissive will is his perfect will, too, and it’s all for the good.” When we have problems/we do not run from God/we run to God.


Laurie Klein


In 1974, Laurie Klein was a young wife and mother living in an isolated trailer house in the Oregon high desert. Her husband was a full-time college student, and the couple was surviving on $400.00 a month. They had not found a home church, had no close friends in the area, and Laurie did not drive. Even the cost of a long distance phone call could have meant that they did not have necessary food and supplies for their toddler.
Laurie says that she was hopeless and depressed. “I felt the poverty of my own life keenly at that point, both emotionally and physically. That morning I was so empty [that as I went to the Lord] I knew I didn't have anything to offer Him. I asked if He would like to hear me sing...if He would just give me something He would be in the mood to hear.” I sang two phrases and put the chords with it with no effort [I love You Lord and I lift my voice to worship You. O my soul, rejoice!]. She stopped long enough to get a pen and write those phrases down. When she continued, the last two phrases came just as easily [Take joy, my King in what you hear. May it be a sweet, sweet sound in Your ear].

Laurie's husband, Bill, recognized the simple beauty of the song and encouraged her to play it for a local pastor and some visiting musicians who carried it to a national convention and, from there, it went across the country. The influential Church on the Way sang it, Annie Herring of the Second Chapter of Acts heard it and put it on a children’s album, and Maranatha! Music published it on the fourth album of their influential Praise and Worship series. From there, it took off. When we have problems/we do not run from God/we run to God.

Henry Smith

As a teenager, Henry Smith played in a secular band, but while in college, he had a spiritual awakening. He headed off to a mainline Presbyterian seminary planning to become a pastor. He was disturbed by what he was taught in seminary. Furthermore, after he graduated, he had to take odd jobs because his degenerative eye problem was limiting his career options. He began to attend a vital church.
One Sunday his pastor quoted 2 Corinthians 8:9, “For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your sakes he became poor, so that you through his poverty might become rich.” Henry decided to write a song expressing what the text spoke to his heart. “Give thanks with a grateful heart; give thanks to the Holy One, Give thanks because He’s given Jesus Christ His Son. And now, let the weak say, “I am strong” Let the poor say “I am rich.” Because of what the Lord has done for us.” He might as well have said, “Let the blind say I can see.” He was soon blind, but he still saw the important truths.
Henry’s song got away from him. It was making its way around the world, and he had no knowledge of the fact that it was becoming a hit song until Integrity Music published it eight years later with the disclaimer “author unknown.” Someone called it to Henry’s attention, and he called Integrity who expressed delight at finding him so that he could receive his royalties.

Today, Henry operates a recording studio in Virginia, serves as worship leader at his church, and continues to write Christian songs. Someone once asked Henry how to promote a song so that it became a hit. He answered that he had no idea; his one hit went worldwide before he even knew anyone was singing it. "It’s a God thing," he says. When we have problems/we do not run from God/we run to God.

Eddie Espinosa

Sometimes the problems that confront us are hidden. Eddie Espinosa was the worship leader for John Wimber’s founding Anaheim congregation of Vineyard Christian Fellowship, sort of the next decade’s Calvary Chapel. No one could tell anything was wrong in Espinosa’s life. But he says, “Sin and attitudes of the heart were suddenly glaring me in the face. I realized that in order for me to walk uprightly before the Lord, I needed a heart transplant. I desperately needed for God to change my heart in order to love the things that He loves and to hate the things that He hates. I also was aware that only He could change my heart. I began to sing without paying attention to the melody, it just flowed from the depths of my being.” The chorus, “Change My Heart, O God” was born. When we have problems/we do not run from God/we run to God.

Marty Nystrom

Marty Nystrom was a 24-year-old music teacher who had made plans to attend a summer training session in Dallas. I am telling part of his story as I remember hearing him tell it some years ago at a worship conference, so that part is only as accurate as my memory (ahem). His motivation was that the love of his heart was going to be there, and he planned to ask her to marry him. There was an airline strike, but, undeterred he spent three days of torture riding a bus so as not to miss this moment. When he arrived, his true love announced to him her engagement to marry another. The campus was unattractive, the summer weather was sweltering, and Marty was crushed. Furthermore, he was in a spiritual crisis. He recognized that he did not really want more of God in his life; he just wanted more human approval.
A roommate convinced him that he needed to fast, so his sole source of nourishment was Dallas tapwater…that, and the Bible and the Holy Spirit. As he was reading the Psalms, he noticed that he could pray Psalm 42 with sincerity. “As the Deer,” his resulting song written to worship God, has spoken to many hearts through the years. But most of all it indicates something that was more important than the love of that young woman, God’s love for him and his own love for God.
He had gone to Dallas to establish a life covoenat with his true love, and in an odd way he did. He now knows that closeness to God is far more important than any human approval.
Nystrom has since written and co-written many successful praise and worship songs. He also worked for some years for the influential Integrity Music, helping to select the songs to which they would give success. He says that, when he met the woman who became his wife, he was glad that things had not worked out for his earlier infatuation. When we have problems/we do not run from God/we run to God.
From World Changers to Life Nudgers
The kinds of praise and worship choruses we are considering today served as midwives in Judy’s and my awakenings from sterile religion to vital faith. I know that we cannot recreate that era, but the best of those choruses will serve ongoing roles in the worship repertoire of the church. They may never again move the world as they once did, but they will continue to nudge hearts awake. Especially, they may remind us that, “when we have problems/we do not run from God/we run to God.”

A few notes that did not make the August 23 sermon

Some writers whose work we used in our worship service whose stories did not get told:

Twila Paris, “He Is Exalted,” 1985, from Elm Springs, AR. Graduate of John Brown University and veteran of Youth with a Mission (YWAM), associated with Ecclesia College; dedicated to Christian higher education and home-schooling; has thoughtfully considered what makes quality worship. Also wrote: “We Will Glorify,” 1982; “We Bow Down,” 1982; “Lamb of God,” 1985; “How Beautiful,” 1991; God Is in Control, 199_; and many more.

Jack Hayford, “Majesty,” 1981. Founder of The Church on the Way, and The King’s College and Seminary. President of the International Church of the Four Square Gospel; prolific author; respected leader across a broad spectrum of Christianity. While visiting England during the events celebrating Queen Elizabeth’s 50th year as queen, Hayford was impressed with the way royalty had steadied British hearts in various tough times in history and concluded that Christians should be far more steadied by our Divine King. As he drove with his wife away from Blenheim Palace, he asked her to take dictation of the words and musical notes of the hymn that was coming into his mind.

Sophie Conty, Naomi Batya Ginsberg (a.k.a. Nomi Yah) “King of Kings and Lord of Lords,” 1980. The writers were 13 years old at the time.

Robert Cull, “Open Our Eyes, Lord,” 1976. Pastor.

Lanny Wolfe, “Surely the Presence of the Lord,” 1976. A major professional Christian musician, asscoiated with the production of musicals/cantatas and comtemporary Christian music in addition to worship music.

Melody and Keith Green, “There Is a Redeemer,” 1982. Melody was pregnant with their fourth child when contemporary Christian singer Keith Green took a song Melody had written several years earlier and had almost forgotten, added a third verse, recorded it, and turned it into a major worship song. Not much later, Keith and their two older children, ages 4 and 2, were killed in a plane crash just after attempting take-off from their Texas ranch that was dedicated to offering new beginnings for troubled young adults. Melody has since had to deal with determining how to sustain and then bring to conclusion their outreach ministry to troubled young adults, has suffered a life-threatening illness, has endured a troubled second marriage that ended in divorce, and other challenges, but nothing can take away this valuable and enduring contribution to our worship. Despite much pain and grief, she and her two grown daughters remain committed and active Christians.


Kurt Kaiser, “Pass It On” 1969. Kaiser’s love for music of all kinds--classical, traditional, folk, choral, light rock, and spirituals—and his sensitivity to what is widely acceptable--smoothed the way for the emergence of praise and worship music. Education: two degrees from Northwestern University; one from the American Conservatory. Beginning in 1959, director of artists, arranger, producer, and eventually vice-president of Word, Incorporated, Waco, Texas; helped make the company a major force in contemporary Christian music. Co-wrote and co-produced several youth musicals with Ralph Carmichael, most notably "Tell It like It Is" which introduced “Pass It On.” During my college days, nearly every college and high school church youth group across the country must have sung that song. Kaiser’s praise and worship chorus, "Oh How He Loves You and Me," 1975, has touched the hearts of millions and will probably endure. Kaiser led several student choirs at Baylor University. Judy sang in his choir for the Baylor Religious Hour, a mid-week campus worship service. She had a deep admiration for his genuine Christian commitment which he lived out in his private life as well as in public. He and his wife Pat took in many foster children. Today, semi-retired, Kaiser remains active as an accomplished pianist, a musician in his local Baptist church, and a consultant to church choirs. The Kaisers still reside in Waco, where they have lived with Christian integrity for fifty years.

Major shapers of Christian music in the time period 1960-1985 that I had to leave completely out of the worship service today (Perhaps at some future time, we will give a Sunday each of the following):

(1) Bill and Gloria Gaither (whose influence has been HUGE) and their protégés in both the Southern and contemporary gospel movements. Gaither songs include: “He Touched Me,” 1963, “The Longer I Serve Him,” 1965, “I Believe in a Hill Called Mount Calvary,” 1968, “The Family of God,” 1970, “There’s Something About That Name,” 1970, “Because He Lives,” 1971, “Something Beautiful,” 1971, “Jesus Is Lord of All,” 1973, and Gloria Gaither’s mainline hymn, “I Then Shall Live,” 1981. Their Christian integrity is admirable.

(2) Andrae Crouch and the African-American contemporary gospel movement; Crouch songs include: "The Blood Will Never Lose Its Power," 1957, 1966, “Through It All,” 1966, "My Tribute," 1971, "Bless His Holy Name," 1973, and “Soon and Very Soon,” 1976. Crouch was fifteen years old when he wrote, “The Blood Will Never Lose its Power,” thought it was no good, and threw it in the trash. His twin sister Sandra disagreed and rescued it.

(3) David and Dale Garratt, New Zealand, who founded Scripture in Song in 1968, a very influential development in the unfolding of praise and worship music.

(4) the Roman Catholic praise and worship movement which was as prolific as the Protestant and which included our own local John Michael Talbot. “I Am the Bread of Life,”1971, “Abba, Father,” 1977, “One Bread, One Body,” 1978, “On Eagle’s Wings,” 1979, “Come, Worship the Lord,” 1980, “Here I Am, Lord” 1981, and many more.

Of the many others we should note, here are a few:

John Wimber, “Spirit Song,” 1979 Founder of Vineyard Christian Fellowship which continues beyond Wimber's own lifetime as a major influencer of contemporary Christian worship music.

Lynn DeShazo, “More Precious than Silver,” 1979. Written as she was repenting for breaking a fast while working at McDonald’s (nibbling a couple of French fries). She continues as an important creative force. “Ancient Words,” 2001, is another of hers.

Michael W. Smith, “How Majestic Is Your Name,” 1981. Major writer and performer. Co-wrote “Great is the Lord,” 1982, with wife Deborah Smith and “Thy Word,” 1984 with Amy Grant.

Michael Card, “El Shaddai,” 1981. Also “Jesus Let Us Come to Know You,” 1982. A Bible scholar who has produced a large quantiity of Bible-based music and als has produced a couple of hymns albums that have a combination Celtic and American frontier sounds. He jokingly calls himself, "the broccoli of contemporary Christian music."

Christopher Beatty, “Holy Ground,” 1982. Geron Davis, “Holy Ground,” 1983. The two “Holy Ground” choruses combine well.

Jesus: Our Victory

Sermon by John Turner
August 16, 2009
1 Corinthians 15:50-58


I tell you this, brothers: flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God, nor does the perishable inherit the imperishable. Behold! I tell you a mystery. We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed, in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet. For the trumpet will sound, and the dead will be raised imperishable, and we shall be changed. For this perishable body must put on the imperishable, and this mortal body must put on immortality. When the perishable puts on the imperishable, and the mortal puts on immortality, then shall come to pass the saying that is written: “Death is swallowed up in victory.” “O death, where is your victory? O death, where is your sting?” The sting of death is sin, and the power of sin is the law. But thanks be to God, who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. Therefore, my beloved brothers, be steadfast, immovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, knowing that in the Lord your labor is not in vain.

What Kind of Victory?

Thanks be to God who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. What kind of victory does God give us through Jesus Christ? God gives us victory over the guilt of sin through Jesus’ self-giving love on the cross. God gives us victory over the power of sin through the Holy Spirit who is available to those who believe in Jesus and who helps transform our lives into Christlikeness. God gives us victory over the greatest consequences of sin, death and hell, through the resurrection of Jesus Christ, a resurrection that is shared with all who believe in him. God gives us victory over meaninglessness and despair through the mission of Jesus Christ’s redeeming love. Thanks be to God for the victory in Jesus. The hymns we will examine today in various ways celebrate that victory.


From Carl Boberg to Stuart Hine


“How Great Thou Art” has an interesting and complicated history. In 1885 Carl Gustav Boberg of Sweden was walking home from church with friends. They had to hurry for shelter as there came an awesome storm with lightning, thunder, strong winds, driving rain, followed by a rainbow and inspiring calm. Boberg looked out an open window across an ocean bay and heard the song of a thrush and the playing of a hymn on church bells. As he reflected on the sights and sounds and meditated on Psalm 8, the idea came to him for a nine-stanza poem the title of which translates as "O Mighty God.” It was set to a Swedish folk tune.
A German Baptist living in Estonia translated it into German; a Russian Baptist, who was jailed and eventually exiled for his efforts, translated it into Russian. Its first English translation in 1925 in Chicago was by Eric Gustav Johnson of the Swedish heritage Evangelical Covenant denomination, but I am not aware that it was much used outside that denomination.

Stuart Hine, born in England in 1899, came to Christ under the ministry of a woman evangelist. He and his wife became missionaries in Eastern Europe, traveling and ministering in Poland, Czechoslovakia, Romania, and the Ukraine. Hine first heard the Russian translation of “O Mighty God” during his travels. One day, a mountain thunderstorm brought the hymn to his awareness, and he began to alter the words in his mind, plus he arranged the tune differently. His version took shape over many years in both Russian and English. He ultimately wrote six verses. He added imagery and inspiration from his own experiences. Verses 3 and 4 are substantially original with him.

Arriving in one town, Stuart and his wife Edith inquired where they might find a Christian home. The home to which they were directed contained a woman who some years earlier had acquired a Bible left behind by a Russian soldier and used it to teach herself to read. As the Hines approached the house, they heard her reading aloud to a houseful of guests from the Gospel of John about the crucifixion of Christ. To avoid disrupting the event, the Hines waited outside, with Stuart listening as the guests expressed aloud their wonder at Christ’s dying for their sins and as they began to repent of their sins. Hine was inspired to turn his notes into the verse: “And when I think that God, His Son not sparing, sent Him to die, I scarce can take it in; that on the Cross, my burden gladly bearing, He bled and died to take away my sin.”

Some years later, after World War 2, Stuart Hine was back in England ministering to Polish and Russian exiles who were anxious to return home. A Russian man had not seen his Russian Christian wife in several years and longed to see her to tell her that he also had become a Christian. He doubted that he would ever see her in this life, but longed for the day that they would meet in heaven to share Life Eternal and to praise their Lord together. Hine then wrote: "When Christ shall come with shout of acclamation to take me home, what joy shall fill my heart. Then I shall bow in humble adoration and there proclaim, ‘My God, how great Thou art!’”
Hine first published his hymn in 1949, but sold it to Manna Music whose editors changed a couple of words. The version we sing therefore bears Manna’s 1953 copyright. “How Great Thou Art” was first introduced to the United States in the 1950’s by J. Edwin Orr and became known to general audiences as sung by George Beverly Shea of the Billy Graham evangelistic crusades. It has ever since been among the favorite hymns in both America and Great Britain, usually ranking first or second in popularity.


Three-Plus Kinds of Gospel Music

The remaining hymns we are considering today could be classified as gospel music. Three forces that emerged in this time period were black gospel, Southern country gospel, and pop gospel. Let’s touch each of those.

Black Gospel

No one knows who wrote, “Just a Closer Walk with Thee,” but the earliest known time it was sung was at a black gospel singing convention in the early 1930’s. It has been very popular among white folks as well as black, expressing the deep aspirations that many people have for a closer relationship with the living, loving God.

We know more about “Precious Lord, Take My Hand.” We do not have copyright permission to duplicate it, but it appears in your pew hymnals as No. 628 if you want to take a look. Thomas Dorsey, not the big band leader, was born in Georgia in 1899, the son of a preacher. He didn’t show his religious background at first focusing his career on the dance hall and blues music. He had a conversion experience in 1921, but it was in the 1930’s that his faith began to show consistently in his life and work. He was attending a gospel conference and revival in St. Louis when he received word that his pregnant wife back in Chicago had died giving premature birth to a son who also had died. Stunned and deeply grieved, he cried out to God, “God, you aren’t worth a dime to me right now.” A few weeks later, however, he knew differently and wrote the hymn, “Precious Lord, Take My Hand.” This hymn has had the enduring capacity to touch people at a very deep level.

Dorsey wrote many other gospel songs, including, “Peace in the Valley.” He became known as the “father of black gospel music.” As a mature Christian, Dorsey wrote, “My business is to try to bring people to Christ instead of leaving them where they are. I write for all of God’s people. All people are my people. What I share with people is love. I try to lift their spirits and let them know that God still loves them. He’s still saving, and he can still give that power.” Dorsey died in 1993. He had become an important voice for the victory that comes to us through Jesus Christ.

Southern Country Gospel

Some of the dominant songs of Southern country gospel come close to home for us here in the Ozarks. Eugene Bartlett was born on Christmas Eve, 1884, in Waynesville, Missouri. He attended two Baptist schools, Hall-Moody In­sti­tute, in northwest Ten­nes­see, and Will­iam Jew­ell Acad­e­my, near Kansas City, Mis­sou­ri. He moved to Hartford, Arkansas, south of Ft. Smith, where he worked for the Central Music Company until that company relocated in 1918. He stayed put and co-founded the Hartford Music Company, the Hartford Music Institute, and the Herald of Song journal as well as sponsoring singing schools and gospel quartets. Bartlett wrote a number of gospel songs, but the one that appears in hymnals is “Victory in Jesus” which Bartlett wrote in 1939, just two years before his rather early death.

In 1926, a young man from Oklahoma by the name of Albert Brumley showed up at Bartlett’s office wanting to attend the Hartford Music Institute, but having no money for tuition or room and board. Somehow, he talked Bartlett into offering to take him on without tuition and to provide his room and board in his own home. Brumley was a member of a non-instrumental Church of Christ, but the prohibition of musical instruments only applied to official worship services of his church, and so he was able to pursue his career in Southern gospel music. In 1931, still connected with the Hartford enterprises, Brumley met a young woman in Powell, MO, married her, and resettled there. The nest year, at the urging of his wife, he sent one of his compositions back to Hartford to see if it could be published. It was, “I’ll Fly Away.” Brumley says that the idea for the song came to him while he was picking cotton and wishing he weren’t. Heaven sounded pretty good right then.
Brumley had a pretty sketchy education and began to study English grammar and vocabulary on his own to help him write better songs. He often checked the words of his songs with his father-in-law to make sure that they did not violate any scriptural teaching. Brumley lived mostly in Powell, MO, except for two years when he lived in Harrison, AR. He eventually bought the Hartford Music Company and moved it to Powell where it still operates under the leadership of his son, mostly under the name of the Brumley Music Company. Besides, “I’ll Fly Away,” he wrote a number of gospel songs. I am guessing that the best known is, “Turn Your Radio On,” which a member of our Harrison congregation told me was written when Brumley was living in Harrison.

Pop Gospel


What do I mean by pop gospel? Well, it is not black gospel, and it is not Southern country gospel. It is aimed more toward suburban, middle class, popular tastes. John W. Peterson was born in 1921 in the Swedish-settled musical and artistic town of Lindsborg, Kansas, but grew up in nearby Salina. After serving in World War II, he studied at Moody Bible Institute and worked for Moody Radio for many years, graduating from the American Conservatory of Music in 1953. Our worship service today includes three of his hymns: “It Took a Miracle,” “Heaven Came Down”, and his co-written “Surely Goodness and Mercy.” In the 1950’s through 1970’s he was a dominant force in Christian music. It is hard to overstate his influence in that time period. He headed the Singspiration sacred music publishing company, then in Grand Rapids, MI, for over ten years. He wrote over 1,200 songs and 35 cantatas. A few of his hymns will survive, but one of the characteristics of pop gospel is that, however much it may flourish for a time, it all too soon starts to feel a bit like a forty-year-old polyester leisure suit. The very current appeal that gives it power in the beginning does it in over time. Nonetheless, pop gospel has an important place in drawing people into Christian discipleship.

My favorite Peterson story concerns his work with Albert Smith, who had a similar theological and musical education (Wheaton and Juilliard, in Smith’s case). Peterson and Smith each worked on both the words and music of the songs they wrote together, taking turns suggesting ideas. Smith reports on their work on “Surely Goodness and Mercy,” that they were inspired to write it after receiving a letter from a descendant of Philip Bliss, whose hymn-writing we have discussed earlier in our summer study. Apparently young Bliss loved his first country school teacher, Miss Murphy. Before teaching her young students to read and write, she taught them to recite the 23rd Psalm from memory. When they came to the “surely goodness and mercy” part of the Psalm, little Philip thought that it said, “Surely good Miss Murphy shall follow me all the days of my life.” Smith reports that this amusing 19th century story caused the 20th century songwriting duo to focus on that phrase which became the heart and title of their song. The Peterson and Smith hymn interprets Jesus as the Divine Shepherd-Redeemer who seeks out his lost sheep and helps them find their way to an eternal home. It is the refrain that carries the message that Jesus sustains us all the days of our lives. Peterson’s “Heaven Came Down” focuses on the moment of Jesus finding us and entering our lives to begin our transformation. Our victory in Jesus covers all dimensions of our lives.

Just Plain Gospel


I want to finish with a simple, homey, humble song written by a Pennsylvania pastor’s wife for a weekly radio show that simply invited the audience to sit in on their family devotions. I am not sure what kind of gospel song to call this. It was widely sung by George Beverly Shea. It has adapted itself readily from its white origins to black gospel use which is where I have heard it most often, but it works with most audiences and congregations. It speaks of a victory in Jesus that we can hardly do without, one that anchors us through the storms of life, that comes in times like these—no matter when in history we live.
It is called “In Times like These.”

Are you sure that your anchor grips the Solid Rock? Are you sure that you are connected to Jesus, your Victory? Be very sure for these times and all times.

Jesus: His Steadfast Love

Sermon by John Turner
August 9, 2009
John 15:9-17


A Most Important Word


Apart from the names of God, the most important Hebrew word in the original language version of the Old Testament is almost certainly hesed, which I believe is best translated steadfast love. It refers first of all to a quality of God by which God establishes and maintains covenant with people who do not merit divine favor. Hesed is the kind of love that does for us what we cannot do for ourselves. This divine quality is then imparted to us as God’s covenant people and should show through us in our relationships with one another, in our family life and in our covenant community of faith, as we do for others what they cannot do for themselves, or more often as we do with others what they cannot do by themselves. Hesed is most purely revealed in God’s
perfect Son Jesus. Jesus not only provides his steadfast love for our salvation, but also commands us to show this covenant love to one another.

John 15:9-17

“As the Father has loved me, so have I loved you. Abide in my love. If you keep my commandments, you will abide in my love, just as I have kept my Father's commandments and abide in his love. These things I have spoken to you, that my joy may be in you, and that your joy may be full. “This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you. Greater love has no one than this, that someone lay down his life for his friends. You are my friends if you do what I command you. No longer do I call you servants, for the servant does not know what his master is doing; but I have called you friends, for all that I have heard from my Father I have made known to you. You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you that you should go and bear fruit and that your fruit should abide, so that whatever you ask the Father in my name, he may give it to you. These things I command you, so that you will love one another.”

The point is that Friends of Jesus show divine steadfast love for one another and for others. The concept of divine steadfast love is deeply rooted in both the Old and New Testaments, in Judaism and Christianity. It comes to full flower in Jesus Christ.

Frederick Lehman
1n 1096 in Germany, Jewish cantor Meir Ben Isaac Ne­hor­ai, wrote a poem, a portion of which, translated into English, reads as follows:

Were the sky of parchment made,
A quill each reed, each twig and blade,
Could we with ink the oceans fill,
Were every man a scribe of skill,
The marvelous story of God’s great glory would still remain untold;
For He, Most High, the earth and sky created alone of old.

More than 8 centuries later, a new adaptation of that translation was found penciled on the wall of a mental institution after the death of the room’s occupant. The poem was published in newspapers, and Frederick Lehman, reading it, decided to write two additional verses, plus a refrain, and to set the whole to music:
The love of God is greater far than tongue or pen can ever tell;
It goes beyond the highest star, and reaches to the lowest hell;
The guilty pair, bowed down with care,
God gave His Son to win;
His erring child He reconciled,
And pardoned from his sin.

Refrain: O love of God, how rich and pure!
How measureless and strong!
It shall forevermore endure--the saints’ and angels’ song.

When years of time shall pass away,
And earthly thrones and kingdoms fall,
When men, who here refuse to pray,
On rocks and hills and mountains call,
God’s love so sure, shall still endure, all measureless and strong;
Redeeming grace to Adam’s race—the saints’ and angels’ song. Refrain
Could we with ink the ocean fill,
And were the skies of parchment made,
Were every stalk on earth a quill,
And every man a scribe by trade,
To write the love of God above,
Would drain the ocean dry.
Nor could the scroll contain the whole,
Though stretched from sky to sky. Refrain
Frederick Lehman was born in 1868 in Germany. His family immigrated to the United States when he was 4. He was converted at age 11, pursued education for ministry, and served as pastor in four Midwestern states. He helped found the Nazarene Publishing House in Kansas City and focused much of his career on Christian music publishing. He moved to California, where he wrote this song in 1917 and died in 1953.


Thomas O. Chisholm
The theme of God’s steadfast love pops up in the strangest places in the Bible. Who would have thought to find, right in the structural center of the Old Testament book of Lamentations, a book of deep and agonizing grief over the Babylonian destruction of Jerusalem and her people, a celebration of the greatness of God’s steadfast love? We heard the passage read earlier. The words of that passage inspired Thomas O. Chisholm to write one of the most beloved hymns of all time, “Great Is Thy Faithfulness.” Chisholm was born in a log cabin in 1866 in Franklin, Kentucky. At age 16 he became the teacher of the one room school which he had attended, and at age 21 became the associate editor of his hometown newspaper. At 27, he was converted under the preaching of Dr. Henry C. Morrison, eminent Methodist evangelist and publisher as well as President of Asbury College and founder of Asbury Theological Seminary. Morrison called Chisholm into Christian publishing and then into pastoral ministry, but Chisholm’s physical constitution was not strong enough for the pastorate.
For most of his life, he earned a meager living selling insurance while writing hymns. He lived close enough to the financial edge to appreciate God’s miraculous provision; he later attributed his writing of “Great Is Thy Faithfulness” to that oft repeated experience in his life of God’s showing up just in time with provision.
Chisholm also wrote “Living for Jesus,” describing a life of consecration in response to the steadfast love Jesus has displayed on the cross: “Living for Jesus who died in my place, bearing on Calvary my sin and disgrace; such love constrains me to answer His call, follow His leading and give Him my all. Living for Jesus through earth’s little while, my dearest treasure, the light of His smile; seeking the lost ones He died to redeem, bringing the weary to find rest in Him.

Lesser known are Chisholm’s earlier “O to Be like Thee” and his later “I Want to Be like Jesus.” Those hymns convey his life’s theme, Chisholm’ desire to be grasped by Christ’s steadfast love so as to reflect it in his own life. Despite Chisholm’s lifelong weak constitution, he lived into his 90’s, dying in 1960. From what I have seen of his hymns, it must have been a life well-lived.

Henry Van Dyke

In contrast to Chisholm, Henry Van Dyke was reared as the son of a prominent Presbyterian clergyman with a love for the outdoors. Henry inherited his father’s position and passion in life. He rose quickly as a widely sought preacher, best-selling author of poetry, fiction, and devotional literature, chair of the committee that produced the first official Presbyterian Book of Worship, professor of English literature at Princeton University, U.S. ambassador to Holland and Luxemborg, and moderator of his Presbyterian denomination. Van Dyke was an optimistic believer in human progress and sought to appeal to people’s better instincts. He was among the enthusiastic supports of "the war to end all wars," that so disilusioned the American people with the church. The church had reached a peak of influence in 1910, but by the 1920's and 1930's that influence was lost.
You may judge the temper of the man by what he wrote of his most lasting achievement, the hymn, “Joyful, Joyful, We Adore Thee”: “These vers­es are sim­ple ex­press­ions of com­mon Christ­ian feel­ings and de­sires in this pre­sent time—hymns of to­day that may be sung to­ge­ther by peo­ple who know the thought of the age, and are not afraid that any truth of sci­ence will de­stroy re­li­gion, or any re­vo­lu­tion on earth over­throw the king­dom of hea­ven. There­fore this is a hymn of trust and joy and hope.” Christians of all stripes, even those of us with a more sober, realistic, and biblically grounded faith, appreciate the hymn with its celebration of creation, of the reigning and forgiving love of God, and of the influence of that love on human relationships.

Maltbie Babcock

Another Presbyterian outdoorsman with strong academic credentials, but a bit more of a common touch, actually followed Van Dyke in one pastorate. Maltbie Babcock wrote the beloved, “This Is My Father’s World.” While Babcock delights in God’s presence in nature, he is also aware of the spiritual battle that is going on for our souls, and he centers the solution in the atoning work of Christ. Almost all hymnals print only three of his six verses, probably the right decision, but I have included the seldom printed ones in your bulletin insert because I think that you may find them interesting.

J. Wilbur Chapman

J. Wilbur Chapman, another Presbyterian minister, was a very different character, a product of the ministries of famous evangelist Dwight Moody, although much better educated than his mentor, with both college and seminary degrees. It should be noted that, when he graduated from seminary, Chapman married a woman who shared preaching duties with him. They accepted a call to pastor two churches, one in Indiana and one just across the line in Ohio; they traded pulpits week by week. Unfortunately, his wife died four years later.
Chapman accepted a call to a very large and successful church in Philadelphia. Shortly after his arrival in the church a layman came to him and said, “You are not a very strong preacher, but a few of us have decided to gather and pray every Sunday morning for you." The number of people praying reached 1,000, and the church grew even stronger under this “weak preacher.” After just two years, Chapman resigned to become an evangelist. His style of preaching was described as “cultured, earnest, enthusiastic, but sane; never coarse or thoughtless; calm but forceful, emotional but not dramatic,” just effective. Dwight Moody called him the greatest evangelist in the country.
After four years of this, he returned to his Philadelphia church where his church grew to the largest attendance in the world and the largest membership of any Presbyterian Church in America. Not bad for a weak preacher. He was soon on to other endeavors, one of which was developing a system that succeeded for a time in evangelizing large metropolitan areas with coordinated, multiple, simultaneous interdenominational revivals scattered across the city. Eventually, he took his evangelistic campaigns worldwide. It is thought that he preached in more countries than anyone before him. Chapman’s body did not stand up under the strain, but he refused to slow down enough to really recover his strength, and he died at age 59. His life’s motto was, “Anything that dims my vision for Christ, or takes away my taste for Bible study, or cramps me in my prayer life, or makes Christian work difficult, is wrong for me; and I must, as a Christian turn away from it.”

Chapman had served most of the last year of his life as moderator of the Presbyterian Church, oddly the same position that Van Dyke had held a few years earlier. They were as different as night and day. Where Van Dyke saw human progress, J. Wilbur Chapman saw lost souls. Chapman’s “Jesus, What Friend for Sinners,” also known as “Our Great Savior,” assumes that we are sinners and strugglers in need of help; it celebrates Jesus’ saving work--his steadfast, helping love--in a way that can be used either as a praise hymn or as an invitation hymn.
Chapman’s hymn, “One Day” also still shows up in many hymnals. I had never heard it sung until I mentioned it to Judy, and she began to sing it from memory. It is not as obscure as I thought it was. Again it focuses on the central redeeming work of Jesus. Chapman believed in keeping the main thing the main thing.

George Bennard
George Bennard was an evangelist whose entrance upon his life’s vocation was delayed by his father’s death and the immediate necessity of supporting his family. But eventually he found the career that was in his heart, traveling across the United States and Canada in his labors. He wrote many hymns, most of them on two topics, trusting God to answer prayer and answering God’s call to win the lost to Christ. But the one hymn for which he will be remembered is focused on the atoning work of Christ. “The Old Rugged Cross” struck a chord in the hearts of Christians and was a dominant hymn through much of the 20th century. It emotionally portrays Jesus’ atoning sacrifice and calls for our self-surrender at the foot of the cross, promising the eventual reward of a crown in eternal life.

C. Austin Miles
Another hymn that was dominant for several generations was C. Austin Miles’ “In the Garden.” If you evaluate it theologically, literarily, or musically, it is inferior to most hymns, but critical analysis does not determine the fate of hymns. It was set to a style of music that was popular for love songs in the time of its emergence; it appealed especially to women, and it just caught on. The critiques I have heard of many contemporary choruses, that they are just entertainment or that they are just girly love songs to Jesus, apply just as well to this old favorite hymn. It helps to know that “In the Garden,” is designed to tell the story of Mary Magdalene’s meeting of Jesus outside the tomb in the garden of Joseph of Arimathea on the resurrection morning. Here is how Miles described what he tried to portray in the hymn,

“Out of the mists of the gar­den comes a form, halt­ing, he­si­tat­ing, tear­ful, seek­ing, turn­ing from side to side in be­wil­der­ing amaze­ment. Fal­ter­ing­ly, bear­ing grief in ev­e­ry ac­cent, with tear-dimmed eyes, she whis­pers, “If you have carried him away”… “He speaks, and the sound of His voice is so sweet the birds hush their sing­ing.” Je­sus said to her, “Mary!” Just one word from his lips, and for­got­ten the heart­aches, the long drea­ry hours….all the past blot­ted out in the pre­sence of the Liv­ing Pre­sent and the Eter­nal Fu­ture.”

Civilla Martin
Civilla Martin was taken sick and was unable to accompany her husband on a preaching engagement. He considered canceling his engagement until their young son spoke up, “Father, don’t you think that if God wants you to preach today, He will take care of Mother while you are away?” With the parents agreeing, Mr. Martin went on his way to a successful preaching event. Mrs. Martin fully recovered shortly after he left and, inspired by her son’s words, wrote the words to “God Will Take Care of You” by the time her husband returned. He quickly composed the tune for it.
On another occasion, the Martins were visiting a couple named Doolittle. Mrs. Doolittle had been confined to bed for twenty years, and Mr. Doolittle had to propel himself in a wheel chair to and from work. Despite their afflictions they lived happy and productive Christian lives. Mr. Martin asked their secret. Mrs. Doolittle answered, “His eye is on the sparrow, and I know he watches me.” Mrs. Martin was gripped and inspired by the answer and soon turned it into the hymn, “His Eye Is on the Sparrow,” that speaks to many hearts of the steadfast love of God.

Luther Bridgers
Luther Bridgers was a young Methodist evangelist, a product of Asbury College, whose wife and three sons were killed in a tragic fire. Shortly thereafter, Bridgers wrote the hymn, “He Keeps Me Singing,” also known as “In My Heart There Rings a Melody.” I would never have guessed that such a seemingly happy hymn could come from such deep grief. The Lord indeed kept Bridgers’ heart singing in a productive evangelistic career that took him to Belgium, Czechoslovakia, and Russia as well as across the United States. He also pastored churches in Kentucky, North Carolina, and Georgia. He had a long and successful ministry.

Cleland McAfee
We have today considered the prominent Presbyterians Van Dyke, Babcock, and Chapman. Cleland McAfee was another prominent Presbyterian minister, a college and seminary professor, a chaplain, a choir director, and a pastor. When two of his nieces died of diphtheria, their family could not even leave the quarantined home to attend the funeral, so the funeral was brought to the street outside their home. McAfee wrote the hymn, “Near to the Heart of God” for his choir to sing as part of the funeral and as the communion hymn the next Sunday at church.

The hymn invites us to find comfort, peace, rest, and release in the steadfast, redeeming love of God in Jesus Christ. The refrain says it over and over: “O Jesus, blest Redeemer, sent from the heart of God, hold us who wait before thee, near to the heart of God.” May it be so.

Saturday, August 22, 2009

The Remarkable Dave Buttgen



You may not know this about our fellow First Christian Church member David Buttgen, but he has been using his training as an engineer to help very poor fish farmers near the town of Zomba in southern Malawi increase the production of their ponds, and to lower the cost of pond imputs such as feed.

How has Dave been doing this? Through the Institute for Social and Economic Development (ISED) and Project Concern International (PCI), Dave has designed a wind-powered pond aerator that pumps oxygen into ponds to make them healthier for the fish being raised in them. This results in larger fish and shorter growth periods and fish that can be sold at local markets for more money, more often.

Dave has also designed a highly efficient fire box for grain drying. Typically, women in rural Malawi walk 5 to 10 miles to gather small bundles of fire wood in sufficient quantities to simply cook dinner for their families. Now, with Dave's innovation, the same small quantity of fuel can be used far more efficiently, to cook dinner, heat homes, and to dry grain that will be ground into fish food. The lives and livelihoods of very poor people will be dramatically improved through Dave's efforts.

Since the Buttgen Wind Turbine and the Buttgen Drying Oven have been posted on the Internet, plans for these innovations have been downloaded by people living in Africa, in Peru, Guatemala, Turkey, and myriad locations throughout North America.

We thank God for the talents and gifts He has given Dave, and for the example of Christ that has led Dave--and which leads all of us--to be of service.

Saturday, August 8, 2009

Some Other Church Sponsored Community Gardens


There are more than 500 Church Sponsored Community Gardens in the United States. These useful, beautiful, and productive spaces are positive expressions of our active love for one another and for Christ.


This Community Garden is sponsored by the Unitarian Universalist Church in Derry, New Hampshire. It is open to the public and has been operating for two years.




This Community Garden is sponsored by a Congregational Church in Manchester, New Hampshire. The food grown is distributed to members of the church on a subscription basis (CSA) and the proceeds are used to fund youth programs.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Jesus: Our Commander

Robert Lowry

Horatio Spafford


Philip Bliss


Daniel Whittle

James McGranahan

Jesus: Our Commander

Sermon by John Turner

August 2, 2009

Matthew 28:16-20


Now the eleven disciples went to Galilee, to the mountain to which Jesus had directed them. And when they saw him they worshiped him, but some doubted. And Jesus came and said to them, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you. And behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age.”


The Great Commission

As promised, the risen Jesus appeared to his disciples in their former mission field of Galilee and gave them a mission for the whole world. They were to know two things and to do three things:
Here is what they were to know: (1) All authority in both the material and the spiritual realms had been given to Jesus, Lord of heaven and earth. (2) The risen Jesus would be with them in their service to him at all times and places, until he brought all things to fulfillment. Here is what they were to do: (1) They were to go forth to make disciples of people from all nations. (2) They were to baptize the new disciples in the name and identity of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. (3) They were to teach the new disciples to observe and obey all the commandments of Jesus, most specifically loving God, loving neighbor, and loving fellow believers as Jesus has loved us. We call this passage of scripture the Great Commission. The late 19th century emphasis on the Great Commission took place on three fronts: world missions, large evangelistic crusades, and Sunday schools. I am going to illustrate that emphasis by talking of two men who, so far as I know, never wrote a hymn.

Dr. Livingstone, I Presume

Scottish Congregational medical missionary, Dr. David Livingstone, served in Africa most of the time from 1841 until his death in 1873. Livingstone’s missionary endeavors are variously evaluated today, but, whatever his flaws, he was a man of faith and of heroic proportion. In the scale of news coverage, and in that way alone, David Livingstone was the Michael Jackson of his day. His endeavors captured the public imagination, especially in Great Britain and North America, greatly fueling missionary enthusiasm in the late 19th century.


Dwight Moody

Dwight Moody was raised in an impoverished family, under tough circumstances, with little formal education, little religious upbringing and little encouragement. Due to a change of jobs at age seventeen, he became an evangelical Christian. He moved to Chicago and started a Sunday school for poor children of all races and ethnic backgrounds. He was still barely literate and had to skip over a lot of the words as he read the scriptures to the children. He learned as he went and soon had the biggest Sunday school in the world. Moody’s heart was in reaching large numbers of people for Jesus Christ, and he pursued that goal in many directions with extraordinary discipline, dedication, shrewdness, love, and prayer, prayer, prayer. In a short time, he was the world’s most famous evangelist and head of a mammoth organization that still thrives today.

The Church’s Loss of Nerve


Much of the Christian music of the late 19th century, the kinds of hymns that we are singing in today’s worship service, partook of the enthusiasm for world missions and evangelism. By the time I was in seminary in the 1970’s, some mainline seminary professors, apparently more interested in academic fads and cultural snobbery than in spreading the gospel, were embarrassed and appalled by such hymns. They called them triumphalistic and insensitive to the complexities and injustices of life. Those seminary professors helped create ministers and churches without enough confidence to stand for anything, and it should not be surprising that the churches with those ministers are for the most part dying. The cause of Jesus Christ is a great cause, and we need to be proud to stand for Jesus. We will not endure and do not deserve to endure if we are ashamed of the gospel for which Jesus died.

Counter-Example

Critics frequently charge that late 19th century missions were tied in with the imperialistic greed of powerful nations desiring to exploit poor nations and that they were insensitive to the needs of poor people. Sometimes those charges were true, but not predominantly so. As a counter-example, consider the so-called Clapham Sect, an informal group of mostly evangelical Anglicans who met in the London suburb of Clapham and sought to apply Christian values to social life, advocating against slavery, child labor, animal cruelty and many dozens of similar causes, and advocating for world missions and evangelism precisely because of their concern for the poor and forgotten. The most famous and influential member of the first generation of the Clapham Sect was William Wilberforce who may have done more for social justice than any Christian in history. Katherine Hankey, born into a prosperous titled family about the time Wilberforce died, was a late second generation Claphamite and was dedicated to their causes. She organized and taught Sunday schools for the poor in London. She traveled to South Africa as a medical nurse to assist her brother in his missions work. During a prolonged illness, she wrote a lengthy poem from which the verses for two hymns have been selected and set to music: “Tell Me the Old, Old Story,” and “I Love to Tell the Story.” I fail to see the evidence of anything triumphalistic or insensitive about her. Although Katherine Hankey was from privileged background, her hymns connected with the hearts of real people from all walks of life helped them find meaning and purpose in serving Jesus.

The Value of a Great Cause

Some seminary professors were disdainful of Sunday school Christianity; they could not say “Sunday school” without a sneer. Sunday schools were powerful institutions in the late 19th century for putting order and purpose into the lives of unchurched children and adults, many of them poor. Two of the commissioning hymns we are singing today were written for Sunday schools. Priscilla J. Owens, of Baltimore Maryland, wrote “We Have Heard the Joyful Sound (Jesus Saves)” and Ernest Nichol, an Oxford educated British musician, wrote “We’ve a Story to Tell to the Nations,” both for their respective Sunday schools. In the latter part of the 19th century, children and adults were being taught in Sunday schools to be dedicated to world missions and evangelism. I wonder if we could learn from that.

Educated Bible-Believers

Some seminary professors scorned Bible-believing Christians such as Moody as ignorant and simplistic. Perhaps they were jealous of Moody’s popular touch; far more people listened to Moody than would listen to them. But there were also well-educated people in the Bible-believing camp; some of them wrote hymns.

Robert Lowry, a Baptist preacher and Sunday school advocate, was also literature professor and chancellor at the University of Lewisburg, now known as Bucknell University. He was one of the most influential hymn-writers, composers, and hymnal editors of the period (“Christ Arose,” “Nothing but the Blood,” “Shall We Gather at the River,” the refrain and tune of “We’re Marching to Zion,” tunes to a handful of Fanny Crosby hymns, and many others)

No one could dismiss R. Kelso Carter as ignorant: college-level professor of physical sciences, mathematics, and engineering, with advanced professional degrees in both ministry and medicine, and a writer, composer, and editor of hymns. He wrote both the words and music for “Standing on the Promises.”

Nor could one dismiss the broad intellect of Francis Rowley. He was a prominent Baptist minister, educated at a respected graduate theological seminary, and dedicated to public causes such as the prevention of cruelty to animals. He was reluctantly persuaded to write a revival poem for his song leader to set to music. His “I Will Sing the Wondrous Story,” still shows up in hymnals today.

Vulnerability Alongside Victory

My seminary professors did not notice that, mixed with bold confidence in the gospel, many late 19th century hymns also have a confessional humility about human weakness. Hear Rowley’s words: “I was lost, but Jesus found me, found the sheep that went astray, threw His loving arms around me, drew me back into His way. I was bruised, but Jesus healed me, faint was I from many a fall, sight was gone, and fears possessed me, but He freed me from them all. Days of darkness still come o’er me, sorrow’s path I often tread, but His presence still is with me; by His guiding hand I’m led.” Rowley proves that education, spiritual honesty, humility, and strong faith can go together.

Nitty-Gritty Faith

My seminary professors seemed to think that enthusiastic hymns were symbolic of a “feel-good” Christianity that would not engage the real problems of life. There is certainly a feel-good Christianity in more recent times of which that charge may be partly true (Norman Vincent Peale, Robert Schuler, Joel Osteen), but it is simply not true that late 19th century Christianity and its hymns were feel-good Christianity, removed from the pains of ordinary life. This point may be illustrated by a chain of events and associations surrounding the hymn, “I Will Sing of My Redeemer.” All of the people in this story—Horatio Spafford, Philip Bliss, Daniel Whittle, James McGranahan--were associated with Dwight Moody and his song leader Ira Sankey.

“When Peace Like a River…”

Horatio Spafford was a wealthy Chicago lawyer and real estate investor who took a deep interest in Moody’s evangelistic enterprises. He lost a four year old son to scarlet fever in 1870; most of his real estate holdings were wiped out in the Chicago fire of 1871. Two years later, the Spafford family had enough resources restored to plan a lengthy vacation to Europe, where they also planned to help with a Moody revival. Some last minute business problems detained Horatio, but his wife and four daughters kept their reservations on an ocean liner. The ship was struck by another ship and sank off the coast of Wales. The four daughters were lost. His wife cabled, “Saved only.” Horatio took ship to meet her and on the way penned the words to “It Is Well with My Soul,” an extraordinary statement of faith in the face of tragedy. The Spaffords had three later children, a son and two daughters, but the second son likewise died of scarlet fever at age four. Of eight children, two daughters lived to adulthood. If anyone needed the “peace like a river” of which Spafford wrote, his family did.

You can read widely varying accounts of the emotional and spiritual balance of the Spaffords in their latter years. I have read just enough to conclude that it would take doctoral level research to sort it all out. In the end, Horatio died of malaria in Jerusalem where they had moved to found the perfectionistic, communitarian, benevolent society, the American Colony, which ministered to people in need without regard to their religious persuasion. Horatio Spafford’s own words should be written across the last page of their story: “Tho’ Satan should buffet, tho’ trials should come, let this blest assurance control, that Christ hath regarded my helpless estate, and hath shed his own blood for my soul.”

Introducing Bliss

Spafford’s poem was set to music by Philip P. Bliss, a widely admired and powerful young singer, musician, composer, and poet, a soloist for Moody revivals and the song leader for Moody protégé, evangelist Daniel Whittle, who was also a hymn writer. Bliss composed the tunes for many other hymns. His own words appear in “Wonderful Words of Life,” “The Light of the World Is Jesus,” “Let the Lower Lights Be Burning,” “Hallelujah! What a Savior!” and many more.

The One-Armed Preacher

Daniel Whittle as a young man had shown an interest in religion, but he had never made a real faith commitment. He served in the Civil War, becoming a major before being seriously wounded at the battle of Vicksburg, resulting in the amputation of his right arm. While recovering in a Confederate prisoner of war hospital, he looked for some­thing to read, found a New Test­a­ment, and read until he fell asleep. A hos­pit­al or­der­ly woke him and said a dy­ing pris­on­er want­ed some­one to pray with him. Whit­tle de­clined, but the or­der­ly said, “I thought you were a Christ­ian; you were reading the Bible.” Whit­tle then agreed to go.

He re­cord­ed what took place at the dy­ing youth’s bedside:
“I dropped on my knees and held the boy’s hand in mine. In a few brok­en words I con­fessed my sins and asked Christ to for­give me. I be­lieved right there that He did for­give me. I then prayed ear­nest­ly for the boy. He be­came qui­et and pressed my hand as I prayed and plead­ed God’s prom­ises. When I arose from my knees, he was dead. A look of peace had come over his trou­bled face, and I can­not but be­lieve that God who used him to bring me to the Sav­ior, used me to lead him to trust Christ’s pre­cious blood and find par­don. I hope to meet him in hea­ven.”

The Almost Opera Singer

James McGranahan was a Pennsylvania farm boy with a marvelous tenor voice who had spent some years instructing singing schools for churches, but was tempted to follow suggestions that he should pursue a career in opera. Bliss discussed McGranahan with Daniel Whittle, asked if Whittle thought McGranahan could find an evangelist with whom to work, and got Whittle’s approval of a letter that he was sending McGranahan urging him toward dedicating himself to sacred music rather than opera.

How the Narrative Comes Together

A few weeks later, Bliss and his wife were en route from Pennsylvania back to Chicago so that Bliss could take part in a Moody revival when a bridge in Ohio collapsed under their train and their train fell sixty feet and burst into flame. The Blisses’ bodies were consumed in the fire. The story received major news coverage because of Bliss’ renown.

The day after the wreck both Whittle and McGranahan showed up to sift through the wreckage and ashes of the train. Philip Bliss’ trunk was found unharmed, and in it was an unpublished poem, “My Redeemer.” The poem was entrusted to McGranahan who composed a tune for it. The hymn became very popular. A few decades later, “I Will Sing of My Redeemer” was one of the first songs ever recorded on an Edison phonograph.

Whittle believed that Bliss’ conversations with him about McGranahan had been divinely guided to direct him to Bliss’ own replacement as his song leader. McGranahan was persuaded to heed the advice Bliss had given him a few weeks before his death.

Whittle and McGranahan formed a partnership that produced many hymns of which “I Know Whom I Have Believéd” stands out as declaring a faith that is good in the face of life’s many tragedies uncertainties. The hymn emphasizes that there are many things we do not know, but that we know Jesus who can make all turn out right in the end.

Faith from the Depths of Despair


On his death bed, Whittle was struck by the musical chiming of a bedside clock, and he thought of the bells on the robe of an Old Testament priest that told of his coming. He dictated the poem which you can read in the previous blog entry.

Do not tell me that the faith of these 19th century hymn-writers was removed from the hard challenges of everyday life. Rather, their faith’s triumphs shone most brightly from the depths of human despair.

The hymns of the late 19th century are bold and confident about Jesus, his message, and his mission. They are also honest about human vulnerability and compassionate about human struggles. We do not need to back off boldness and confidence in order to be honest and compassionate. In fact, backing off from the one hope of all the world makes us less honest and less compassionate.

Devotional Writings of Late 19th Century Hymn-Writers

Daniel Whittle’s Last Poem Dictated from His Death Bed (inspired by a chiming clock that reminded Whittle of bells on a priest's robes signaling his presence)

"Swift, with melodious feet, the midnight hours pass by;
As with each passing bell so sweet, I think, 'My Lord draws nigh.'

I see Heaven's open door, I hear God's gracious voice;
I see the blood-washed 'round the throne, and with them I rejoice.

It may be that these sounds are the golden bells so sweet
Which tell me of the near approach of the Heavenly High Priest's feet.

Not every night is thus; some nights with pain are drear.
Then I join my moan with creation's groan and the chimes I do not hear.

But the Lord remains the same; faithful He must abide;
And on His word my soul I'll rest, for He is by my side.

Some midnight sleepless saints, made quick by pain to hear,
Shall join the glad and welcome cry, 'The Bridegroom draweth near.'

Then I shall see His face, His beauteous image bear;I
'll know His love and wondrous grace, and in His glory share.

So sing my soul in praise, as bells chime o'er and o'er,
The coming of the Lord draws near, when time shall be no more."


I Know Whom I Have Believèd (Daniel Whittle)

I know not why God’s wondrous grace to me He hath made known,
Nor why, unworthy, Christ in love redeemed me for His own.

Refrain: But I know Whom I have believèd, and am persuaded that He is able
To keep that which I’ve committed unto Him against that day.

I know not how this saving faith to me He did impart,
Nor how believing in His Word wrought peace within my heart. Refrain

I know not how the Spirit moves, convincing us of sin,
Revealing Jesus through the Word, creating faith in Him. Refrain

I know not what of good or ill may be reserved for me,
Of weary ways or golden days, before His face I see. Refrain

I know not when my Lord may come, at night or noonday fair,
Nor if I walk the vale with Him, or meet Him in the air. Refrain

It Is Well with My Soul (Horatio Spafford)

When peace, like a river, attendeth my way, when sorrows like sea billows roll;
Whatever my lot, Thou has taught me to say, it is well, it is well, with my soul.

Refrain: It is well, with my soul, it is well, with my soul,It is well, it is well, with my soul.

Though Satan should buffet, though trials should come, let this blest assurance control,
That Christ has regarded my helpless estate, and hath shed His own blood for my soul. Refrain

My sin, oh, the bliss of this glorious thought! My sin, not in part but the whole,
Is nailed to the cross, and I bear it no more, praise the Lord, praise the Lord, O my soul! Refrain

For me, be it Christ, be it Christ hence to live: if Jordan above me shall roll,
No pang shall be mine, for in death as in life Thou wilt whisper Thy peace to my soul. Refrain

But, Lord, ‘tis for Thee, for Thy coming we wait, the sky, not the grave, is our goal;
Oh trump of the angel! Oh voice of the Lord! Blessèd hope, blessèd rest of my soul! Refrain

And Lord, haste the day when my faith shall be sight, the clouds be rolled back as a scroll;
The trump shall resound, and the Lord shall descend, even so, it is well with my soul. Refrain

The Light of the World Is Jesus (Philip Bliss)

The whole world was lost in the darkness of sin, the Light of the world is Jesus!
Like sunshine at noonday, His glory shone in. the Light of the world is Jesus!

Refrain: Come to the light, ’tis shining for thee; sweetly the light has dawned upon me.Once I was blind, but now I can see: The Light of the world is Jesus!

No darkness have we who in Jesus abide; the Light of the world is Jesus!
We walk in the light when we follow our Guide! The Light of the world is Jesus! Refrain

Ye dwellers in darkness with sin blinded eyes, the Light of the world is Jesus!
Go, wash, at His bidding, and light will arise; the Light of the world is Jesus! Refrain

No need of the sunlight in Heaven we’re told; the Light of the world is Jesus!
The Lamb is the Light in the city of gold; the Light of the world is Jesus! Refrain


How Can I Keep from Singing? (Robert Lowry)

My life flows on in endless song; above earth’s lamentation
I hear the sweet though far off hymn that hails a new creation:
Through all the tumult and the strife I hear the music ringing;
It finds an echo in my soul—How can I keep from singing?

What though my joys and comforts die? The Lord my Savior liveth;
What though the darkness gather round! Songs in the night He giveth:
No storm can shake my inmost calm while to that Rock I’m clinging;
Since Christ is Lord of Heav’n and earth, how can I keep from singing?

I lift mine eyes; the cloud grows thin; I see the blue above it;
And day by day this pathway smoothes since first I learned to love it:
The peace of Christ makes fresh my heart, a fountain ever springing:
All things are mine since I am His—How can I keep from singing?


Here Is Love (William Rees, Welsh, vv. 1,2; William Williams, Welsh, vv. 3,4; William Edwards, this English translation, 1900; Robert Lowry (tune 1876).

Here is love, vast as the ocean, lovingkindness as the flood,
When the Prince of Life, our Ransom, shed for us His precious blood.
Who His love will not remember? Who can cease to sing His praise?
He can never be forgotten, throughout Heav’n’s eternal days.

On the mount of crucifixion, fountains opened deep and wide;
Through the floodgates of God’s mercy flowed a vast and gracious tide.
Grace and love, like mighty rivers, poured incessant from above,
And Heav’n’s peace and perfect justice kissed a guilty world in love.

Let me all Thy love accepting, love Thee, ever all my days;
Let me seek Thy kingdom only and my life be to Thy praise;
Thou alone shalt be my glory, nothing in the world I see.
Thou hast cleansed and sanctified me, Thou Thyself hast set me free.

In Thy truth Thou dost direct me by Thy Spirit through Thy Word;
And Thy grace my need is meeting, as I trust in Thee, my Lord.
Of Thy fullness Thou art pouring Thy great love and power on me,
Without measure, full and boundless, drawing out my heart to Thee.



O Love That Wilt Not Let Me Go (George Matheson, blind Church of Scotland preacher)

O Love that wilt not let me go, I rest my weary soul in thee;
I give thee back the life I owe, that in thine ocean depths its flow may richer, fuller be.

O Light that followest all my way, I yield my flickering torch to thee;
My heart restores its borrowed ray, that in thy sunshine’s blaze its day may brighter, fairer be.

O Joy that seekest me through pain, I cannot close my heart to thee;
I trace the rainbow through the rain, and feel the promise is not vain, that morn shall tearless be.

O Cross that liftest up my head, I dare not ask to fly from thee;
I lay in dust life’s glory dead, and from the ground there blossoms red life that shall endless be.



Make Me a Captive, Lord (George Matheson)

Make me a captive, Lord, and then I shall be free.
Force me to render up my sword, and I shall conqueror be.
I sink in life’s alarms when by myself I stand;
Imprison me within Thine arms, and strong shall be my hand.

My heart is weak and poor until it master find;
It has no spring of action sure, it varies with the wind.
It cannot freely move till Thou has wrought its chain;
Enslave it with Thy matchless love, and deathless it shall reign.

My power is faint and low till I have learned to serve;
It lacks the needed fire to glow, it lacks the breeze to nerve.
It cannot drive the world until itself be driven;
Its flag can only be unfurled when Thou shalt breathe from heaven.

My will is not my own till Thou hast made it Thine;
If it would reach a monarch’s throne, it must its crown resign.
It only stands unbent amid the clashing strife,
When on Thy bosom it has leant, and found in Thee its life.