We place a great
deal of emphasis, and rightly so, on studying Scripture in its
original context and moving from there to our present context.
That becomes an integral part to preaching and teaching from the
Scriptures. It helps shed light on what God is saying, to that
first audience and to us today. Hymn singing can also be viewed in
that same light.
Many of the great
hymns have a rich background. I have always tried, where possible,
to let people know something of the background of either the hymn
or the writer, or both. We are admonished to sing with
understanding. With today’s emphasis on singing choruses and
other contemporary music, we may be keeping God’s covenant
people, including the children, from a rich heritage and
experience in singing the great hymns.
I recall when I
first heard about the circumstance that led George Matheson to
write the hymn “O Love That Will Not Let Me Go,” the hymn was
even further endeared to my mind and heart, knowing how though all
others forsake me, God will never let me go. That story is in this
book. And there are 149 other familiar hymns and stories that can
be used in worship, sermon illustrations, Bible teaching in
general, and with family devotions. “There is a Fountain Filled
with Blood,” “Amazing Grace,” “O God Our Help In Ages
Past,” “Like a River Glorious,” and many others are rich in
biblical truth and made real and edifying to us as we learn
something about the writers and their situations. For example:
your heart will fill with both joy and tears as you read about
Frances Havergal, who wrote “Like a River Glorious,” and see
what that meant to her has she died trying to sing about God.
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