Third Verse Devotion: How Firm a Foundation

How Firm a Foundation is another of my favorite hymns. It rather snuck up on me though. I mean I heard it and sang it many times and gradually I realized I loved this hymn. I cannot tell you what I love about the hymn. Whether it is the words themselves or the meter of the music. Maybe it is a combination of the two. Either way this has become a beloved hymn of mine.

When thro’ fiery trials thy pathway shall lie,
My grace, all-sufficient, shall be thy supply;
The flame shall not hurt thee; I only design
Thy dross to consume, and thy gold to refine
.

I have a confession. When I was younger, I had no idea what “dross” meant. The word wasn’t in my vocabulary. Maybe it wasn’t in my music directors either as this was the verse that was skipped most often. I would read the verse as we were singing the other verses. Of course, this was when we still had hymnals in the pew racks before COVID- 19 and modern projectors.

So, as I read this verse today, I understand a little better the process described here. I think that if you breathe then your path lies through fiery trials. It is just part of the process of life. There will be hard times. We live in a fallen world filled with sin, trials and temptations. Those who would tell you that life in Jesus is all sunshine and roses are liars. The difference is that life in Jesus brings peace that brings us through the fiery trials. We know we can get through because his grace is all sufficient. Paul mentioned having had to learn this lesson. He had a “thorn in the flesh” he called it. Here is what he said,

Concerning this I pleaded with the Lord three times that it might leave me.And He has said to me, “My grace is sufficient for you, for power is perfected in weakness.” Most gladly, therefore, I will rather boast about my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may dwell in me. Therefore, I delight in weaknesses, in insults, in distresses, in (persecutions, in difficulties, in behalf of Christ; for when I am weak, then I am strong. (2 Corinthians 12: 8-10 NASB)

Sometimes God lets us go through the fire to refine us to strengthen us. The impurities need to be removed.  I mentioned earlier my lack of understanding where dross is concerned. Now I understand. When metal is melted down, like gold or silver, the impurities rise to the surface. The ick that isn’t supposed to be in the metal that make the metal less valuable. This comes to the surface and can then be skimmed off. The trials we go through are like that for us. God allows them for us to bring to the surface the impurities to then remove them to make us pure, refined.  We come out stronger on the other side.

I need to add a caveat here, however, the problems we cause ourselves and the results are not God’s fault. Those fires were built by our own hands and are the consequences of our own actions. There is a difference. In other words, don’t say it’s a fiery trial from God when you are the one that lit the fire. I do believe God will see you through if you ask him, but you might get singed in the process and the scars remain for a lot longer. God’s trials remove the impurity and leave you stronger. Like Paul, you still might bear what you wish removed, but now your heart is changed, and you bear it better. There is an attitude change. A heart change. Dross removed. To be honest, I would much rather have God’s trials than the one’s I have created for myself. God is gracious. Unfortunately, when I am building my own fiery trials, I don’t build in grace.

Are you going through a trial right now? Is it one of God’s making or of your own? Are you a believer in Christ? If you have not accepted Christ as your Savior, chances are you created it yourself. Turn to Jesus for rescue. If you have accepted Jesus, let him refine you. He wants to pull the impurities out. What is he doing in your life? What is he wanting to address in you that you are holding on to? Where has he told you my grace if sufficient?

We as believers in Christ have a Firm Foundation. Jesus does not want to leave us as we are, and he daily wants to remake us into his image. He desires to make us more like him. Let him consume the dross and refine the gold in you. Walk on friend, walk on.

Angela

Third Verse Devotion: The Haven of Rest

This is one of my favorite hymns. I could not find the background for the song only the name and life of the author. As always, you can learn about the author, H. L. Gilmour, as well as the full text of the hymn at www.hymnary.org. Here is the third verse as found in the 1975 Baptist Hymnal.

The song of my soul, since the Lord made me whole,
Has been the old story so blessed,
Of Jesus who’ll save whosoever will have
A home in the haven of rest.

In what way has the Lord made you whole? Has there been a habit you have stopped? An addition you have been set free from? Has your language been cleaned up? Have your relationships changed? See, when he makes us whole, things change. He delivers us from the muck and mire of our sin and shame and gives us a safe place to stand. When we find we are safe and whole the old temptations may be there but now we are not alone

Maybe you need to be made whole.  Your life is a mess, and you can see no way to fix it. You have done things you are not proud of. You may be cut off from friends and family and you don’t know how to restore the relationships. Maybe you are in a bad relationship and don’t know how to get out. Maybe you are in the grip of drugs or alcohol, and you have tried on your own to break free and it doesn’t work. Whatever the situation, He stands ready to make us all whole in large and small ways.

I can’t help thinking of Peter. Jesus wanted to be alone to pray and he sent the disciples ahead across the sea of Galilee. A storm came on them suddenly so that the boat was taking on water. In the middle of this they saw someone walking on the water. They all thought it was a ghost. It was actually Jesus walking on the water to them. He calls to them to not be afraid. Peter called out “If it is really you, tell me to come to you.” Jesus tells him to come. Peter stepped into the water with the storm raging with wind and waves and he walks to Jesus. Soon though the storm catches his attention, and he looks around and realizes he is walking on the water and begins to sink. He calls out to Jesus to save him, and Jesus is right there to save him. Jesus is ready to save you and me just like he did Peter.  He is not willing for any to perish but for all to come to repentance. Take a moment and really read those words. Jesus is ready to save. All you have to do is call to him. You can have that haven of rest today. Come and anchor your soul in him today.

Angela

A View of August

If you have visited All for One, you know it is a small blog. It is only a couple of months old. I am still learning to blog and finding it is more than just putting thoughts and words on a screen. There is a lot that goes on behind the scenes.

I have however, been amazed and humbled how far these words have reached. So, I want to say a very sincere and quick thank you. If you have been watching and reading, thank you. If you have dropped by and lingered long enough to read a post, thank you. I hope you stick around there is more to come. We are just getting started.

August is shaping up with back to school. Parents rejoice and children mourn. There is planning involved in the new school year. Teachers and administrators alike plan events and lessons. Classrooms are decorated and everything is cleaned and ready for the return of the students. Parents and kids hit the malls and stores buying school clothes and supplies. There is an excitement in the air ready for school to begin.

I am getting ready also. I am not going back to school. Those days ended for me a while back. My son is grown so I do not have to fight the crowds for school supplies. But I am working on content. Planning what I want to bring to you in August. Since school is beginning. I thought we would get back to basics. I have been toying with the idea of a theme for each month. August will be the first month I really dig in and try it out.  If it works wonderful. If not, well at least I gave it a try.

So, what do I mean by back to basics? Well in Times Like These, I want to cover some basic Christian doctrines. will try to cover doctrines without my Southern Baptist paradigm, but my Baptist roots run deep. I want to take the view of whatever doctrine we are studying as close to the bible as possible, so we are getting truth and not opinion. In Third Verse Devotions, we will look at some old hymns like Are you Washed in the Blood, At the Cross, and others. If you have a favorite hymn you would like to explore, just let me know and I will be happy to include it in Third Verse Devotions. In Angela’s Bookshelf, I hope to have more material up. Maybe not all reviews but other articles and posts.

So, there it is a quick overview of what I hope for in August, a Back-to-Basics kickoff. You don’t want to miss anything that is coming, so be sure to hit the like and subscribe button.  Also leave me a comment and let me know what you are most looking forward to in August. I’m looking forward to seeing you throughout August as we get Back to Basics.

Angela

The Way Home

Mother-in-laws get a tough rap. They become the butt of jokes, gossiped about over coffee, warred over in homes. Yet in the Bible we find the story of a mother-in-law who did not fit the mold when we think of mothers-in-law.

This lady’s family moved because of lack of food. There was a famine and her husband, and her two sons moved to the land of Moab. Soon after her husband died. Her sons grew up and married local girls, then they too died. The woman was left with nothing. In this time, there were not many options for a woman left alone with no man to protect her or provide for her. She was in a strange land and now had two daughters-in-law with her. In her profound grief, she decided to go home.

You may already recognize the story. I am talking about Naomi from the book of Ruth. This small book of history in the Old Testament gives a beautiful account of the relationship between a mother-in -law and a daughter-in-law. The picture they paint can be a model for us today in the treacherous waters between women who dare to marry sons loved by their mothers.

What is your relationship with your mother-in-law like? Is she like a mother to you? My own mother-in-law was much older than myself. In fact, she and my grandmother were closer in age. She had a difficult life, and I married her youngest son, the baby. Were you and your mother-in-law at peace with each other? Had you found a way to make your relationship work?

We pick up Naomi’s story in chapter 1 of the book of Ruth. Naomi had heard there was food again in the land of Judah so with her husband and both sons gone, she decided to go home. It is worth noting that both of her daughters-in-law were prepared to go with her. Yet Naomi urged them to return to the home of their parents, so they could move on with their lives and find another husband and have a future. We aren’t told how much time passed from when her sons died to when she decided to go home. What we do see is that both her daughters-in-law were devoted to her. They were going with her back to her homeland.

What would you do? If your mother-in-law decided to move away, would you rejoice? Or would you start packing to move with her? Would you be willing to live with your mother-in-law? Naomi’s daughters-in-law were prepared to go with her back to the land of Judah. They were ready to leave their own land and follow her, such was their devotion.

Naomi released them. When she saw what they were intending, she sent them home and blessed them. She kissed them and they all wept together. At first both insisted on going with her then she convinced one of them to return but, “Ruth clung to her.”

So, now the question begs, what kind of mother-in-law are you? Or let’s go ahead and ask, what kind of father-in-law are you? Would your daughter-in-law “cling” to you? Or do you interfere in a marriage that isn’t yours? Do you pull your child away from his or her spouse at every chance? Are you a divider between them? While it may be hard to believe that someone could be good enough for our “baby”, our baby has found someone. I have not had the experience yet as a mother-in-law. So, I don’t know what I will be like. I hope I could follow Naomi’s example and be one that my future daughter-in-law could cling to.

When Naomi urged Ruth to go back to her people and her gods, Ruth uttered the words that many have committed to memory, and many have since repeated as a declaration of loyalty and devotion.

But Ruth said, “Do not plead with me to leave you or to turn back from following you; for where you go, I will go, and where you sleep, I will sleep. Your people shall be my people, and your God, my God. Where you die, I will die, and there I will be buried. May the Lord do so to me, and worse, if anything but death separates me from you. (Ruth 1:16-17 NASB)

When Naomi heard the determination of these words, she stopped talking about it and they went home. Ruth worked to provide for herself and Naomi in fields picking grain. She happened to work in a field of a close relative. Before long, with Naomi’s guiding, Ruth revealed who she was to the owner of the field, Boaz. Boaz took the necessary steps and became her husband. Naomi had the joy of holding Ruth and Boaz’s first child.

The relationship between mothers-in-law and daughter-in-law can be tricky. Some never find common ground. Others experience a relationship like Ruth and Naomi. These two ladies set the bar high. They are the model to attain to. Is your mother-in-law a monster? Love her. She gave birth to your husband or wife. Is your daughter-in law impossible? Love her. She loves your son. Pray for each other. Your relationship may never reach the level of loyalty or devotion of Ruth and Naomi, but you can reach for a level of peace as much as it depends on you.

Angela

Third Verse Devotion: Battle Hymn of the Republic

The words of this patriotic song were written by Julia Howe at the start of the Civil War in November 1861.  This patriotic song can be found in many hymnals. There are five stanzas to the song and all of them are full of meaning, for the sake of time I will only focus on one.

Here is the third verse from the 1991 Baptist Hymnal. You can find the full song at www.hymnary.org.

He has sounded forth the trumpet that shall never sound retreat;
He is sifting out the hearts of men before His judgment seat;
O be swift, my soul, to answer Him; be jubilant, my feet!
Our God is marching on. [Chorus]

Judgement is not something any of us like to think about. We choose to believe the characteristic of God as love, and He is love. Yet He is also judge. He cannot look on sin. He must judge sin. He is a righteous God and there is no unrighteousness in Him. So, the sin you and I carry must be judged.

There are two types of judgment mentioned in the New Testament. The first is found in Romans 14:10 and 2 Corinthians 5:10. This is a judgement for believers. Every person who has placed faith in Christ Jesus will stand before Him one day and give an account of the things they have done. Did you accept the gift of salvation that Jesus offers? What did you do with the gifts you have been given? How did you live your life? Did you share your faith with others? Did other people know you were a Christian? Did they know you believed in Jesus? What did you do good or bad after you became a follower of Jesus? This is what this judgement seat is all about. The second judgement is mentioned in Revelation and is called “the Great White Throne Judgement”. It is found in Revelation 20: 11-15 and is for all non-believers throughout history. Every individual who had the opportunity to accept God and refused will stand before Him and give an account of his deeds. All deeds were listed and then their name is checked against the book of Life. If their name was not listed there, they were thrown into the lake of fire.

Please hear me, if you think living a good life and performing good deeds will be enough to get you into heaven, Friend, you are wrong. You want your name in that book of Life. The only way to escape the Great White Throne Judgement is Jesus. You want to be at that first judgment.  The next line of the song is “…be swift, my soul, to answer Him…”. Let that be your response as well. When you know God is calling you to follow him, do not hesitate. Respond then. Ephesians 2: 8-9 reminds us:

For by grace you have been saved through faith;

and this is not of yourselves, it is the gift of God; 

not a result of works, so that no one may boast. (NASB)

You can never perform enough good works or be a good enough person to make your way to heaven and escape the second judgement. Good works will not get your name in the book of life. Only accepting the grace of Jesus will accomplish salvation and ensure judgment at Christ’s judgement seat.

Be assured God loves you. He does not want any at the second judgment. It is a fact that many will be there. Those who choose to reject Him. You don’t have to be among their number. If you are reading these words, you still have a choice. Make that choice today. Be swift to answer Him.  Since everyone one day will be judged, where will your judgement take place, at the foot of Jesus or at the Great White Throne of God. I hope to see you at the feet of Jesus.

Angela

Third Verse Devotion: America the Beautiful

We sing this hymn around the patriotic holidays of Memorial Day and Independence Day.  I also incorporated it around 9/11. I know I am past Independence Day, but I want to celebrate our freedom all month. Each of the Third Verse Devotions this month is patriotic in nature.

While every verse of the song is poignant and can cause reflection on the beauty and wonder of our nation verse three is a testament to those who have sacrificed much for this land of liberty. By way of note, I pull the hymns for the Third Verse Devotions from the 1991 edition of the Baptist Hymnal. You can find it here at www.hymnary.org.

Katharine Lee Bates wrote this song after climbing the top of Pike’s Peak. Inspired by the vista below she penned these verses. I think we can understand where she was coming from. I have never stood on Pike’s Peak, but I can imagine the view having seen vistas from lesser high points. Ms. Bates had been a high school teacher and a professor at Wellesley College in Massachusetts. She never married as at that time women who married were required to resign their tenure at the college. She wrote poems, books and was in demand as a speaker. America the Beautiful is perhaps her best-known work.

I have only found four verses for the song. The Methodist Hymnal 1989 moves the verse I want to focus on to verse four. The Baptist Hymnal 1991 and most of the other hymnals I looked at all have the verse as verse three.

O beautiful for heroes proved
In liberating strife,
Who more than self their country loved,
And mercy more than life!
America! America!
May God thy gold refine,
Till all success be nobleness,
And ev’ry gain divine.

This country was fought for with the blood and vigor of men who became heroes because they believed in what they stood for. Our armed forces today are still made up of men and women who are willing to become heroes in some way for this country. “Who more than self their country loved.” They are willing to give themselves for this country on the battlefield wherever it may be. There was a rise in enlistment after Pearl Harbor and again after 9/11. When our country is under attack there is a spirit that rises to defend her. When she is at peace, that same spirit is there to make sure that peace remains. I fear that there is a serious lack of patriotism among some of our people today. Our country means nothing to these individuals and those that have given their lives so they can express their hatred seems in vain. These individuals are not heroes proved in liberating strife.

This verse makes clear who the heroes are. Those who are willing to put their lives aside for their country. Those who are proved on the battlefield. Those who stand for what is right. A belief so unshakable that America is the greatest nation. Their state is the greatest state. Their town is the greatest town. Their school is the greatest school. Their family is the greatest family. Look to find heroes at the smallest level. How do they treat their family? Heroism begins small and grows from there to the battlefield of life.

Stand for what you believe. Be a hero to your family. Do what is right. Be proved a hero in the strife that comes. Stand strong and firm. Love your country. Love your family, more than your life. Be a giver of mercy. You are part of a great nation. Make it greater by your actions. In Micah 6:8 we have this admonition:

He has told you, mortal one, what is good;

And what does the LORD require of you

But to do justice, to love kindness,

And to walk humbly with your God? (NASB)

You want to be a good person? A hero? It starts with faith in God and a willingness to set yourself aside. Here in Micah we have an outline for three ways to live your life. Do justice, love kindness, walk humbly with God. If we all try to do these three things we would see America beautiful again. All success be nobleness and every gain divine. God bless America.

Angela

Be Adopted Today

We need to be adopted. We are all orphans without a home lost in a world that is cold and hard and unfeeling. We try to figure out who we are and where we belong.

I want to look at a couple of Bible passages today and look at the spirit of slavery, the spirit of adoption and the spirit of the Son. Our adoption has already been approved and sealed. We only need to accept it.

SPIRIT OF SLAVERY

Romans 8:15

For you have not received a spirit of slavery leading to fear again

Paul was writing to the Roman church. He wanted them to understand who they now were and who they once were. They had not received a spirt of slavery. Look where slavery leads. To fear. Did you see that? “For you have not received a spirit of slavery leading to fear again.” Some of us live our lives in constant fear. We are afraid of our world and everything in it. The Father is not the author of fear. Fear is the work of the slave master.  Fear is only a symptom that we need to be adopted. We are rejected and caught in sin and fear. We need redemption. We cannot make this happen on our own. We are trapped in this spirit of slavery. When we become entrenched in fear with a need to belong, a need to fit in, a need for approval, we become slaves to that thing. Where does the fear come in? After having done everything, we are still rejected. We are still unwanted. It will never be enough.

SPIRIT OF ADOPTION

Romans 8: 15-17

 but you have received a spirit of adoption as sons and daughters by which we cry out, “Abba! Father!” The Spirit Himself testifies with our spirit that we are children of God, and if children, heirs also, heirs of God and fellow heirs with Christ, if indeed we suffer with Him so that we may also be glorified with Him. (NASB)

Our adoption is spiritual. Our adoption allows us to cry out “Abba! Father!”  Abba. It’s not a word that the western world uses, but it at its basic means “Daddy.” It is a very personal name for a father. Our adoption allows us to have a personal close relationship with God. We become his child.

 We become His heirs and fellow heirs with Christ. What does it mean to be an heir? That means that someday when someone dies, we will inherit what someone has left to us. Now since God will never die what does this mean? When we die, we will inherit what he has for us. When He returns, we will inherit what He planned for us. When we become a child of God we suffer with Christ. We may not be nailed to a cross, but we share the persecution, rejection by the world, shame, and reproach, that Jesus did. We share the “family name.” In sharing the family name, we also are glorified with Him. Whatever reproach we endure on earth is wiped away in glory.

SPIRIT OF HIS SON

Galatians 4:4-6

Our adoption stands ready. It has been bought and paid for all we need to do is accept it. Receive the family that is Jesus. Notice what Paul writes in Galatians 4:4-6

But when the fullness of the time came, God sent His Son, born of a woman, born under the Law, so that He might redeem those who were under the Law, that we might receive the adoption as sons and daughtersBecause you are sons, God has sent the Spirit of His Son into our hearts, crying out, “Abba! Father!”

God does everything in His time. When the time was right, Jesus was born in Bethlehem. When the time had come, Jesus died on the cross for our sins. It is this one act of sacrifice that allowed us to be redeemed, to be adopted. We only need to accept the adoption that is waiting for us. Paul points out that after we receive the adoption as sons and daughters, God sends “the Spirit of His Son into our hearts, crying out, “Abba! Father!” After we accept Jesus and the price he paid for our redemption, we are no longer slaves to fear and sin. We are sons and daughters. The Spirit takes up residence in our hearts and we enjoy personal relationship with God calling him Abba!

You can have that relationship with Him today. A new destination in life. I don’t know what is going on in your life. I don’t know where in the world you may be. I do know you need to be adopted and redeemed from the slavery of fear you are in. You need the Spirit of the Son in your heart. You need Abba. You need the Father. Today you can change your heavenly family. All you need to do is cry out to Jesus. He will show you the rest. Won’t you do that today?

Angela

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The Family Vacation

The family vacation is usually reserved for the summer months. Time for the beach, cookouts, homemade ice cream and travel. A time for families to get away to relax, enjoy life and celebrate how much fun it is spending time together cramped in a car with children or teenagers for a 6-to-8-hour drive to enjoy the wonders of God’s creation. Right.

I wonder how many of us come back from our vacation more tired than when we left. What we really need is rest. The staycation is becoming more popular as families realize that staying home can be as fun as traveling less expensive, safer, and more relaxing.

I am for families connecting, recharging and resting. I believe this is what the family vacation is about. It is taking time away with the people who live in our house for a retreat from daily life for a few days. This is good for relationships and good for the soul.

In the Bible, there are times where God built in times of rest for the people of Israel. Many of the festivals and solemn events they were to practice were to have no work involved and lasted several days. Times of rest built into their year, and they were frequent.

When Jesus was with the disciples, He saw the need for them to get away for a while. Mark 6:31 says that, “And He said to them, “Come away by yourselves to a secluded place and rest a little while.” (For there were many people coming and going, and they did not even have time to eat.)” (NASB) The disciples had been working hard with the people and they needed a break. They needed a vacation. Jesus made sure they got it. He also offers that to us as well.

Today, I think we have forgotten how to truly rest. We have gotten so accustomed to work that our brains do not know how to be still. We do not have a shut off or a reset. We are constantly on go. As a result, there is a high rate of burn out, depression, drug abuse, and even suicide. We need rest.

Jesus tells us in Matthew 11:28-29, “Come to Me, all who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest.Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will findrest for your souls.”

The vacation is intended to allow families to get away for a while, not one more item to check off the ever-growing checklist of things to accomplish. How many of us can say we truly relaxed on vacation without an itinerary of where we needed to go next or what time we needed to do this next. It is even worse if we take extended family along for the ride. No wonder we come back from out vacation more stressed than when we left.

Whether you stay home this vacation season or travel, look for ways to relax. Be intensional. I know you have to keep the kids engaged, but it wouldn’t hurt them to have some downtime also. Some quiet moments of solitude  walking in the woods, swinging in a hammock. Maybe laying on a blanket in the backyard watching the clouds go by or watching the stars come out. Maybe take a sketch pad and try to sketch or watercolor paint a sunset. You don’t have to be good just have fun and relax. The family vacation is about taking time with your family to enjoy a time to relax with your family. Turn off the electronics for the evening. Watch the stars, paint the sky, watch the birds. Feel the tension ease in the gentleness that nature brings.

I’m not talking about extremes. Just beginning to practice times of rest. Walk on the beach rather than splash in the water. Collect shells, wade the surf, listen to the waves. Try something different. Take time to rest this family vacation. I mean really rest. Let the tension, stress, and worry go. Believe me it will be there waiting for you. For now find a secluded place and know He is gentle and humble in heart. Find rest for your soul.

Angela

Solitary in Families

Family. The word conjures all sorts of images. Some of those images aren’t always good. Sometimes families are messy and hard. I imagine there have been times we have wondered how we landed in our messed-up family while it seems other families have it all together and love and support each other. They seem to be places where someone can grow and thrive and prosper. Then there is the other side. The dark side we don’t want to talk about. The family that is cold and abusive and destructive. Members of those families seek that nurturing they missed anywhere they can find it and it seems what they find is more of the same or worse. Deep down what all of us really want, and need, is unconditional love and acceptance,

I have worked in my present job as a secretary in a mental health clinic for over ten years. In that time, I have seen a lot of families come through our doors. Some families are more broken than others. Some leave a lot of damage in their wake and pass it on for generations. Broken people creating more broken people.  Yet, some have learned to cope with their brokenness and begun to heal.

Psalm 68:6 says, “God places the lonely in families, he sets the prisoners free and gives them joy. But he makes the rebellious live in a sun-scorched land (New Living Translation)

Adam may have related well to the first part of this verse. As the first man in creation, he saw all the wonder and beauty of everything God had created. Alone. He named all the animals. Alone. He tended the garden. Alone. Adam had realized his loneliness as he named the animals and saw there was no helper for him. In all of creation, there was no one else like him. He was truly alone. It was during this time that God said, “It is not good for the man to be alone.” So, He created Eve.

We are social people. We need each other. I have seen and heard and been a part of the “debate” over introverts vs. extraverts. Some of us are geared to be around people and need to be around people. Then there are those of us who think the world is way to    people-y. We need a high degree of space and can be on our on for long periods of time just fine, thank you very much. Yet even in that aloneness, there is a realization that “it is not good…to be alone.”

God gives us people we can relate to and talk to and be ourselves with. Sometimes this is our birth family. Sometimes it is our in-laws. Sometimes it is a really good group of friends. I think that when we spend too much time on our own, and I fall into that introvert group, we become prisoners to our mind and go to dark places. The family God gives us helps take away our prison and can fill us with joy and freedom and removes the loneliness.

I don’t know what your family looks like. It may be a place of joy. It may be a place of darkness. If it is a place of joy, I celebrate with you. You have found a special thing. Rejoice in the Lord’s provision. You are not alone. If it is a place of darkness. Let me tell you, you are not alone either. There is hope. God has a family for you also. Trust Him to bring you into that family. Get the help you need. If you are seeking and lost in your own prison, let God bring you into His Family. Trust Him today to be your Father and let Him adopt you as His child. There is no better family than His.

National Domestic Violence Hotline: 800-799-7233

National Child Abuse Hotline: 800-422-4453

National Suicide Hotline: 988

Angela

Third Verse Devotion: Trust and Obey

I can still recall this hymn from my youth. It was most often the offertory hymn. Four men would gather at the back of the church when the song leader gave the cue. It went something like this. “For our offertory hymn, let’s stand as we sing the first, second, and last verses of…” That was all it took, and they would leave their seats as we all stood with hymnals in hands. I wonder if this wasn’t one of his favorite hymns. We seemed to sing it every other Sunday. The men would stand at the back and wait for the last verse then march down the aisle to stand before the pulpit. The song leader would nod at one of them to pray or the pastor would come to pray then they would begin to take the offering. I didn’t realize then that this was just as much a part of worship as the preaching and singing. Giving back to the Lord just a portion of what He had given to us.

Take a moment to read the verses to the hymn.

1 When we walk with the Lord
in the light of his word,
what a glory he sheds on our way!
While we do his good will,
he abides with us still,
and with all who will trust and obey.

Refrain:
Trust and obey, for there’s no other way
to be happy in Jesus, but to trust and obey.

2 Not a burden we bear,
not a sorrow we share,
but our toil he doth richly repay;
not a grief or a loss,
not a frown or a cross,
but is blest if we trust and obey. [Refrain]

3 But we never can prove
the delights of his love
until all on the altar we lay;
for the favor he shows,
for the joy he bestows,
are for them who will trust and obey. [Refrain]

4 Then in fellowship sweet
we will sit at his feet,
or we’ll walk by his side in the way;
what he says we will do,
where he sends we will go;
never fear, only trust and obey. [Refrain]

United Methodist Hymnal, 1989

Hymnary.org

The hymn was written by John H. Sammis around 1887. He was a businessman who was born in New York. He eventually settled in Logansport, Indiana where he became a secretary for the local YMCA. He later became a Presbyterian minister. He is said to have penned more than 100 other songs.

The backstory for the hymn is uncertain as I have read at least two varying accounts. However, what is clear is that a gentleman stood up during a Dwight Moody revival in Brockton, Massachusetts and stated, “I am not quite sure – but I am going to trust, and I am going to obey.” This statement was the catalyst for Sammis to pen the hymn.

Verse three is our primary focus. Sammis reminds us that “we never can prove the delights of his love…” What a beautiful thought.  We can never out test God’s love. God is steadfast in His love for us. He does not waver; He does not change. His greatest act of love is when he sent Jesus to the cross. In return, we lay everything on the altar. Give our all to Him.

Sammis points out it is in this giving everything on the altar, this trusting and obeying, that we experience His favor and the fullness of His joy. Indeed, we are encouraged to trust Jesus for our eternity, and we show our love for Him by our obedience.

There are examples of individuals experiencing the delights of God’s love, favor, and joy throughout the Bible. These experiences are accompanied by trust and obedience. I do not say that the path is easy. Many in the scriptures who chose to trust and obey had difficult journeys and troubled paths. Yet their joy was complete knowing they had accomplished what their God had sent them to do.

Psalm 84:12 encourages us, “LORD Almighty, blessed is the one who trusts in you.” (NIV)

What is the Lord asking you to do? Are you hesitant to begin? Let me encourage you to take that first shaky step. Will you be like the gentleman I mentioned at the beginning from Dwight Moody’s service? I will trust. I will obey.

Trust and obey

For there’s no other way

To be happy in Jesus

But to trust and obey

Angela