Lovey stuff
This is one of my favorite hymns!
“‘Tis So Sweet to Trust in Jesus” by Louisa M. R. Stead | The United Methodist Hymnal, No. 462
“Tis so sweet to trust in Jesus, and to take him at his word; just to rest upon his promise, and to know, "Thus saith the Lord.” Jesus, Jesus, how I trust him! How I’ve proved him o'er and o'er! Jesus, Jesus, precious Jesus! O for grace to trust him more!“
From her childhood, the call to missionary service was the guiding motivation for Louisa M. R. Stead (c. 1850-1917). Born in Dover, England, and converted at the age of nine, Stead came to the United States in 1871, living in Cincinnati. She attended a camp meeting in Urbana, Ohio, where she dedicated her life to missionary service. Ill health prevented her from serving initially. She married in 1875, and the couple had a daughter, Lily. Hymnologist Kenneth Osbeck describes a major turning point in the family’s life:
“When the child was four years of age, the family decided one day to enjoy the sunny beach at Long Island Sound, New York. While eating their picnic lunch, they suddenly heard cries of help and spotted a drowning boy in the sea. Mr. Stead charged into the water. As often happens, however, the struggling boy pulled his rescuer under water with him, and both drowned before the terrified eyes of wife and daughter. Out of her ‘why?’ struggle with God during the ensuing days glowed these meaningful words from the soul of Louisa Stead.”
The hymn, “’Tis so sweet to trust in Jesus” was inspired by this personal tragedy.
Soon after, Lousia and Lily left for the Cape Colony, South Africa, where Louisa worked as a missionary for fifteen years. She married Robert Wodehouse, a native of South Africa. Because of her health, the family found it necessary to return to the United States in 1895. Wodehouse pastored a Methodist congregation during these years until, in 1900, they returned to the mission field, this time to the Methodist mission station at Umtali, Southern Rhodesia (present day Zimbabwe).
Kenneth Osbeck records a message sent back to the United States shortly after her arrival in Southern Rhodesia: “In connection with the whole mission there are glorious possibilities, but one cannot, in the face of the peculiar difficulties, help but say, ‘Who is sufficient for these things?’ But with simple confidence and trust we may and do say, ‘Our sufficiency is of God.’”
Her daughter Lily married after their return to Africa. Louisa retired because of ill health in 1911. Lily continued to serve for many years in South Rhodesia. Her mother passed away after a long illness in 1917 at her home in Penkridge near the Mutambara Mission, fifty miles from Umtali. Following her death, it was recorded that Christians in South Rhodesia continued to sing her hymn in the local Shona language.
While the exact date of the composition is not known, sometime between 1880-1882, Lousia Stead’s hymn was first published in Songs of Triumph (1882). The Rev. Carlton R., Young, editor of The United Methodist Hymnal, describes the hymn’s content as “a series of loosely connected key evangelical words and phrases.” Indeed, the hymn is full of the language of piety common to the day in evangelical circles. Furthermore, the succession of stanzas lacks the usual progression of ideas leading to heaven that characterizes most gospel hymns.
Perhaps the hymn might be best described as a mantra on the name of Jesus. Indeed, “Jesus” is sung twenty-five times if one sings all four stanzas and the refrain. Stanza one is a simple statement of “trust in Jesus.” The singer is invited to “rest upon his promise.” Though the “promise” is not specifically articulated, it is assumed that all know that this is the promise of salvation. The stanza ends with “Thus saith the Lord” – a phrase, interestingly enough, that appears 413 times in the Old Testament in the King James Version, and is a reference to God rather than Jesus.
Stanza two continues the theme of trust, drawing upon the “cleansing blood” of Jesus. The poet demonstrates her trust as she “plung[es] … neath the healing, cleansing flood,” a possible reference to the William Cowper (1731-1800) hymn, “There is a fountain filled with blood”: “… and sinners plunge beneath that flood lose all their guilty stains.” The typology of the cleansing flood may find its biblical roots in Genesis 6-7, the account of Noah and the great flood, or perhaps the blood and water that flowed from the crucified Christ’s side (John 19:34), or even a conflation of these ideas. Cowper’s hymn was probably well known to Stead, and she referenced it in her hymn.
Stanza three stresses that one should die to “sin and self” by “simply taking life and rest, and joy and peace” in Jesus. Stanza four is a personal witness by the author that she is “so glad I learned to trust thee.” The final stanza concludes with a fleeting eschatological reference, “thou art with me, wilt be with me to the end.” Though this reference to heaven is not as pronounced as one would often find in similar gospel hymns of this era, especially in Fanny Crosby. Referencing heaven in some way is virtually obligatory in this theological context.
The refrain establishes the Jesus mantra, singing his name five times, the last strengthened by adding the qualifying, “precious Jesus.” Though the singer has “proved him o’er and o’er,” the prayer is for “grace to trust him more.”
C. Michael Hawn is University Distinguished Professor of Church Music, Perkins School of Theology, SMU.
Attribution: Photo (The old red books or red worship songbooks in church) courtesy of Wirestock at: https://www.freepik.com/ijeab
hahahahahahahahaha... i need to see this every time i log into my blog.. LOOOOL
Yasssss...... here.. :)) cant find the original version though.... :( this one by Lindsey Novitske
Isaiah 43:19
Eterera wone ũndũ ũngĩ mwerũ ũrĩa ngwĩka,
O na rĩu nĩũratuĩka, na nĩũkũhota kũwona!
Atĩrĩĩrĩ, nĩ ngũthondeka barabara
ĩtwĩkanĩrie kũu werũinĩ
na ndũme njũũĩ igĩe kuo.
hahahahahaha..omg i totally fell in lovve with this...society is so condescending! society is a bitch.
Shalom.
🌸 May affirmations 🌸
🌿 My life is flowing in the right direction
🌿 I am surrounded by love and kindness
🌿 I am filled with inspiration and creativity
🌿 My heart and mind are in harmony
🌿 I fuel my mind with positive thoughts
🌿 I am balanced, grounded and energized
🌿 I attract abundance to every area of my life
🌿 Everything is happening for my highest good
Dear Jesus, Please take this Wheel....
hahahahaa.. this is so common in my city its not even funny anymore...
(Disclaimer: These questions are very personal and may touch on sensitive subjects; you may want to look over them before reblogging. You can strike out or totally delete questions you don’t want to deal with.)
Who hurt you the most?
Who have you hurt the most?
Who do you miss the most?
Who do you want out of your life the most?
Who had the biggest positive impact on you?
Who had the biggest negative impact on you?
Who do you wish you could be honest with?
Who have you harbored (any kind of!) secret feelings towards?
Who would the world be better off without?
Who do you wish you’d treated differently?
What was the worst day of your life?
What’s your greatest fear?
What’s your biggest insecurity?
What’s your biggest regret?
Describe your ideal world.
Describe your personal hell.
What’s a hopeless dream you’re still holding on to?
What’s the most embarrassed you’ve ever been?
What’s the angriest you’ve ever been?
What’s the saddest you’ve ever been?
What’s the most scared you’ve ever been?
What’s the most hopeless you’ve ever felt?
What’s the most frantic you’ve ever felt?
What’s the bravest you’ve ever felt?
What’s the best case scenario for your future?
What’s the worst case scenario for you future?
What’s the most physical pain you’ve ever felt?
What’s the most emotional pain you’ve ever felt?
Describe a time you felt like a hypocrite.
Describe a time you felt like a traitor.
Describe a time you felt like a hero.
Describe a time you felt inhuman.
Describe a time you felt like a failure.
What’s the worst thing you’ve ever done?
What are you proudest of?
What’s your relationship with your family like?
What’s your relationship with religion like?
Talk about someone you’ve lost.
Talk about someone who abandoned you.
Talk about a desire you have that scares you.
What’s something you wish you were capable of?
What’s something you’re afraid that you’re capable of?
Describe the kind of life you wish you’d been born into.
Describe your worst heartbreak.
Describe your worst disappointment.
Have you ever taken a fall for someone?
Have you ever forced or let someone take a fall for you?
Have you ever done serious physical harm to someone?
Have you ever done serious emotional harm to someone?
Have you ever self-harmed?
Have you ever attempted suicide?
Have you ever stolen something?
Have you ever cheated on someone?
Have you ever been cheated on?
Have you ever taken revenge on someone?
Have you ever seriously considered killing somone?
Have you ever betrayed someone who trusted you?
Have you ever experienced something supernatural or unexplainable?