Weekly Seed of Faith 10/24/2022

Dear Faithful Seed Sowers!
It is my prayer that we are learning to grow in the grace of Christ each day. I have been thinking about the wonderful hymn, “How Great Thou Art.” I encourage you to take a minute and YouTube your favorite version of this song and sing at the top of your lungs. Pause and ponder the powerful lyrics and the deep meaning behind the words.
This is an inspiring hymn of praise and adoration, reminding us of God’s unlimited power and love. Although written in 1886, the hymn has become familiar to congregations everywhere around the world.
It especially became an international favorite after the Billy Graham Evangelistic Team used it in their crusades during the late 1940’s and early 1950’s.
The original text was written by a Swedish pastor, Carl Boberg, in 1886. While visiting a beautiful country estate, Boberg was caught in a sudden thunderstorm. The awesome and violent lightning and thunder quickly ended, leaving clear, brilliant sunshine and the calm, sweet singing of the birds in the trees. Falling on his knees in awe and adoration of Almighty God, the pastor wrote nine stanzas of praise. Swedish congregations began to sing his lines to one of their old folk tunes. The text was later translated into German and Russian and ultimately into English by the Reverend S. K. Hine and his wife, English missionaries to the people of the Ukraine. When war broke out in 1939, it was necessary for the Hines to return to Britain, where Mr. Hine added the fourth stanza to this hymn. These four stanzas by Stuart Hine have since ministered and inspired God’s people worldwide:
O Lord my God, when I in awesome wonder consider all the worlds Thy hands have made, I see the stars, I hear the rolling thunder, Thy pow’r thruout the universe displayed!
When thru the woods and forest glades I wander and hear the birds sing sweetly in the trees, when I look down from lofty mountain grandeur and hear the brook and feel the gentle breeze.
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!
When Christ shall come with shout of acclamation and 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!
Refrain: Then sings my soul, my Savior God, to Thee; how great Thou art, how great Thou art! Then sings my soul, my Savior God, to Thee; how great Thou art, how great Thou art![i]
Worship
The first three verses of Psalm 145 teach us so much about worship. When we think of God and His greatness, what is it that we can give to God? The only thing that we can give to God is our praise — our worship.
In the first three verses are three nearly parallel lines — “I will praise you — I will praise you everyday — I will praise you forever and ever.”
“I will praise” you. Praise is worship; it is acknowledging God to be who God truly is. God is the Sovereign Lord of creation. God is holy, just, righteous, merciful, awesome, and majestic. God is with us forever and ever. Say it with David, “I WILL PRAISE YOU, GOD!”.
What worship is not: worship is not coming to God in order to get things from God. Worship is not confessing our sins or pleading for grace, though these things flow naturally from worship. Worship is simple but so difficult for so many. Worship is acknowledging God to be God. Indeed, it is doing precisely what David does in the remainder of this Psalm.
I will praise you “every day.” David is not going to praise God merely on the Sabbath, though the seventh day (or for us the first day of the week, Sunday) is explicitly set aside for that purpose. Rather, David is going to praise God “every day,” Monday through Sunday. Wow! What a profound statement! Especially in our culture today when so many people are disconnecting from church and worship of God, here is the word of God reminding us to praise God every day. Worship is not just one hour a week. Worship is a 24/7/365 deal. Let’s get on it.
I will praise you “for ever and ever.” “For ever and ever” means more than merely “to the end of my days, until I die.” It means “forever,” indicating David’s belief he would be worshiping God in heaven even after his worship on earth was ended. Fantastic! Forever and ever and ever and ever.
Friends, the Good News for us today is that we will be worshiping God forever and ever–along with the other redeemed saints from all the other ages of world history. Can you only imagine that? Praising God with Peter and Paul and Mary. Praising God with Bonhoeffer. Praising God with Calvin. Praising God with Luther. Praising God with Augustine. Praising God with Mother Teresa.
The “so what” question is right here, right now. “Why don’t I practice worshiping God right now?”
If we were to break down this wonderful Psalm, we would say that David praises God for his greatness (vv. 5–7). David does not stop with praising God for His greatness, David praises God for his grace (vv. 8–13a), his faithfulness (vv. 13b–16), and his righteousness (vv. 17–20).
Here’s your “so what” homework:
- Praise God for His greatness!
- Praise God for His grace!
- Praise God for his faithfulness!
- Praise God for his righteousness!
Yes! Try it right now. Right here as you finish reading this SEED OF FAITH, let that mustard seed of faith grow. Tell God why you think God is great! Tell God about His great grace for you! Tell God about how faithful God has been to you. Thank God for his righteousness. We got this. You can travel to work, school, the grocery store and the mall and thank God for the many beautiful things you see or hear. Thank God for His grace: his glorious riches at Christ’s expense. Wow, you could drive cross country on that one. Look back over your life and thank God for His faithfulness to you. Lastly, praise God for His righteousness. Tell God you want to walk rightly, you want to follow Jesus and you need daily help and strength to do that.
Let’s practice this wonderful advice from David and Psalm 145. And after you are done with this great PRAISE session, play the song and sing along.
HOW GREAT THOU ART. What an opportunity we have to be able to turn our lives into a song of praise.
God loves You and so do I,
Dave
KKLA Seed of Faith Broadcast 10/23/2022
Weekly Seed of Faith 10/15/2022

Yet this I call to mind and therefore I have hope: Because of the Lord’s great love we are not consumed, for his compassions never fail. They are new every morning; great is your faithfulness. I say to myself, “The Lord is my portion; therefore I will wait for him. The Lord is good to those whose hope is in him, to the one who seeks him; it is good to wait quietly for the salvation of the Lord.” Lamentations 3:21-26
Dear Faithful Seed-Sowers,
Do you know the famous hymn, “Great Is Thy Faithfulness?” The verses are familiar to many Christians, it is a well-known hymn written by Thomas O. Chisholm (1866–1960):
Great is Thy faithfulness, O God my Father!
There is no shadow of turning with Thee;
Thou changest not; Thy compassions, they fail not:
As Thou hast been Thou forever wilt be.
Great is Thy faithfulness! Great is Thy faithfulness!
Morning by morning new mercies I see;
All I have needed Thy hand hath provided—
Great is Thy faithfulness, Lord, unto me.
The story of how Chisholm came to write his great hymn reveals a profound truth about God’s faithfulness. Some of our great hymns are written in response to a dramatic spiritual experience. That is not the case with “Great Is Thy Faithfulness”. This hymn was not the product of a single experience but of a lifetime of God’s faithful care. Not long before his death, Chisholm wrote:
“My income has never been large at any time due to impaired health in the earlier years which has followed me on until now. But I must not fail to record here the unfailing faithfulness of a covenant keeping God and that He has given me many wonderful displays of His providing care which have filled me with astonishing gratefulness.”[i]
Great is God’s Faithfulness!
Do you believe that? Have you seen God’s faithfulness? What is faith? What does it mean to be faithful?
I would like for you to take a few moments and read the above passages from Lamentations out loud and read them slowly. Ask the Holy Spirit to speak to you with His Words.
Lamentations was written by an eyewitness of the siege and fall of Jerusalem. Many scholars give Jeremiah credit as the writer. The book has some descriptions of these terrible events. They are fresh and vivid. They bear all the marks of firsthand experience. In all likelihood, Lamentations was written in or near the ruined city itself—if not by Jeremiah himself, then at least by one of his contemporaries. To set the stage so that we can enter the story and then let the story enter into us, Jerusalem has finally fallen around 587 B.C. After a long siege, the city fell to King Nebuchadnezzar. Immediately, the best and brightest citizens were deported to Babylon. The others were left behind in a destroyed and desolate city that had been ransacked and ruined. Are you with me in the story? Are you with the best and brightest in Babylon or are you stuck behind in the ruins of Jerusalem?
Maybe Jeremiah wanted to remind the people that just as their ancestors had to rely on God’s manna to descend new every morning, so even in a dark time of destruction, death and desolation, God’s mercies and compassions were going to be new every morning. Think of that: manna and mercies—new every morning and we can only collect enough for the day because tomorrow—they will again be new. Also notice that the word for compassion is plural. That God has many and varied ways to shower us with His compassions. The word for “great love” or “steadfast love” depending on your translation is one of my favorite Hebrew words — “hesed.”
I remember when my seminary, Hebrew teacher first taught me that word … “hesed.”
It means “loyalty, devotion, fidelity, faithfulness, goodness, graciousness and steadfastness love.”
I drove 125 miles each way to go to seminary. As I drove, I used a special tape recorder to help me memorize my Hebrew and Greek. I listened to my own recordings on a cassette tape which I had talked into. Now friends that is old technology from the mid 1990’s! I went to seminary 4 days a week and worked Friday through Sunday. One Friday early on in seminary, I went to the preschool where my wife was teaching. I wanted to tell her the meaning of “hesed.” When I tried to explain it, I began to cry. The thought of God having a “loyalty, devotion, fidelity, faithfulness, goodness, graciousness and steadfast love” for me and my wife was overwhelming. You know how your brain burns into itself precious memories? I remember well writing the Hebrew word HESED down for Jac and trying to explain what it means. After I was done teaching my preschool teacher/student, I secretly went into her closet where she hung her coat and purse each morning. I wanted her to know that God’s HESED was always with her, even on the days when I wasn’t. I wanted her to have a sign that God’s Hesed was new every morning for her in 1994–just like manna was thousands of years ago for the Jews.
Pause and ponder the “hesed” —- the “loyalty, devotion, fidelity, faithfulness, goodness, graciousness and steadfast love” that God has for you! Friends this “hesed” love — this steadfast love is new every morning. It does not matter how far you have gone or fallen. The prophet Jeremiah says, “Yet this I call to mind and therefore I have hope:” To call to mind in Hebrew means to bring it back — to turn back and recall over and over.
GREAT IS THEY FAITHFULNESS…GREAT IS THY: firmness, steadfastness, fidelity, faith, faithfulness, honesty, responsibility, stability, steadiness, trust, truth. Yep. Can you put yourself into this story and then…Enter in and put this story into you. This is great stuff here.
Jeremiah, the prophet, declared that “the Lord’s loving-kindness indeed never ceases, for His compassion never fails. They are new every morning: great is Thy faithfulness,” (Lam 3:22)
William Carey demonstrated faithfulness when he asked his friend John Williams to pray for him after serving eight years in India with few visible results. He needed encouragement and asked his friend, “Pray for us that we may be faithful to the end.” In the end, William Carey was a faithful witness in India and a great missionary. GREAT IS THY FAITHFULNESS!
Faithfulness means being committed to what God lets us have the chance to do, whether it looks like a big assignment, or a small one. You might be given a big assignment–leave all you know and go be a missionary. Or…you might be given a small assignment, like saying, “Yes” to a church leadership position. Maybe God is asking you to start a small group or work with the youth. One thing I know for sure, big or small–our God is GREAT and Great is His Faithfulness!
Because of the Lord’s great love we are not consumed, for his compassions never fail. They are new every morning; great is your faithfulness. Lamentations 3:22-23
So What?
One tribe of native Americans had a unique practice for training young braves. On the night of a boy’s thirteenth birthday, he was placed in a dense forest to spend the entire night alone. Until then he had never been away from the security of his family and tribe. But on this night he was blindfolded and taken miles away. When he took off the blindfold, he realizes he had been left alone–in the middle of thick woods–by himself. All night long. Every time a twig snapped, he visualized a wild animal ready to pounce. Every time an animal howled, he imagined a wolf leaping out of the darkness. Every time the wind blew, he wondered what more sinister sound it masked. No doubt it was a terrifying night.
After what seemed like an eternity, the first rays of sunlight enter the interior of the forest. Looking around, the boy saw flowers, trees, and the outline of a path. Then, to his utter astonishment, he beheld the figure of a man standing just a few feet away, armed with a bow and arrow. It was the boy’s father. He had been there all night long.
Can you think of any better way for a child to learn how God allows us to face the tests of life? God is always present with us. God’s presence is unseen, but it is more real than life itself.[i]
Friends, we have a heavenly Father who is always watching out for us. GREAT IS HIS FAITHFULNESS!
Your SO WHAT? For this week is to put yourself into God’s story so that God’s story may live in you. Get ready. You are going to be given daily opportunities to live out God’s great HESED: great is thy faithfulness! Enjoy. Be blessed and be a blessing. It’s the only way to live. Ask Jeremiah….and whether you are part of the best and brightest, or whether you’ve been left behind in the ruins–know this: OUR GOD REIGNS and OUR GOD HAS PLANS for YOU! (Jeremiah 29:11) And just like the young warrior, our father watches over us. His compassions for us will never fail. Before I close, in 1985 I started reading 5 psalms a day and a chapter of proverbs; that’s 37 years ago. I’ve shared with you that I write in my bible–and I have notes in my bible on these psalms and proverbs from 35 years ago and from last year. God’s word is new to us every morning–not because we are faithful but because HE is faithful.
I urge you to put the living words of life into your story today and every day. It’s even better than manna!
See You Sunday!
God loves you and so do I,
Pastor Dave
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