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  • Singalong Sundays: I Asked the Lord

    • 19 Feb 2012
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    • John Newton Worship hymns singalong sundays
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    My apologies for the hiatus that this "Singalong Sundays" has taken. The Christmas holidays was a busy one, along with a busy time post-Christmas. I've been trying to read more, and thus I have not been able to devote enough time to writing about hymns and worship songs.

    Blogger Justin Taylor recently posted about John Newton and why God almost drove Newton to despair. Taylor posted this old hymn from Newton, titled, "I Asked the Lord". I remembered that I had this on the Indelible Grace live The Hymn Sing album and so I went back listened to the explanation-introduction of the hymn again, as well as the hymn itself. And boy... is it a convicting hymn that honestly addresses human struggles and despair.

    Newton in the preface of the hymnbook, writing of the purpose of it was in part because of his friendship with hymnwriter William Cowper:

    A desire of promoting the faith and comfort of sincere christians, though the principal, was not the only motive to this undertaking. It was likewise intended as a monument, to perpetuate the remembrance of an intimate and endeared friendship [that is, Cowper's friendship]. With this pleasing view I entered upon my part, which would have been smaller than it is, and the book would have appeared much sooner, and in a very different form, if the wise, though mysterious providence of GOD, had not seen fit to cross my wishes. We had not proceeded far upon our proposed plan, before my dear friend was prevented, by a long and affecting indisposition, from affording me any farther assistance. My grief and disappointment were great; I hung my harp upon the willows, and for some time thought myself determined to proceed no farther without him [Cowper].

    Indeed, the path through struggle and despair is through faith in Christ, faith in our Lord that is often accompanied by heartache and tears.

    Listen to Indelible Grace's introduction to this hymn:

    11_Introduction_To_I_Asked_The_Lord_(Kevin_Twit).mp3
    (download)
    Click here to download:
    11_Introduction_To_I_Asked_The_Lord_(Kevin_Twit).mp3 (3.52 MB)

    And here's the hymn itself:

    12_I_Asked_The_Lord_(Live_Feat._Emily_Deloach).mp3
    (download)
    Click here to download:
    12_I_Asked_The_Lord_(Live_Feat._Emily_Deloach).mp3 (8.24 MB)

     

    I Asked the Lord

    John Newton.
    Olney Hymns, Hymn 36, Prayer answered by crosses.
    Lead Sheet / Chord Chart

    1. I asked the Lord that I might grow
    In faith and love and every grace
    Might more of His salvation know
    And seek more earnestly His face

    2. Twas He who taught me thus to pray
    And He I trust has answered prayer
    But it has been in such a way
    As almost drove me to despair

    3. I hoped that in some favored hour
    At once He'd answer my request
    And by His love's constraining power
    Subdue my sins and give me rest

    4. Instead of this He made me feel
    The hidden evils of my heart
    And let the angry powers of Hell
    Assault my soul in every part

    5. Yea more with His own hand He seemed
    Intent to aggravate my woe
    Crossed all the fair designs I schemed,
    Cast out my feelings, laid me low *

    6. Lord why is this, I trembling cried
    Wilt Thou pursue thy worm to death?
    "Tis in this way" The Lord replied
    "I answer prayer for grace and faith"

    7. "These inward trials I employ
    From self and pride to set thee free
    And break thy schemes of earthly joy
    That thou mayest seek thy all in me,
    That thou mayest seek thy all in me."

    *The last line of the original verse 5 reads, "Blasted my gourds, and laid me low." I reckon most of us do not understand the old English of God blasting my gourds, so the edit into "Cast out my feelings, laid me low" is helpful.

     

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  • Singalong Sundays: You Are My Treasure

    • 18 Dec 2011
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    • Matt Hammitt Worship singalong sundays
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    Our hope for you is unshaken, for we know that as you share in our sufferings, you will also share in our comfort. (2 Corinthians 1:7 ESV)

    This week's Singalong Sunday song is for those whose faith may be being refined through fire. It's a song that goes right at the heart of where our treasure is--where our heart is. Matt Hammitt's own experience of life's difficulties is a reminder that we are not alone with our struggles. There are other brothers (and sisters) in Christ around the world who share in our similar sufferings.

    As difficult as those trials may be, we must remind ourselves of God's faithfulness in times of difficulties. That's it; that is all; that's the key. Persevere, my dear friends in the faith, and the Lord shall preserve you.

     

    You Are My Treasure

    Performed by Matt Hammitt (Album: Every Tear Falling).
    Words and Music by Jason Ingram, Matt Hammitt.

    1-05_You_Are_My_Treasure.m4a
    (download)
    Click here to download:
    1-05_You_Are_My_Treasure.m4a (10.49 MB)

    Oh, I have a hope 
    I have a treasure
    I have found the place
    Where I have no need
    For my earthly posessions 
    And my worries just fade away

    And when sickness and death are at my door
    Trying to steal from me
    Oh, they cannot take what I've already laid down
    At Jesus' feet

    ** You are my treasure; Your love lasts forever

    And I have a peace
    That I don't understand
    When I know where I stand with you
    And I already have everything that I need
    And You're all that I have to lose

    All my hope
    All my hope
    All my hope is You

    Copyright © 2011 Birdwing Music.

    -

    Lead sheet below:

    Read the rest of this post »

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  • Singalong Sundays: I Need Thee Every Hour

    • 11 Dec 2011
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    This week's Singalong Sunday features a hymn that address an issue that Christians both young and old struggle with.

    And that issue is "need". How often do you need the Lord? Do you need him when your job is going well? Or do you only need him when you tireless try to find a job? Do you need the Lord when you're healthy? Or do you only need him when you are desperately in need of physical healing?

    Through good times and bad, sickness and health, trial or temptation, we are reminded by this hymn that, I Need Thee Every Hour.

    Our need for Christ and his gracious hand upon us should be daily, weekly, consistently. Maybe our New Year's resolution should be about desperately depending on God during our normal days. Jerry Bridges described this discipline of grace when he aptly wrote, “Our worst days are never so bad that you are beyond the reach of God's grace. And your best days are never so good that you are beyond the need of God's grace.”

    May we grow in our need of God's grace, this hour and every hour of our lives.

    I Need Thee Every Hour
    Words by Annie Hawks; alt. by Kevin Twit; music by Kevin Twit.
    Performed by Indelible Grace feat. Sarah Catherine Brooks Wheeler. 
     Chords | Lead Sheet

    14_I_Need_Thee_Every_Hour_(Live_Feat._Sarah_Catherine_Brooks_Wheeler).mp3
    (download)
    Click here to download:
    14_I_Need_Thee_Every_Hour_(Live_Feat._Sarah_Catherine_Brooks_Wheeler).mp3 (8.69 MB)

    1. I need Thee every hour, most gracious Lord;
    No tender voice like Thine can peace afford.
    I need Thee every hour, stay Thou nearby;
    Temptations lose their power when Thou art nigh.

    Chorus: I need Thee, O I need Thee;
    O I need Thee every hour;
    I need you Lord, O bless me now,
    My Savior, I come to Thee.

    2. I need Thee every hour, in joy or pain;
    Come quickly and abide, or life is vain
    I need Thee every hour, teach me Thy will;
    And Thy rich promises in me fulfill

    (Repeat Chorus)

    3. I need Thee every hour, most Holy One;
    O make me Thine indeed, Thou blessed Son

    (Repeat Chorus)

    Tag: I need Thee every hour,
    I need Thee every hour,
    I need Thee every hour,
    I need Thee every hour.

    ©1998 Kevin Twit Music.

     

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  • Singalong Sundays: Blessed Assurance

    • 5 Dec 2011
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    and since we have a great priest over the house of God, let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith, with our hearts sprinkled clean from an evil conscience and our bodies washed with pure water.

    (Hebrews 10:21-22 ESV)

    This week's Singalong Sunday is from one of my favorite hymn writers, Fanny Crosby.

    The story behind the writing of "Blessed Assurance" is simple, yet interesting:

    One day Miss Crosby was in the home of her friend Mrs. Phoebe Knapp. In the Knapp home was installed what was believed to be the largest pipe organ ever placed in a private dwelling. However, on this particular day Mrs. Knapp called her guest over to the piano to listen to a new melody she had just composed. After playing the tune a few times she asked, 'What do you think the tune says?'

    "Blessed assurance Jesus is mine", answered Fanny Crosby, and then, drawing from her vast storehouse of Scripture knowledge, continued with

    Oh what a foretaste of glory divine
    Heir of salvation, purchase of God
    Born of His Spirit, washed in His blood.

    In a very short time a new sacred song was born with words by Fanny Crosby and music by Phoebe Knapp.

    Although written as far back as 1873, Blessed Assurance still remains a firm favorite with Christians everywhere!

    08_Blessed_Assurance.mp3
    (download)
    Click here to download:
    08_Blessed_Assurance.mp3 (5.82 MB)

    Blessed Assurance

    Lyrics: Frances (Fanny) J. Crosby. Music: Phoe­be P. Knapp.
    Performed by Matt Boswell.

    Sheet Music

    1) Blessed assurance, Jesus is mine!
    Oh, what a foretaste of glory divine!
    Heir of salvation, purchase of God,
    Born of His Spirit, washed in His blood.

    Refrain:

    This is my story, this is my song,
    Praising my Savior all the day long;
    This is my story, this is my song,
    Praising my Savior all the day long.

    2) Perfect submission, perfect delight,
    Visions of rapture now burst on my sight;
    Angels, descending, bring from above
    Echoes of mercy, whispers of love.

    3) Perfect submission, all is at rest,
    I in my Savior am happy and blest,
    Watching and waiting, looking above,
    Filled with His goodness, lost in His love.

     

    (Source: story behind the song)

     

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  • Singalong Sundays:O Love That Will Not Let Me Go

    • 27 Nov 2011
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    This week's Singalong Sunday is a hymn by George Matheson.

    It was written on the evening of Matheson’s sister’s marriage. His whole family had went to the wedding and had left him alone. And he writes of something which had happened to him that caused immense mental anguish. There is a story of how years before, he had been engaged until his fiancé learned that he was going blind, and there was nothing the doctors could do, and she told him that she could not go through life with a blind man.

    He went blind while studying for the ministry, and his sister had been the one who had taken care of him all these years, but now she is gone. He had been a brilliant student, some say that if he hadn’t went blind he could have been the leader of the church of Scotland in his day. He had written a learned work on German theology and then wrote “The Growth of The Spirit of Christianity.” Louis Benson says this was a brilliant book but with some major mistakes in it. When some critics pointed out the mistakes and charged him with being an inaccurate student he was heartbroken. One of his friends wrote, “When he saw that for the purposes of scholarship his blindness was a fatal hindrance, he withdrew from the field – not without pangs, but finally.”

    So he turned to the pastoral ministry, and the Lord has richly blessed him, finally bringing him to a church where he regularly preached to over 1500 people each week. But he was only able to do this because of the care of his sister and now she was married and gone. Who will care for him, a blind man? Not only that, but his sister’s marriage brought fresh reminder of his own heartbreak, over his fiancé’s refusal to “go through life with a blind man.”

    It is the midst of this circumstance and intense sadness that the Lord gives him this hymn – written he says in 5 minutes! Looking back over his life, he once wrote that his was “an obstructed life, a circumscribed life… but a life of quenchless hopefulness, a life which has beaten persistently against the cage of circumstance, and which even at the time of abandoned work has said not “Good night” but “Good morning.” How could he maintain quenchless hopefulness in the midst of such circumstances and trials? His hymn gives us a clue.

    “I trace the rainbow in the rain, and feel the promise is not vain” The rainbow image is not for him “If the Lord gives you lemons make lemonade” but a picture of the Lord’s commitment! It is a picture of the battle bow that appears when the skies are darkening and threaten to open up and flood the world again in judgment. But then we see that the battle bow is turned not towards us – but toward the Lord Himself!

    O Love That Will Not Let Me Go

    Lyrics: George Matheson (1842-1906); Music: Christopher Miner.
    Performed by Indelible Grace feat. Sandra McCracken.

    Chords | Lead Sheet real key; capo key

    17_O_Love_That_Will_Not_Let_Me_Go_(Live_Feat._Sandra_McCracken).mp3
    (download)
    Click here to download:
    17_O_Love_That_Will_Not_Let_Me_Go_(Live_Feat._Sandra_McCracken).mp3 (6.03 MB)

    1. O Love that will 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.

    2. 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.

    3. 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.

    4. 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.

    ©1997 Christopher Miner Music.

     

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    Unashamed preacher of the gospel; unofficial evangelist of all things Apple! Chinese Canadian Calvinist, charismatic with a seatbelt;-) M.Div student @SBTS

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