MAY 22ND
TEXT: ROMANS 3:24-26; 1
CORINTHIANS 6:11; EPHESIANS 1:7-9
Memory Verse: “Come
now, let us reason together,” says the Lord, “Though your sins are like
scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though they are red as crimson, they
shall be like wool.” (Isaiah 1:18)
It has been stated that all
religious system can be spelled with just two letters – D O. The gospel of
Christ, however, is spelled with four letters – D O N E! This hymn text,
written by a lay woman named Elvina Hall, speaks pointedly to the basic truth,
which is the very basis of our Christian faith.
Mrs. Hall wrote these words one Sunday
morning while seated in the choir loft of the Monument Street Methodist Church
in Baltimore, Maryland, supposedly listening to the sermon by her pastor, the
Rev. George Schrick. One can imagine a conversation something like this
following the service:
Pastor Schrink,
I must confess that I wasn’t listening too closely to your message this
morning. Because, you see, once you started preaching about how we can really
know God’s love and forgiveness, I began thinking about all that Christ has
already done to provide our salvation. Then these words came to me, and I just
had to get them down on paper. And the only paper I could find at the time was
the flyleaf of this hymnal. SO I scribbled the words on that.
The pastor recalled that the church
organist, John Grape, had just previously given him a copy of a new tune he had
composed, which he had titled “All Grape’s tune fit perfectly with Elvina Hall’s
words scribbled on the flyleaf page of the hymnal. Since its first appearance
in 1874, this hymn has been widely used in churches, especially for the
communion services.
I hear the Saviour say, “Thy
strength indeed is small! Child of weakness, watch and pray; find in me thine
all in all.”
Lord, now indeed I find Thy
pow’r, and Thine alone can change the leper’s spots and melt the heart of
stone.
For nothing good have I whereby
Thy grace to claim – I’ll wash my garments white in the blood of Calv’ry’s
Lamb.
And when before the throne I
stand in Him complete, “Jesus died my soul to save, “ my lips shall repeat.
Chorus:
Jesus paid it all, all to him I owe. Sin had left a crimson stain – He washed
it white as snow.
ACTION
POINT: Breathe a prayer of thanksgiving even now that our eternal standing with
God is dependent only on the redemptive work of Christ. Seek to share this good
news with someone who may be confused about this.
TAKEN FROM “AMAZING GRACE; 366
INSPIRING HYMN STORIES FOR DAILY DEVOTION”
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