Saturday, January 18, 2020

My Jesus, I Love Thee


My Jesus, I Love Thee

Complaining about the youth of the day has been the pastime of adults for centuries.

An Egyptian tomb has an inscription from over 6,000 years ago that reads, “We live in a decadent age.  Young people no longer respect their parents.  They are rude and impatient.  They inhabit taverns and have no self-control.”

Martin Luther, late in his life, grumbled, “The young people of today are utterly dissolute and disorderly.” 

“The youth are rebellious, pleasure-seeking, and irresponsible.  They have no respect for their elders,” fumed Plato.  Socrates once said, “Children now love luxury.  They have bad manners, [and] contempt for authority.  They show disrespect for elders, and love chatter.”

We seem to have to be reminded often that we are not necessarily “going to Hell in a handbasket” because of our children.  The Bible is full of youth who stood firm for their Faith: Joseph guarding his purity even at the expense of his own freedom, David who slew a giant with unshakeable faith, Daniel and his three friends who faced tyranny, Mary – the teenaged mother of Jesus.

Charles Spurgeon began preaching to large crowds as a teen.  Isaac Watts wrote some of his most famous hymns before he turned 20 years old. 

In 1999, seventeen-year-old Cassie Bernal gave her life for her faith during the Columbine shooting.  In October, 2006, two sisters, Mirian and Barbara Fisher, ages 13 and 11, asked the gunman in their Pennsylvania Amish school if they could be shot first so the younger students would be spared.  Waves of young people have volunteered for service in the military as a result of the attacks of September 11th, 2001.  If we look, we can see ten examples of our young people stepping up, often in not-so-dramatic fashion, for every bad example which captures our attention.  Don’t let their music styles fool you – there is a great deal of character to be found in the youth of every generation.

In 1862, a sixteen-year-old young man wrote a small song to celebrate his conversion to Christianity.  William Featherston attended a Methodist church in Montreal.  Little is known about how this young man came to faith or even how the song came to be published (it was apparently published without his knowledge).  It’s okay that we don’t know much about him, we just know that his little hymn, the only writing of his that has survived, is an expression of his own undying faith and is a reminder that even our young people can make a lasting difference.  William died at the very young age of 26.

My Jesus, I love Thee; I know Thou art mine.  For Thee all the follies of sin I resign.
My gracious Redeemer, My Savior art Thou.  If ever I loved Thee, My Jesus, ‘tis now.

I love Thee, because Thou hast first loved me.  And purchased my pardon on Calvary’s tree.
I love Thee for wearing the thorns on Thy brow, If ever I loved Thee, My Jesus, ‘tis now.

I’ll love Thee in life, I will love Thee in death.  And praise Thee as long as Thou lendest me breath;
And say when the death dew lies cold on my brow, If ever I loved Thee, My Jesus, ‘tis now.

In mansions of glory and endless delight, I’ll ever adore Thee in heaven so bright.
I’ll sing with the glittering crown on my brow, “If ever I loved Thee, My Jesus, ‘tis now.”

Morgan, Robert J., Then Sings My Soul, Nelson Publishers, 2003.



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