27 March 1842 A.D. CHURCH OF SCOTLAND: Birth of Rev. George Mattheson, Scottish Hymnwriter—Author of “O Love, that will not let me go…”
27 March 1842 A.D. CHURCH OF SCOTLAND: Birth of Rev. George Mattheson,
Scottish Hymnwriter—Author of “O Love, that will not let me go…”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZiZ9xXoZ1Mk
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JHM3bG6_ZoQ
March 27: 1842
Birth of George Matheson (Trinity Hymnal)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZiZ9xXoZ1Mk
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JHM3bG6_ZoQ
Myers, David T. “March 27: 1842 Birth of George
Mattheson (Trinity Hymnal).” This Day in
Presbyterian History. 27 Mar 2015. http://www.thisday.pcahistory.org/2015/03/march-27-2/. Accessed 27 Mar 2015.
March 27: 1842
Birth of George Matheson (Trinity Hymnal)
The Hymn was a Fruit of
Sufferings
We
all experience it. Suffering, I mean. It can last a short time. It can
last a long time. It might be a disappointment in life. We thought that we
had it all figured out, but then one of those “hard Providences” cames along,
and we are in suffering on account of it. Perhaps it happened to ourselves, to
a spouse, to a child, to a grown loved one, to a friend, and we are in extreme
anguish as a result.
George
Mattheson, the Scottish hymn writer, experienced it one day. It his case, it
came to him on the day of his sister’s marriage in 1882. Everyone one of his
family, including his beloved sister, was staying overnight in Glasgow, apart
from him. Something happened to him which he described as “a most
severe mental suffering.” No one knows exactly what it was. He said that it was
known only to himself, but whatever it was, it overwhelmed his soul.
Sitting
down in a room of his manse, this single pastor, who was born this day on
March 27, 1842, said that the words of this poem was “the quickest bit of work
I ever did in my life.” Further, he acknowledged that “I had the impression of
having it dictated to me by some inward voice than of working it out myself.”
He added that the whole four verse poem was completed in five minutes! Never
once did he retouch or correct the words.
And
if that part of the story is remarkable, three years later, Albert Peace, a
renowned organist, read it. He then sat down before his organ and wrote all the
notes into a hymn. The ink of the first note was hardly dry when he
finished it.
When
we consider that Rev. Mattheson was a famous preacher in two cities of
Scotland, one of them being a 2000 member congregation in the capital city
of the kingdom, we imagine that he had all things going for him. And he did,
but he was also blind, beginning in his 18th year. His three sisters rose to
the occasion, by tutoring him in his studies at the University of Glasgow. One
even learned Hebrew, Greek, and Latin to help him, enabling him to complete his
studies. It was on the occasion of this sister’s marriage that he wrote this
hymn, celebrating the constancy of God’s love.
Found
in the Trinity Hymnal (no. 708), read over its four stanza’s especially if you
find yourself in a time of trouble. In fact, either turn to the number in the
red hymnal or sing it with the familiar tune, as part of our Words to Live By section:
“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.
“O
Light that follow’st all my way, I yield my flick-ring torch to thee; my heart
restores its borrowed ray, that in thy sunshine’s blaze its day may be
brighter, fairer be.
“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
“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 that blossoms red life that shall
endless be.”
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