Suggested Hymns from HymnSite.com

Second Sunday after Pentecost

Year C: Proper 7(12)

Unifying Theme:
We are one in Christ, who rules in strength.
He quietly assures His people,
for whom He holds a rich inheritance.

Scripture Theme Hymns
1 Kings 19:1-4, (5-7), 8-15a
or
Isaiah 65:1-9
God's assurance given in a gentle, quiet voice
--or--
The inheritance given to God's chosen
126: Sing Praise to God Who Reigns Above
369: Blessed Assurance
377: It Is Well with My Soul
Psalms 42 and 43
or
Psalm 22:19-28
Our deep need for God
--or--
The Lord Rules!
130: God Will Take Care of You
142: If Thou Shalt But Suffer God to Guide Thee
731: Glorious Things of Thee Are Spoken
Galatians 3:23-39 One in Christ! 559: Christ Is Made the Sure Foundation
575: Onward, Christian Soldiers
Luke 8:26-39 Christ confronts Legion 73: O Worship the King
525: We'll Understand It Better By and By

Featured Hymn
Softly and Tenderly Jesus Is Calling

Hymn #348
Words and Music by Will L. Thompson
Tune Name: THOMPSON

Our God is indeed a great God! Creator, ruler, comforter, protector. The scripture passages for this week focus on many attributes of God the Father and God the Son. We, His creatures, have such a great need for God in so many ways. To make sense of the world around us, we, like the Psalmist, need God's rule. For safety from the powers and principalities of the air, we, like the man possessed, need God's protection. For comfort in times of despair, we, like Elijah, need God's tender assurance. For fullness of life, we, like the children of Israel and the body of Christ in Galatia, need unity through a shared inheritance--an inheritance in God's kingdom!

This week's featured hymn is often associated with the story of the prodigal son. Like the father in that story, this hymn depicts Christ as He waits and watches and welcomes. In Christ, God provided the way of pardon and forgiveness--the way to return home. When we realize how weary we are in our lives of sin, the welcome mat is already there.

The hymn goes beyond the story of the prodigal son, though. In that story, the father never came searching for his son; the father never called for his son; the father just waited. In the words of this hymn, Will L. Thompson caught another aspect of God--the aspect of a savior who comes to us and calls to us and actively brings us home again. It was an active God who sustained Elijah in the wilderness and led him to the mountain of God where the prophet had shelter from enemies and elements; it was an active God who sustained the children of Israel through defeat and captivity, keeping for them a great inheritance; it was an active God who moved the Psalmist to recognize the need for God in our lives and over our lives; it was an active God who confronted demons and cast them out; it was an active God who came to us, both Jew and Gentile, to make us one in the body of Christ.

The hymn carries at least one more important message. It is the same message that Elijah learned. God does not have to shout to be with us. God does not have to shake the earth, scorch with flames, or roar with the wind. God can be with us in a quiet voice in a remote place if we will only listen.

Born in East Liverpool, Ohio, Thompson studied music in the United States and in Germany. He wrote both secular and sacred music. "Softly and Tenderly" was among Thompson's most popular hymns. "Jesus Is All the World to Me" is another of his works, and also appears in the United Methodist Hymnal. D. L. Moody used "Softly and Tenderly" frequently as a hymn of invitation. It is said that from his death bed, Moody whispered to Thompson, "I would rather have written Softly and Tenderly than anything I have been able to do in my whole life." Here are those special words:

1. Softly and tenderly Jesus is calling,
calling for you and for me;
see, on the portals he's waiting and watching,
watching for you and for me.
(Refrain)
2. Why should we tary when Jesus is pleading,
pleading for you and for me?
Why should we linger and heed not his mercies,
mercies for you and for me?
(Refrain)
3. Time is now fleeting, the moments are passing,
passing from you and from me;
shadows are gathering, deathbeds are coming,
coming for you and for me.
(Refrain)
4. O for the wonderful love he has promised,
promised for you and for me!
Though we have sinned, he has mercy and pardon,
pardon for you and for me.
(Refrain)
Refrain:
Come home, come home;
ye who are weary come home;
earnestly, tenderly, Jesus is calling,
calling, O sinner, come home!

May you hear the soft and tender voice of Jesus calling you today and every day.

God bless you--
Lection at HymnSite.com


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Passages suggested are from The Revised Common Lectionary: Consultation on Common Texts (Abingdon Press, 1992) copyright © by the Consultation on Common Texts (CCT), P.O. Box 340003, Room 381, Nashville TN 37203-0003. Reprinted with permission of CCT.