One of the many hymnists from whom we could take an
entire year of devotions would be Isaac Watts.
He is known as the Father of English Hymnody. By the time he was in his early twenties he
had written an entire hymnal. One of
those hymns, “Sin, Like a Venomous Disease”, relates to the encounter of Jesus
with the mad man of the Gadarenes found in Mark 5. It is an encounter of great grace both on the
part of Jesus and also His disciples.
The third stanza of Watts’ hymn gives us a picture into
our own nature bound up in the demon possessed man. “Madness by nature reigns
within, the passions burn and rage, till God’s own Son, with skill divine, the
inward fire assuage.” As lost people we
are always casting about for something to give us peace within. The number of seminars given for that purpose
and the amount of money spent on them reflects the great desire of mankind for
inner peace. That was the problem of the
mad man of the Gadarenes. All the self
help books, societal gimmicks and legal restraints placed upon him had done
nothing to alter the inner turmoil he had.
He had demons within and only Jesus could cast them out.
In Watts’ sixth stanza (yes, they used to sing hymns
with many more stanzas than that) he describes both the problem and the
cure. “The man possessed among the tombs
cuts his own flesh, and cries; he foams and raves, till Jesus comes, and the foul spirit flies.” Then what happened? He sat down at the feet of Jesus and listened to Him preach. There is a great lesson for us all. When we are in our right mind we will sit at the feet of Jesus and learn from Him.
cuts his own flesh, and cries; he foams and raves, till Jesus comes, and the foul spirit flies.” Then what happened? He sat down at the feet of Jesus and listened to Him preach. There is a great lesson for us all. When we are in our right mind we will sit at the feet of Jesus and learn from Him.
But the grace in this story was not just demonstrated by
Jesus with His healing of this needy man.
Grace was also demonstrated by His disciples. The man must certainly have terrified them
when they first encountered him. He was
violent, scarred, naked and raving. But
we find him sitting with THEM after he was cured. They graciously accepted him into their
circle. There was no shunning him for
his past. How much we need that grace in
our churches today. We don’t have to
elevate them to leadership right away, but we must welcome them as a child of
God to share His witness and the blessings of His sacraments. That was a grace they had learned and we need
to apply it, too.
The Friday Benediction
Until Monday, my friends, may the
good God envelop you with His grace; may you prove the common confession of
faith, “I believe in the holy Christian church and in the fellowship of the
saints”, and may you be enriched with joy and hope as you exercise that
confession this weekend. Amen
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