Have you ever looked at all the hymns in your hymnal that
deal with the Trinity? How many of them
do we regularly sing? Many of them are
only routinely sung on Trinity Sunday, the Sunday after Pentecost in the spring
or following the offering as we sing the doxology or Gloria Patri. Otherwise
this blessed and gracious truth of God is not emphasized in our churches as
much as it should be.
Recently we looked at God as the Great I AM. Jesus took that name for Himself as well in
John 8 where He told the Jews, “Before Abraham was, I AM”. Later in John 10 Jesus said, “I and the
Father are one.” Another name given to
the Holy Spirit in Scripture is the Spirit of God. The church has proclaimed the teaching of the
Trinity in confessions used each Sunday in many churches, The Apostles’ Creed
and the Nicene Creed. One of the most
ancient hymns of the church is the te
deum, a hymn of praise reflecting the glory and majesty of the Trinity.
What does that have to do with grace? Grace is the blessed and powerful work of the
Trinity to save and preserve His people.
In grace we find the godhead, the Father, Son and Holy Ghost in our
lives. Each day we find power from above
and power within and power alongside us as we walk in our life of grace. The enormity of the Triune God working in our
lives each day should fill us with awe and gratitude and praise.
Praise can be expressed in prayer. Prayer isn’t just a time
to ask God for things. It is a time to
recognize God for who He is and that acknowledgment is praise. Praise can be expressed in obedience. We praise God before the world by living in concert
to His will. Jesus said to let our light
shine before men that they might glorify our Father in heaven.
Praise can also be expressed in song. One version of the te deum is found in an ancient hymn translated by Clarence
Walworth, “Holy God, We Praise Thy Name”.
His fourth stanza reads, “Holy Father, Holy Son, Holy Spirit,
Three we name Thee; while in essence only One, undivided God we claim Thee; And
adoring bend the knee, while we own the mystery.” In the original there were 8 stanzas. The final is our appeal for the help of the
Triune God in our daily life. “Spare Thy people, Lord, we pray, by a thousand
snares surrounded: keep us without sin today, never let us be confounded. Lo, I
put my trust in Thee; never, Lord, abandon me.”
Rejoice and take hope today in the Name of the Triune God.
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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