Friday, February 13, 2015

Hymn of the Month: Rise, My Soul!

At the Breaking of Bread on Sunday, December 30, 2012, Jack Baker asked the assembly to sing this hymn in worship—and worship, it really is!

OUR HEAVENLY TITLE

“Accepted in the Beloved.”—Ephesians i.6.

 Rise, my soul! behold ‘tis Jesus,—
  Jesus fills thy wondering eyes;
See Him now, in glory seated,
  Where thy sins no more can rise.

There, in righteousness transcendent,
  Lo! He doth in heaven appear,
Shows the Blood of His atonement,
  As thy title to be there.

All thy sins were laid upon Him,
  Jesus bore them on the tree;
God, who knew them laid them on Him,
  And, believing, thou art free.

God now brings thee to His dwelling,
  Spreads for thee His feast divine,
Bids thee welcome, ever telling
  What a portion there is thine.

In that circle of God’s favour,
  (Circle of the Father’s love),
All is rest—and rest for ever,—
  All is perfectness above.

Blessed, glorious word “for ever!”
  Yea, “for ever” is the word;
Nothing will the ransom’d sever,
  Nought divide them from the Lord.

Believers Hymn Book #238
J. Denham Smith       

     Joseph Denham Smith was born July 11, 1817, in Romsey, Hampshire, and trusted the Lord in childhood. In fact, his biographer tells us, “At the age of sixteen he first preached the Gospel, and many were thrilled by his lifting up of Christ.” Not many years later he studied at the Dublin Theological Institute and “entered the Congregational ministry in 1840. In 1849 he became pastor of the Congregational Church at Kingstown [now Dunleary], near Dublin.”

     In 1859 a revival began in the North and Smith visited Belfast, Ballymena and other places. He returned to his church in Kingstown and it is reported that there was “a remarkable outburst of spiritual blessing on September 9 in the church at Kingstown, which continued for many months with notable blessing to thousands of souls.” Services were even begun on the ferries running between Kingstown and Holyhead in Wales. Smith then rented the Metropolitan Hall in Dublin and began gospel presentations to which “thousands flocked together in the morning, and remained hour after hour—many without refreshments—until ten and eleven at night.”

     Smith resigned from his church in Kingstown “to take his stand as a servant of the Church at large.” At about this time a united effort was put forth to build a centre for evangelization in Dublin, and Merrion Hall was constructed. In 1863 Smith began a series of services in the new hall. Shortly afterwards, he  visited Paris and Geneva for more gospel work and finally settled in London.

     Smith “preached his last message at Merrion Hall on July 26, 1887... concerning the Blessed Hope of the any-moment return of the Lord for His people.” On March 5, 1889, he passed away in the presence of his wife and family, in Marylebone, London, and was buried in Hampstead Cemetery. Engraved on his memorial stone are two great tributes: “A servant of Jesus Christ” and “A man greatly beloved.”

     A good number of Denham Smith’s works are now available online. The language of the times may seem very flowery to us but it can never disguise Smith’s love for the Lord and his longing for the salvation of his hearers. His poetry, especially in the five hymns we know in the Believers Hymn Book [#57, 118, 157, 238, and 241], seems to distill to us all that is best:

Death and hell cannot appal me,
  Safe in Christ whate’er befall me,
Calmly wait I, till He call me,
  Peace, peace, is mine!

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