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The center of the Traditional Anglican Communion; adhering to the Holy Bible (KJV) in all matters of Faith and Doctrine, a strict reliance on the Thirty Nine Articles of Religion, The two Sacraments of Baptism and Holy Communion, the Two Creeds, and the Homilies and formularies of the Reformation Church of England.

Verse of the Day

Sunday, June 23, 2024


Sermon Notes for 4th Sunday after Trinity,  23 June 2024 Anno Domini, the Anglican Orthodox Communion Worldwide

 


39 And he spake a parable unto them, Can the blind lead the blind? shall they not both fall into the ditch? Luke 6 36

Luke 6:39


 

            The Lectionary texts for the 4th Sunday after Trinity is all about the mercy, not of man, but of God.

            The Epistle reading from Romans 8:18 informs us of some degree of suffering for all of us. But that suffering is limited to only a small segment of time in the present that cannot compare with the scope of eternity that awaits. We are told of the transient nature of suffering which should ease the pain of our present turmoil.  The epistle tells us of the purpose of suffering in this present world. We can be assured that the suffering of this present time shall pass as the morning fog from the fields as the as the Sun of Righteousness arises with healing in His Wings. Happily, we are also told of the end of all suffering  In that day, every eye shall behold Him and all tears wiped away. 

            The Gospel lesson, discussed in greater detail hereafter, sets an example of mercy for us reflected in that boundless mercy of God toward us. Mercy is a function of wisdom. It is always better to give than receive since the giver has been blessed with the resources to give. The opposing characteristic of mercy is judgment, and I am sure none of us wants to be judged for our deeds and not granted mercy instead.

            As the Collect reveals, we pray for mercy in it largest  measure for that is exactly the amount in which we stand in need. Another reason we pray for mercy, that may escape many, if for the mercy that will guide and r=ule us in our living and future home. Mercy helps us avoid the pits and snares of this world in walking the Straight and Narrow Way to the Gates of Splendor.

            We plea, as blind Bartimaeus, for mercy since we have no merit worthy of salvation in our own right.

            One of God’s greatest gifts to mankind is the gift of sight. He has created our ability to see by His first act of Creation – the blessing of LIGHT. And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters. And God said, Let there be light: and there was light.” Genesis 1:2-3 But the gift of vision is not limited to physical vision – there is a greater vision, by far, that is spiritual. This latter vision is often enhanced when a believer is deprived of his physical sight. We all remember Fanny Crosby who wrote thousands of hymns many of which alluded to seeing her Savior ‘face to face.’

            In developing my expositional sermons, I often attempt to extrude the fullness of each verse of the text in question; however, this text today from the Gospel of St. Luke 6:36-42 is so packed with truth and beauty that I have elected to expound upon the single verse that forms the text for this sermon.

Just as the physical eye can reveal marvelous beauty in God’s Creation, so can the spiritual reveal even greater beauty in that which exists beyond the physical Creation in the realms of our Triune God beyond the Gates of Splendor. In as attempt to explain this beauty, John the Revelator falls short of adequate human vocabulary to describe it. 

            There are often threats and dangers in life that actually reveal a hidden beauty that results by the passing of such threats: 

Through the darkness of the midnight the observer often catches the radiance of a stream of light. It is a meteor. And what is a meteor? From the vast depths of space, flying with tremendous force, come fragments, perhaps of exploded planets, hurtling through space, and ready to strike with tremendous force, as sometimes they have done, destroying anything that stood in their way, and burying themselves deeply in the soil. These meteorites, coming within the limits of the atmosphere, and driven with such terrific speed, are ignited by friction, flash out their brightness amid the gloom of night, and in most instances, unless they are very large, they are entirely consumed before they reach the earth. So, the meteorite becomes a meteor; and the stone flying through the atmosphere, instead of smiting the earth illuminates the sky. And there are troubles, and trials, and dangers which seem sometimes to threaten to crush us, and destroy us, which only light up the heavens with new glory and flash brightness on our pilgrim way. 

The blind eyes of the spirit, however, are far more egregious than those of the physical body. The Light of God is an invisible beam to such blind eyes. “The light of the body is the eye: if therefore thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be full of light. But if thine eye be evil, thy whole body shall be full of darkness. If therefore the light that is in thee be darkness, how great is that darkness!” Matthew 6:22-23 In the case cited above by our Lord Jesus Christ, it is that ‘spiritual blindness to which He makes reference.

Now we consider the audience to whom Christ addresses our selected verse today: in its most profound application, He was addressing the religious leaders of the day whose pretentions of righteousness were based on false and judgmental claims. In a broader application, His counsel applies to us all. We have all been blind to truth. The more we learn and study the dark mysteries of biblical truth, the greater becomes our vision to distinguish truth from the false. In the reverent study of God’s Word, we are assuming a greater garment of the Mind of God and His Will for our lives. Knowing truth, we can readily discern error and falsehood – a decidedly critical characteristic in a day in which evil is called good, and good is called evil. “Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil; that put darkness for light, and light for darkness; that put bitter for sweet, and sweet for bitter!” We see examples of this ‘Woe’ at every turn – in society, in politics, in education, and, regrettable, even in the churches of America. In mainline churches of America, the very abominable sins to which the Scriptures make certain reference are being embraced from the pulpits as being Holy. 

14 But when ye shall see the abomination of desolation, spoken of by Daniel the prophet, standing where it ought not, (let him that readeth understand,) then let them that be in Judæa flee to the mountains.” Mark 13:14 May I suggest that we already see that abomination of Leviticus 18:22 standing in the pulpits and Holy places of American churches – ‘Blind leaders of the blind!’ Have we completely disregarded Holy Scripture as our rule and compass of life? I am afraid that American churches have already fallen into the ditch along with their congregations who blindly follow.

When we encounter Christians who have been deceived by their false prophets and phony churches, what should be our reaction? If we have studied the word of God in love and reverence, and understood His clear will to expose error wherever it raises its ugly tentacles, we must let the blind use our spiritual eyes to expose the Way, the Truth, and the Life.

Each day of our lives is composed of alternating periods of light and darkness. This is a natural blessing in the physical world that allows daily light for labor, and nocturnal shadows for rest and sleep. But the spiritual world in which we, as believers, must fervently desire to abide is forever illuminated by the Light of Christ. We may, from time to time, experience moments of spiritual darkness, however, we must no linger in such periods. If we do, our spiritual eyes will slowly lose their appreciation for the light and we will become as dwellers of the dark world of the lost. 

While a young boy, my father took me to a very special natural wonder near Sweetwater, Tennessee - the Lost Sea. After a descent of two or three hundred feet beneath the surface, we arrived at a very large underground body of water. This was the Lost Sea which had been kept in smothering darkness for centuries, and perhaps, millennia. 

The Lost Sea is America’s largest underground lake and Registered National Landmark. Upon boarding a small glass-bottomed vessel, we were escorted out over the deep of the Sea whose depth has never been able of fathoming. The Sea is teeming with fish that follow the vessel as it navigates the waters. But these fish are quite strange. They are snow white in color and are all blind – not because they have no eyes, but because their scales have grown over the globes of their eyes. The position of the eyes are clearly observed from the bulge the scales form over the eyes. Trout and bass are easily identified in this condition. 

            Since there has been no sunlight on those waters for eons of time, the fish have lost their color and luster. The scales have grown over their eyes because they have lived too long in darkness. They have no need of vision in a dark place.

            I believe those blind fish illustrate the condition of a nation that has known God but, owing to an extended period of darkness, have lost their ability to see. I am afraid our beloved America is thus illustrated. We have allowed the darkness of false teaching and wicked indoctrination to blind our eyes so that we can not longer discern light = we are blinded to truth and reason.

            If those fish could be removed from the Lost Sea and taken to the surface, I do not know if they could ever again be made to see by the skills of the surgeon; however, spiritual blindness is capable of restoration to sight by the resplendent light of the Holy Spirit.

 


 

 


 

Tuesday, June 11, 2024

Remember Me, Hymn Devotion for 11 June 2024 the Anglican Orthodox Communion Worldwide


REMEMBER ME

a Hymn Devotion for 11 June 2024 Anno Domini

the Anglican Orthodox Communion Worldwide


And he said unto Jesus, Lord, remember me when thou comest into thy kingdom. 43 And Jesus said unto him, Verily I say unto thee, To day shalt thou be with me in paradise.”   (Gospel of St. Luke 23:42-43; all scripture quoted is from the King James Bible)

 

          This thoughtful hymn of 1787 is rhetorical in its plea for the Lord to remember us for He never forgets His Elect. The hymn is written from the point of view of the mortal’s plea from a state of faith that needs assurance. The author is Burnham, Richard, b. 1749, d. 1810 – a Baptist minister.

 

          REMEMBER ME

 

1 Jesus, Thou art the sinner's friend,
As such I look to Thee.
Now in the depths of Thy great love,
O Lord, remember me.

 

2 Remember Thy pure word of grace,
Remember Calvary,
Remember all Thy dying groans,
And then remember me.

 

3 Thou wondrous advocate with God,
I yield myself to Thee.
While Thou art sitting on Thy throne,
O Lord, remember me.

 

4 I own I'm guilty, own I'm vile,
Yet Thy salvation's free.
Then, in Thy all abounding grace,
O Lord, remember me.

 

5 Howe'er forsaken or distressed,
Howe'er oppressed I be,
Howe'er afflicted here on earth,
Do Thou remember me.

 

1 Jesus, Thou art the sinner's friend, As such I look to Thee. Now in the depths of Thy great love, O Lord, remember me. Throughout His earthly ministry, our Lord Jesus Christ never treated a sinner with contempt but with compassion. Even as He hung on the cross, His heart went out to the thief who expressed an appeal for remembrance in His Kingdom. If we look in faith to Christ at all, it must be as the sinner’s friend for such He is. He is that friend that “sticketh closer than a brother.” (see Proverbs 18:24) His love is of such depth as to be unfathomable.

2 Remember Thy pure word of grace, Remember Calvary, Remember all Thy dying groans, And then remember mePerhaps equally important that the Lord ‘remember’ us is the fact that we, the suppliant, remember Him – not only in prayers of need, but also of praise and worship. Certainly every word spoken in God’s Holy word is as pure as silver – “The words of the LORD are pure words: as silver tried in a furnace of earth, purified seven times.” (Psalm 12:6) It is true that our Lord remember us on the cross for our names were graven (cut) into the palms of His hands by the iron nails. “Behold, I have graven thee upon the palms of my hands; thy walls are continually before me.” (Isaiah 49:16) That represents a strong remembrance, does it not?

3 Thou wondrous advocate with God, I yield myself to Thee. While Thou art sitting on Thy throne,
O Lord, remember me. 
Our Lord is our ONLY Advocate and High Priest Intercessor for those of us who yield our wills to Him before the Father. “My little children, these things write I unto you, that ye sin not. And if any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous” (1 John 2:1) and as the Creed says, He sits on the right hand of God the Father.

4 I own I'm guilty, own I'm vile, Yet Thy salvation's free. Then, in Thy all abounding grace, O Lord, remember me. The means of being accounted worthy before God is to realize that we are totally unworthy. We are guilty, vile sinners who were dead in trespasses and sins before the power of the Holy Spirit awakened us to our dire situation as lost souls. Yes, to us, His salvation is free, but it cost our Lord the terrible torture and death on the cross, and the Father the excruciating pain of beholding that torture of His only Begotten Son whom He freely gave to redeem us. His grace is so abounding as to absolve us of every sin.

5 Howe'er forsaken or distressed, Howe'er oppressed I be, Howe'er afflicted here on earth, Do Thou remember meIt is at the moments of our greatest distress and affliction that we need the assurance that Christ will remember us through those perils and see us through – and He will! “For God is not unrighteous to forget your work and labour of love, which ye have shewed toward his name, in that ye have ministered to the saints, and do minister.” (Hebrews 6:10) The greater question remains as stated earlier – not that the Lord remember us, but that we remember Him always. He will never forget, but we may forget if our faith waxes uncertain.


 

Sunday, June 9, 2024


 

A CERTAIN MAN, Sermon for 2nd Sunday after Trinity, 9 June 2024 Anno Domini, the Anglican Orthodox Communion Worldwide - 

    by  Bishop Jerry Ogles

 

16 A certain man made a great supper, and bade many: 17 And sent his servant at supper time to say to them that were bidden, Come; for all things are now ready. 18 And they all with one consent began to make excuse. The first said unto him, I have bought a piece of ground, and I must needs go and see it: I pray thee have me excused. 19 And another said, I have bought five yoke of oxen, and I go to prove them: I pray thee have me excused. 20 And another said, I have married a wife, and therefore I cannot come. 21 So that servant came, and shewed his lord these things. Then the master of the house being angry said to his servant, Go out quickly into the streets and lanes of the city, and bring in hither the poor, and the maimed, and the halt, and the blind.

22 And the servant said, Lord, it is done as thou hast commanded, and yet there is room. 23 And the lord said unto the servant, Go out into the highways and hedges, and compel them to come in, that my house may be filled.

24 For I say unto you, That none of those men which were bidden shall taste of my supper.

 

The Collect

2nd Sunday after Trinity

O LORD, who never failest to help and govern those whom thou dost bring up in thy stedfast fear and love; Keep us, we beseech thee, under the protection of thy good providence, and make us to have a perpetual fear and love of thy holy Name; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

 

            The all-pervasive theme of this past Sunday, as well as today’s lectionary text, deals with the love factor both of God and of His people. As our Epistle of 1st Sunday after Trinity proclaims, “BELOVED, let us love one another: for love is of God; and every one that loveth is born of God, and knoweth God.” 1 John 4:7 Love is the one element that  binds all else together in Christ. Without love, we remain dead souls.

            The Collect for today emphasizes that love which is tempered by a fear, not of mortal care, but of disgracing the Holy Name which we bear as Christians in our lives and works. Loving the Name of God means loving all that name represents – fellow believers as well as those who are lost by the wayside of life. Love of God not only bears us up in Holy devotion, but also is our teacher to compel us to know more of the love of God and to share that love abroad. Not only is love our teacher, but also the lesson that it teaches in God’s school of love. We first fear that we will fail to obey Him in love, and once we learn that truth, we do apply that love to our lives, and that love drives out fear.

            Our Epistle reading informs of the necessity of love in the service of God. But our love of God exposes us to the hatred and persecution of the world. The modern hatred of anything dealing with the Name of Jesus Christ stands as monument to that truth. Hatred is the very opposite of love. Hatred seeks to kill and destroy with the same motive of the Serpent of Eden; but love is the one treasure that survives death and which we carry to the Father as emblems of our faith. (see Romans 8:32-39 which clearly points us to that immortality of love). “We know that we have passed from death unto life, because we love the brethren. He that loveth not his brother abideth in death.” 1 John 3:14 The position of that Godly love makes us alive in Christ.

            We also learn from the Epistle that the token of love is sacrifice of our lives. We die daily to self and live for Christ. Christ laid down His life for us, and many. Can we do no less for our brothers and sisters in Christ?  Love unites us in Christ.

            A second token of love is the sacrifice of our possessions. How can we maintain many coats in our closet while our neighbor’s child freezes for lack of apparel? Love, like the Good Samaritan, sacrifices for others.

            A third token of love illustrated in the Epistle is its rewards of confidence toward God and His Presence with us. Loving our brothers and sisters with a burning and inextinguishable love supply magnifies in our hearts the abundant reservoir of love the Father has for us – even in giving His only Begotten son for our Redemption.

            The purpose of the Collect is to gather our hearts upon the same summit for the lessons of the day. Therefore, the Epistle bears out the salient qualities of love while the Gospel provides human and practical examples of the Father’s love for us in preparing all things needful for our well-being in Him. Both of these Sundays after Trinity provide us with examples of the love of God framed in human terms that we who have ears to hear can comprehend.

            A CERTAIN man made a great supper. That CERTAIN man is God the Father, but we cannot grasp the enormity of His love without feeling it in human terms. This CERTAIN man issues an invitation to not a few, but many, to come to His supper. This feast of joy is for as many as will come that are invited. The Church represents those whom the Lord invites, but the entirety of thew Church will not respond to His invitation at such time as He separates the sheep from the goats. The invitation of God assures us of present happiness and future glory. It is a serious invitation whose messenger is the Holy Ghost.

            The invitation issued by this CERTAIN man goes unheeded by those initially invited. They refuse with a multitude of excuses. There are diverse excuses given for refusing to come, but only ONE reason – lack of love for the One who has invited them. This May reflect the Old Testament Church to which Christ came first, but, more and more, it has come represent our modern day churches many of whom have openly embraced perversions and willful sins as acceptable lifestyles. 

            How would we feel if we went to a very great expense in preparing a great supper, yet none invited came? God went to an infinite expense to purchase our place at the Table – His only Begotten Son. How dare any who are called refuse such an exalted invitation! But just as in this case, the Lord tells us: “Many are called, but few chosen.”

            In rejecting those first guest invited, the love for others is not dampened in the heart of the man who issues the invitation. They that are whole need not a physician; but they that are sick.” Luke 5:31 Instead of the wealthy and self-satisfied persons who have refused His invitation, He now invites those for whom the world has little regard – “the poor, and the maimed, and the halt, and the blind.” Luke 5:31 Those having been invited, there is always adequate space for others in the Kingdom of God. So, The call is extended the a general category of those whom the Holy Spirit will draw to the Mercy Seat. Those who formerly were not considered the sons and daughters of Abraham by the flesh are now accounted so by the promise made to Abraham in which they have come to believe. This includes, in the family of God, both Jew and Gentile (who believe) are accounted the Children of Abraham according to faith. These commoners now invited are well-acquainted with hunger and need. They come according that hunger for the love of God represented by His invitation. We must have a hunger for the supper before we can have a taste for it. 

            The above promises are well summarized in Ephesians 2:  “12 That at that time ye were without Christ, being aliens from the commonwealth of Israel, and strangers from the covenants of promise, having no hope, and without God in the world: 13 But now in Christ Jesus ye who sometimes were far off are made nigh by the blood of Christ. 14 For he is our peace, who hath made both one, and hath broken down the middle wall of partition between us; 15 Having abolished in his flesh the enmity, even the law of commandments contained in ordinances; for to make in himself of twain one new man, so making peace;16 And that he might reconcile both unto God in one body by the cross, having slain the enmity thereby: 17 And came and preached peace to you which were afar off, and to them that were nigh. 18 For through him we both have access by one Spirit unto the Father. 19 Now therefore ye are no more strangers and foreigners, but fellow citizens with the saints, and of the household of God; 20 And are built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ himself being the chief corner stone” Ephesians 2:12-20

            You see in these lessons the grand truth that the love of God makes us One in Christ, and in Him is no Death. 

 

 

 

            

 

            

 

Tuesday, June 4, 2024

Hymn Devotion: Stranger of Galilee




STRANGER OF GALILEE, a Hymn Devotion, 4 June 2024 Anno Domini, the Anglican Orthodox Communion Worldwide

 

¶ Now when Jesus had heard that John was cast into prison, he departed into Galilee; 13 And leaving Nazareth, he came and dwelt in Capernaum, which is upon the sea coast, in the borders of Zabulon and Nephthalim: 14 That it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Esaias the prophet, saying, 15 The land of Zabulon, and the land of Nephthalim, by the way of the sea, beyond Jordan, Galilee of the Gentiles; 16 The people which sat in darkness saw great light great light; and to them which sat in the region and shadow of death light is sprung up.

23 ¶ And Jesus went about all Galilee, teaching in theirsynagogues, and preaching the gospel of the kingdom, and healing all manner of sickness and all manner of disease among the people.

Matthew 4:12-16,23

 

            This is a beautifully Illustrative hymn that takes us back to a time when we, too, all walked the shores of placid Galilee and met the most important a stranger in the world, but when we looked up, we saw the face of a Friend who sticks closer than a brother, our Lord, Redeemer, and King.

            This hymn is the composition of Mrs. Mrs. C.H. (Lelia) Morris (1862-1929) who also is the author of more than 1,000 hymns. Blinded at the age of 52, she nonetheless continued to fulfill her calling before God in writing hymns such as ‘Sweeter as the Years Go By.’ The tune, by same author, is “In Fancy I Stood by the Shore One Day.”

STRANGER OF GALILEE

1 In fancy I stood by the shore, one day,
Of the beautiful murm’ring sea;
I saw the great crowds as they thronged the way
Of the Stranger of Galilee;
I saw how the man who was blind from birth,
In a moment was made to see;
The lame was made whole by the matchless skill
Of the Stranger of Galilee.

Refrain 1-3:
And I felt I could love Him forever,
So gracious and tender was He!
I claimed Him that day as my Savior,
This Stranger of Galilee.

 

2 His look of compassion, His words of love,
They shall never forgotten be;
When sin-sick and helpless He saw me there,
This Stranger of Galilee;
He showed me His hand and His riven side,
And He whispered, “It was for thee!”
My burden fell off at the pierced feet
Of the Stranger from Galilee. [Refrain]

 

3 I heard Him speak peace to the angry waves,
Of that turbulent, raging sea;
And lo! at His word are the waters stilled,
This Stranger of Galilee;
A peaceful, a quiet, and holy calm,
Now and ever abides with me;
He holdeth my life in His mighty hands,
This Stranger of Galilee. [Refrain]


4 Come, ye who are driven and tempest-tossed,

And His gracious salvation see;

He’ll quiet life’s storms with His Peace, be still!

This Stranger of Galilee;

He bids me to go and the story tell—

What He ever to you will be,

If only you let Him with you abide,

This Stranger of Galilee.

 

Refrain 4:
Oh, my friend, won’t you love Him forever?
So gracious and tender is He, Accept Him today as your Savior,
This Stranger of Galilee.

1 In fancy I stood by the shore, one day, Of the beautiful murm’ring sea; I saw the great crowds as they thronged the way Of the Stranger of Galilee; I saw how the man who was blind from birth, In a moment was made to see; The lame was made whole by the matchless skill Of the Stranger of GalileeThe boundless sea evinces deep feelings of awe and mystery, but also a calmness of peace and tranquility when its waters are smooth not boisterous. The Sea of Galilee was characterized by that tranquility of waters, but was also characterized by mighty storms induced by the class of cold air masses from Mount Hermon with warmer mass of the near-desert landscape of southern plateaus. Such a setting is reflective of the life of the fervent Christian. There is often much weeping during the dark nights of the soul, but surely joy comes at the dawning of the new day. The day cited in this verse was one of peace and calm. It calls to memory the day Jesus walked those shores healing the blind and recovering the legs of the lame. He came as a Stranger, and remained so to those who resisted the tempting urge of the Holy Voice that called them to repentance. But to the few that sought Him for more than physical healing, He did not remain a Stranger.

 2 His look of compassion, His words of love, They shall never forgotten be; When sin-sick and helpless He saw me there, This Stranger of Galilee; He showed me His hand and His riven side, And He whispered, “It was for thee!” My burden fell off at the pierced feet Of the Stranger from Galilee. Many were healed of a host of physical illnesses on the shores of Galilee, but those who recognized their greater affliction of a sin-sick soul left with the imputed innocence of a New Born. For those who came to know that Stranger with a heart knowledge tinged with a commanding love, recognized the marks and emblems of a Redeemer by the marks of His Words and His wounds. 

 3 I heard Him speak peace to the angry waves, Of that turbulent, raging sea; And lo! at His word are the waters stilled,
This Stranger of Galilee; A peaceful, a quiet, and holy calm, Now and ever abides with me; He holdeth my life in His mighty hands, This Stranger of Galilee
. Though that Sea was calm during His time of healing and preaching, as is often the case, the stormy seas arise following those proclamations of truth and works of mercy. It is ever true in the lives of the Christian. We have joyful moments of our high mountain sojourns in prayer and worship but, comes the darkness of the sea and sky, we must descend and work out our appointed roles as servants in the household of God. When the gales and billows overwhelm, He will hold us up and calm the storm.

4 Come, ye who are driven and tempest-tossed, And His gracious salvation see; He’ll quiet life’s storms with His Peace, 

be still! This Stranger of Galilee; He bids me to go and the story tell—What He ever to you will be, If only you let Him with you abide, This Stranger of Galilee. He calms the seas of life by the omnipotent power of His Word. He only speaks, and the storms subside completely. But we must be on the stormy seas with Him if He is to calm our storms. There is no perishing when we are in and with Christ. When the dark storms roll, we do not go to Him – He comes to us walking on the calming sea. He will be with those always whom the Father has placed in His strong hand. The others disavow to their everlasting peril.

 This hymn has two separate refrains – the first for verse 1-3, and the second for the fourth verse:

 

Refrain 1-3:

And I felt I could love Him forever, So gracious and tender was He! I claimed Him that day as my Savior, This Stranger of Galilee.The seal that grants assurance of salvation is that of love.  Our love is overwhelming and cannot be denied in our walk of life. It is the one quality that enables us to obey His Commandments.  It is also a comfort to know we are called and chosen ere we could ever claim Him as Savior.

 

Refrain 4:

Oh, my friend, won’t you love Him forever? So gracious and tender is He, Accept Him today as your Savior, This Stranger of Galilee. No converted Christian departs Christ as a Stranger, but as a Friend.  He is our great brother, Father, King, and Redeemer. How could we not love Him with all our being? Don’t be a stranger to Him, or He will remain a Stranger to you.