Set Seven Meeting
Three – Delighting in God’s Word
Stories and Illustrations
Fanny Crosby
Frances Jane
Crosby was born into a family of strong Puritan ancestry on March 24, 1820. As
a baby, she had an eye infection which an incompetent doctor treated by placing
hot poultices on her red and inflamed eyelids. The infection did clear up, but
the result was that scars formed on the eyes, and the Fanny became blind for
life. A few months later, Fanny's dad became ill and died. Mercy Crosby,
widowed at 21, hired herself out as a maid while Grandmother Eunice Crosby took
care of little Fanny.
Fanny's
grandmother took on the education herself and became the girl's eyes, vividly
describing the physical world. Grandmother's careful teaching helped develop
Fanny's descriptive abilities, she also nurtured Fanny's spirit. She read and
carefully explained the Bible to her, and she always emphasized the importance
of prayer. When Fanny became depressed because she couldn't learn as other
children did, Grandmother taught her to pray to God for knowledge.
A landlady
of the Crosby's also had an important role in Fanny's development. Mrs. Hawley
helped Fanny memorize the Bible, and often the young girl learned five chapters
a week. She knew the Pentateuch, the Gospels, Proverbs, the Song of Solomon,
and many of the Psalms by heart. She developed a memory which often amazed her
friends, but Fanny believed she was no different from others. Her blindness had
simply forced her to develop her memory and her powers of concentration more.
Blindness never produced self-pity in Fanny and she did not look on her
blindness as a terrible thing. At eight years old she composed this little
verse:
Oh, what a
happy child I am, although I cannot see!
I am
resolved that in this world contented I will be!
How many
blessings I enjoy that other people don't!
So weep or
sigh because I'm blind, I cannot - nor I won't.
In 1834
Fanny learned of the New York Institute for the Blind and knew this was the
answer to her prayer for an education. She entered the school when she was
twelve and went on to teach there for twenty-three years. She became somewhat
of a celebrity at the school and was called upon to write poems for almost
every conceivable occasion.
On March 5,
1858, Fanny married Alexander van Alystyne, a former pupil at the Institute and
now taught there as a professor. He was a musician who was considered one of
the finest organists in the New York area. Fanny herself was an excellent
harpist, played the piano, and had a lovely soprano voice. Even as an old woman
(Fanny lived to be 95) Fanny would sit at the piano and play everything from
classical works to hymns to ragtime. Sometimes she even played old hymns in a
jazzed up style.
After her
marriage, Fanny left the Institute, and in a few years she found her true
vocation in writing hymns. She had an agreement with the publishers Bigelow and
Main to write three hymns a week for use in their Sunday school publications.
Sometimes Fanny wrote six or seven hymns a day. Though Fanny could write
complex poetry as well as improvise music of classical structure, her hymns
were aimed at bringing the message of the Gospel to people who would not listen
to preaching. Whenever she wrote a hymn, she prayed God would use it to lead
many souls to Him.
In her own
day, the evangelistic team of Dwight L. Moody and Ira D. Sankey effectively
brought Fanny Crosby's hymns to the masses. Today many of her hymns continue to
draw souls to their Savior for both salvation and comfort: " Blessed
Assurance," "All the Way My Savior Leads Me," "To God Be
the Glory, " "Pass Me Not, O Gentle Savior," " Safe in the
Arms of Jesus," "Rescue the Perishing," "Jesus, Keep Me
Near the Cross," "I Am Thine, O Lord," and many more.
Though her
hymn writing declined in later years, Fanny was active in speaking engagements
and missionary work among America's urban poor almost until the day of her
death in 1915. She sought to bring others to her Savior not only through her
hymns but through her personal life as well. What happened when Fanny died? Perhaps
one of her later hymns tells it best:
When my
lifework is ended and I cross the swelling tide,
When the
bright and glorious morning I shall see,
I shall know
my Redeemer when I reach the other side,
And His
smile will be the first to welcome me.
I shall know
Him, I shall know Him,
And redeemed
by His side I shall stand!
I shall know
Him, I shall know Him
By the print
of the nails in His hand.
Fanny Crosby
was probably the most prolific hymnist in history, writing over 8,000 hymns. As
many as 200 different pen names were given to her works by hymn book publishers
so that the public wouldn't know she wrote so large a number of them. She
produced as many as seven hymns/poems in one day. On several occasions, upon
hearing an unfamiliar hymn sung, she would inquire about the author, and find
it to be one of her own!
If you were
to take fifteen hymnals and stack them one on top of another. Taken all
together, that's about the number of hymns Fanny wrote in her lifetime! Of
course, many of those have been forgotten today, but a large number remain
favorites of Christians all over the world. In her lifetime, Fanny Crosby was
one of the best known women in the United States and a strong Christian whose
legacy of faithfulness to God is exhibited by the hymns that will be sung for
all eternity!
Watch 2 videos of Bibles being
distributed and the rejoicing that accompanied those events!
Sword Drill
Job 23:12
Psalm 119:
92 - 105
Proverbs
30:5
John 8:31
1 Timothy 4:
11 – 15
1 Peter 2:2
Main Concepts
If we want
to strong in the Lord, it is vital that we are daily receiving nourishment from
God’s Word. If we want to be wise it is
vital that we are going directly to the source of wisdom – the Bible.
Reading
God’s Word is not a duty that we should dread, but rather a great blessing and
privilege! The more we get to know the
Lord and His Word, the more we will naturally want to spend time in it.
Delighting
in God’s Word is primarily a decision – not a feeling. The emotions will come, but it begins with a
commitment to read consistently and faithfully.
If we
neglect God’s Word, our appetite for it will diminish. However, the more we spend time in it, the
more our appetite will grow.
“Blessed is
the man that walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly, nor standeth in the way
of sinners, nor sitteth in the seat of the scornful. But his delight is in the law of the Lord;
and in His law doth he meditate day and night.”
Psalm 1:1-2
Activities
Write
testimonies about what you have learned from God’s Word in the past, and how
God has used it in your life…these will be compiled into a Bright Lights
newsletter.
Bible
reading challenge! Spend at least 5
minutes reading in your Bible every day (more if possible!) and mark your
schedule…have your mom or dad be your accountability partner. Bring back your schedule to our next meeting
to get a prize.
No comments:
Post a Comment