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3 Comments

  1. superkitty1
    1 December 2014 @ 9:59 am

    I agree that the answer of the sturdy dreamers was wrong but as a 78 year old Christian for 55 years I can tell you that most new believers do not understand just how totally dependent they must be on the Holy Spirit to empower them to live the Christian life. My first church told me in effect “Now you are saved – go out and be a Christian. Out of love for the Lord I wanted to conquer the world for Him. I did not get good teaching in the churches but more through experience (falling again and again and seeing how the Lord worked in my life to pick me up and get me going again). I can also thank some wonderful teachers and authors and speakers who contributed to my growth as a believer which was anything but orthodox. I was a sturdy dreamer once and I am still – but now I dream of what the Lord will do in my life, not what I will do for Him. It takes time to learn to rest in the Lord and experience the real joy of the Christian life without striving.

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  2. Jin Chul Seo
    16 December 2018 @ 4:51 pm

    Although I agree with what the article is trying to say, that we cannot do anything without Christ, I find a great change in verse 6 from verse 1.

    Especially I think verse 4 and 5 shows us how low we can go without the help of God.

    That is why we need to remember (verse 4) at those times that our righteousness with God is totally dependent on the work and blood of Jesus Christ and none of ours.

    And to believe(verse 5) at the darkest hours, that it is God who command our soul to “Come forth!”(John 11:44) and live.

    On verse 6, our King whispers now. Private and personal. Nowhere to find pride but faith. He, the sturdy fool, who relied on his wisdom and strength is nowhere. His answer is same. “To the death, now and then” but with humble heart. Not because “I can” but because “God can” finish the good work he started in me.

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    • rcottrill
      17 December 2018 @ 10:14 am

      Thanks for your thoughtful comments. I think we are in basic agreement. I just don’t believe the hymn represents the truth of God’s Word with clarity. Both the “sturdy dreamers” of vs. 1 and the “heroic spirits” of vs. 6 are naive and wrong-headed. As the Lord told the disciples later, “Without Me you can do nothing” (Jn. 15:5). As Paul puts it, “Who is sufficient for these things?…Our sufficiency is from God” (II Cor. 2:16; 3:5).

      To each of the situations described in vss. 2-5, the answer is “No, I’m not able, in myself, to deal with such things. Lord, I will need your daily grace to accomplish Your will through me” (cf. II Cor. 12:9). The closest Marlatt comes to what’s required is in the prayer of the refrain, “Remold them [our spirits], make us, like Thee, divine.” But again, that lacks clarity and calls for a fuller explanation. For that reason, this is not a hymn I would use.

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