O Love That Will Not Let Me Go
written on the evening of Mathesons sisters marriage.
His whole family had went to the wedding and had left him alone.
And he writes of something which had happened to him that caused
immense mental anguish. There is a story of how years before, he
had been engaged until his fiancé learned that he was going
blind, and there was nothing the doctors could do, and she told
him that she could not go through life with a blind man. He went
blind while studying for the ministry, and his sister had been the
one who had taken care of him all these years, but now she is gone.
He had been a brilliant student, some say that if he hadnt
went blind he could have been the leader of the church of Scotland
in his day. He had written a learned work on German theology and
then wrote The Growth of The Spirit of Christianity.
Louis Benson says this was a brilliant book but with some major
mistakes in it. When some critics pointed out the mistakes and charged
him with being an inaccurate student he was heartbroken. One of
his friends wrote, When he saw that for the purposes of
scholarship his blindness was a fatal hindrance, he withdrew from
the field not without pangs, but finally. So he
turned to the pastoral ministry, and the Lord has richly blessed
him, finally bringing him to a church where he regularly preached
to over 1500 people each week. But he was only able to do this because
of the care of his sister and now she was married and gone. Who
will care for him, a blind man? Not only that, but his sisters
marriage brought fresh reminder of his own heartbreak, over his
fiancés refusal to go through life with a
blind man. It is the midst of this circumstance and intense
sadness that the Lord gives him this hymn written he says
in 5 minutes! Looking back over his life, he once wrote that his
was an obstructed life, a circumscribed life
but
a life of quenchless hopefulness, a life which has beaten persistently
against the cage of circumstance, and which even at the time of
abandoned work has said not Good night but Good
morning. How could he maintain quenchless hopefulness
in the midst of such circumstances and trials? His hymn gives us
a clue. I trace the rainbow in the rain, and feel the promise
is not vain The rainbow image is not for him If
the Lord gives you lemons make lemonade but a picture
of the Lords commitment! It is a picture of the battle bow
that appears when the skies are darkening and threaten to open up
and flood the world again in judgment. But then we see that the
battle bow is turned not towards us but toward the Lord Himself!
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