Hast Thou not bid me love Thee, God and King?
All, all Thine own, soul, heart and strength and mind.
I see Thy cross; there teach my heart to cling:
Oh, let me seek Thee, and, oh, let me find!
Spirit of God, Descend Upon My Heart
By: George Croly, 1780-1860
Listen as you read. This is a lovely piano solo version.
On Tuesday we considered the first two lines of this stanza, and with them the rhetorical question of how God invites us to love Him. We turn our attention today to the clearest reason God gives us to do so, the cross, and conclude with a prayer asking the Spirit to help us seek and find Him. Let’s think about this.
I See the Cross
It is one thing to be able to identify the two lines which intersect and from the cross, it is another thing altogether to discern the instrument of your salvation. Everyone with functional eyes can see the cross in the image above, but only those with eyes of faith can will cherish this emblem of suffering and shame because they understand the transaction that took place there. The Holy God allowed His Son to become sin for us to redeem our lives from His wrath.
But God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us. Romans 5:8 ESV
This is a story with which we become casually familiar. We know it so well, that we can easily become guilty of regarding it with no greater reverence than the ones who hang a gilded, gold version of it around their necks with little care their lives bear no resemblance to the One who changed the course of human history when He gave His life on it. We must to more than just see the cross. How will your life evidence the fact today that you have seen the cross, and understand its significance?
Teach My Heart
When the Spirit has done His work of allowing you to see the cross for what it truly is, then you are in a position to have Him do the next very necessary part of His work, teaching you to cling to it. This is a needful activity to engage in for every believer, holding tightly to the cross. Why? Think of it this way.
When we hold tightly to the cross, we are not able to take hold of other things. Things that actually preoccupy us from clinging to the cross. Things like hurts from the past, habits that eat into our discretionary time and energy, and hang-ups that paralyze us from pursuing health and happiness. The cross delivers us from these things by being a place of healing, discipline, and freedom.
This makes me think of Clingstone peaches. You know, the kind whose flesh clings to the pit of the peach, making it nearly impossible to remove without bruising the peach. We need to be like these peaches. Ever clinging to the cross, forcing any attempts to remove us from its presence to leave us bruised. If we are more like Freestone peaches, the ones where the pit is easily removed from the pit, the smallest things will serve to break us free from the presence and influence of the cross.
So which type of disciple will you be? Clingstone or Freestone. Cling-to-cross or free-from cross. Decide today. That will make it much easier when the hurts, habits and hang-ups come to peel you away from the cross.
But it is not enough to simply cling to the cross either. In a sense that is our position or our standing. We must also be mindful we are in process. Acknowledging I have not arrived, my journey is not complete. My standing is in the cross, but I must work its reality into my daily living by continually seeking the One who was crucified there. How do we seek?
Let Me Seek Thee
Rather than focusing on do’s, let me mention a couple don’ts.
The cross teaches us one of the first lessons in seeking when we deny ourselves. We can not seek God if we are consumed by other things we are desiring for ourselves. Lesson, don’t seek after other things. Are there things that are keeping you from seeking?
Our learning to cling to the cross also promotes seeking in that it helps us to realize that God always has a better plan, even when we have to face pain. This close proximity to Jesus also helps to foster a longing for even more because it eliminates His competitors. Truth be told, He has no real competitors, but there are many things that vie for the affection He deserves. When we systematically remove those things, what remains is a single-hearted devotion that virtually insures success. Based on what? His promise.
You will seek me and find me, when you seek me with all your heart. Jeremiah 29:13 ESV
Let Me Find
If we believe this, then the real issue is removing hindrances to seeking, Deuteronomy 4:29 says “You will find [God] when you seek Him with all your heart and all your soul.” The hymn writer offers a simple prayer. Echo that prayer, “God, let me seek You.”
Spirit, help me to not only see the cross, but cling to it. Help me to seek You and find you by seeking you with all my heart and soul. Remove any hindrances to such single-hearted seeking. In Jesus name. Amen.
Determined Thinking!
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Podcast 6.3 Transcript
Welcome to Thursday Thoughts at Resonant 7, where we reflect on the reality of God and resolve to let it resound in our lives, repeatedly. Let’s think about this.
Hast Thou not bid me love Thee, God and King?
1 John 4:16 ESV
So we have come to know and to believe the love that God has for us. God is love, and whoever abides in love abides in God, and God abides in him.
Rhetorical question. Of course He bids us to love. We know this because He loved us first, then invites us to abide or live in that love so He, and His love, may abide in us. If you know that love, are you living your life responding to it?
All, all Thine own, soul, heart and strength and mind.
Mark 12:30 ESV
And you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength.’
The Great Commandment, or at least the first half of it. Love for God, demonstrated by a love for all the things associated with God, is the command. This is not as easy as it seems becuase other things compete with our affection for God. What is competing for yours?
I see Thy cross; there teach my heart to cling:
Romans 5:8 ESV
But God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.
We cling to the cross because we not only see it, but understand what it represents to us. God first loved us by paying the penalty our sin required. When we truly see the cross, we learn to cling. Ask the Holy Spirit to teach your heart to cling to the cross.
Oh, let me seek Thee, and, oh, let me find!
Jeremiah 29:13 ESV
You will seek me and find me, when you seek me with all your heart.
How can I cling to someone or something I am still seeking to find? I purpose to cling to that which I have understood and known with the hope that this close proximity fosters a longing for even more, for there is always more of God’s love than I have apprehended. Ask the Holy Spirit to call you deeper into that love.
Take a few moments to talk to Jesus about what has come to your mind, or just listen to what He is saying to you, then I will read our text once more.
Hast Thou not bid me love Thee, God and King?
All, all Thine own, soul, heart and strength and mind.
I see Thy cross; there teach my heart to cling:
Oh, let me seek Thee, and, oh, let me find!
Take the mindfulness of God’s presence cultivated in these last few minutes into the next ones and beyond. Until next time, be Resonant.