Bearing Precious Seed

“Be Thou My Vision”


Listen Later

Only one missionary is honored with a global holiday, and only one is known by his own distinct color of green-St.Patrick, of course, missionary to Ireland. Patrick was born in A.D. 373, along the banks of the River Clyde in what is now called Scotland. His father was a deacon, and his grandfather a priest. When Patrick was about 16, raiders descended on his little town and torched his home. When one of the pirates spotted him in the bushes, he was seized, hauled aboard ship, and taken to Ireland as a slave. There he gave his life to the Lord Jesus. “The Lord opened my mind to an awareness of my unbelief,” he later wrote, “in order that I might remember by transgressions and turn with all my heart to the Lord my God.” Patrick eventually escaped and returned home. His overjoyed family begged him to never leave again. But one night, in a dream reminiscent of Paul’s vision of the Macedonian Man in Acts 16, Patrick saw an Irishman pleading with him to come evangelize Ireland. It wasn’t an easy decision, but Patrick, about 30, returned to his former captors with only one book, the Latin Bible, in his hand. As he evangelized the countryside, multitudes came to listen. The superstitious Druids opposed him and sought his death. But his preaching was powerful, and Patrick became one of the most fruitful evangelists of all time, planting about 200 churches and baptizing 100,000 converts. His work endured, and several centuries later, the Irish church was still producing hymns, prayers, sermons, and song of worship. In the eight century, an unknown poet wrote a prayer asking God to be his Vision, his Wisdom, and his Best Thought by day or night. In 1905, Mary Elizabeth Byrne, a scholar in Dublin, Ireland, translated this ancient Irish poem into English. Another scholar, Eleanor Hull of Manchester, England, took Byrne’s translation and crafted it into verses with rhyme and meter. Shortly thereafter it was set to a traditional Irish fold song, “Slane,” named for an area in Ireland where Patrick reportedly challenged local Druids with the gospel. It is one of our oldest and most beloved hymns even to this day. Be Thou My Vision! The resources used for the podcast include, but not limited to; “How Great Thou Art” written by Robert J. Morgan and Hymnary.org
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Bearing Precious SeedBy New River Baptist Church

  • 5
  • 5
  • 5
  • 5
  • 5

5

9 ratings