The Streams of Mercy are Still Flowing!

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The Background behind one of my favorite hymns... "Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing"

Born in 1735, seventeen year old Robert Robinson ran the streets of London in gangs, caring not for anything spiritual. He was just a small boy when his dad died. In 18th century England, there was little in the way of a social welfare system and this meant that he had to go to work while still very young. Without a father to guide and steady him, Robert fell in with bad companions.

One day his gang of rowdies harassed a drunken gypsy. Pouring liquor into her, they demanded she tell their fortunes for free. Pointing her finger at Robert she told him he would live to see his children and grandchildren. This struck a tender spot in his heart. “If I’m going to live to see my children and grandchildren,” he thought, “I’ll have to change my way of living. I can’t keep on like I’m going now.”

A few nights later, Robert Robinson, half serious and half in fun, decided to go to a tent meeting to hear the Methodist preacher George Whitefield. To cover his “weak” urge, he suggested that the boys go with him and heckle the gathering. “Let’s go laugh at the deluded Methodists” was his invitation to his gang. Whitefield preached on the text: “O generation of vipers, who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come?” Matthew 3:7. Robert left in dread, under a deep sense that George Whitefield was preaching to him alone.

Finally, at the age of twenty, Robert made peace with God and immediately set out to become a preacher himself. He wrote a letter to George Whitefield and told him that he envied the happiness that he saw on the faces of those people in that tent. Two years later, in 1757, he wrote a hymn which expressed his joy in his new faith: Come Thou Fount of every blessing

Years later Robert did wander away from God. In a spiritually backslidden condition, Robert was traveling in a stage coach one day. His only companion was a young woman unknown to him. In the providence of God, and not realizing who it was she spoke with, the woman quoted Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing, saying what an encouragement it had been to her. Try as he might, Robinson could not get her to change the subject. She asked him what he thought of the hymn she was humming. He responded, “Madam, I am the poor unhappy man who wrote that hymn many years ago, and I would give a thousand worlds, if I had them, to enjoy the feelings I had then.” Gently, she replied, “Sir, the ‘streams of mercy’ are still flowing.” He was deeply touched by that. As a result of the encounter he repented. His fellowship with the Lord was restored through the ministry of his own hymn, and a Christian’s willing witness.

The Streams of Mercy are still flowing
We need to hear this message, beloved of God!

To the one who has felt disconnected… or ashamed… or just “in a rut,” The Streams of Mercy are still flowing!

To a world that is host to enormous amounts of suffering. Suffering due to war caused by Mankind. Suffering due to greed adopted by Mankind. Suffering and grief due to sickness and death. We need to hear that the Streams of Mercy are still flowing!

The Streams of Mercy are still flowing! This is an objective reality that transcends time and place. The streams of mercy flow even when we do not recognize them, see them, or feel the presence of God in our lives. The good news is that our subjective experience, does not overshadow God’s transcendent plan!
 

The Streams of Mercy are still flowing because The Creator of Mercy does not give up on His creation! We see this from Genesis through Revelation… God works throughout scripture to form a people for Himself… to form a family or community… to adopt, cleanse, and redeem that community. As the old song says: “The Love of God is Greater Far than Tongue or Pen could ever Tell! It goes beyond the highest star and reaches to the lowest hell.”

Revelation 22 gives us a beautiful image of these streams of mercy… culminating into a grand river of life! “Then the angel showed me a river with the water of life, clear as crystal, flowing from the throne of God and of the Lamb. It flowed down the center of the main street. On each side of the river grew a tree of life, bearing twelve crops of fruit, with a fresh crop each month. The leaves were used for medicine to heal the nations. No longer will there be a curse upon anything. For the throne of God and of the Lamb will be there, and his servants will worship him. And they will see his face, and his name will be written on their foreheads. And there will be no night there—no need for lamps or sun—for the Lord God will shine on them. And they will reign forever and ever.”

Mercy, grace, and life flow from the source, and that source is not going anywhere… God the Father… God the Son, Jesus Christ! The streams of mercy have become a mighty river of salvation due to the sacrifice of Jesus on the Cross… due to the empty tomb on Easter Sunday! Jesus carried or took our sins upon himself on the cross, reconciling us to God… Jesus conquered death and opened the gates to everlasting life through his resurrection… and the streams came together and became the grand river of life nourishing the Tree of Life!

In this chapter, the fruit of the tree of life is never out of season! No nation or color or language is excluded! Death, the great curse, will be no more! God’s people will exist the way we were created to exist in intimate communion and in full authentic worship. We will experience what it feels like, and what it means, to be God’s treasured possession in a way that we cannot understand now.

And light will shine… this light is the light of full knowledge… this light is the light of full safety… this light is the light of full exposure (nothing hidden)... this light is the light of full life! The Lord God will be our light!

My dear friends, the streams of mercy are still flowing, never ceasing, calling for songs of loudest praise, leading us to find rest and purpose and forgiveness and belonging within the person of work of Jesus, the Messiah and within His Church, taking us to the river of life. Robert Robinson needed to hear that message. This is a message we all need to hear and embrace on a regular basis.

Thanks be to God, Amen!

Ryan Edgecombe
Broadwell Christian Church
Central Presbyterian - Petersburg
*Preached at the Lincoln Railsplitter Festival 2024

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