Sunday, 10 August 2025

Sunday 10th August - the new day

Drawing
The primula outside my window 10/8/25.

 We had two hymns in our zoom church service today that Richard Osman would have called 'bangers' on his 'Richard Osman's House of Games' quiz show on television. He would have been talking about pop songs though.

The first hymn was 'All my hope on God is founded', and the final hymn was 'Great is thy faithfulness'. 

At the end of the old year many people choose a word or phrase for the new year, something aspirational, or affirming, such as 'be strong', or 'shine' or whatever. A few years ago the phrase 'strength for today and bright hope for tomorrow' lodged in my brain, and then became an earworm as I tried to remember where they came from. 'Great is thy faithfulness', of course!

Well, that was back then, and I haven't changed them. The earworm has stood me in good stead.

Ang quoted this verse in her comment on yesterday's post

2 Corinthians 12:9 "My grace is sufficient for you, My strength is made perfect in weakness."

That'll do for me. I'll just hang on to those words when I'm getting overwhelmed or struggling.

Music

The King's Singers. 

You Are the New Day  (follow the link for more information)


Lyrics

You are the new day

You are the new day

I will love you more than me

And more than yesterday

If you can but prove to me

You are the new day

Send the sun in time for dawn

Let the birds all hail the morning

Love of life will urge me say

You are the new day

When I lay me down at night

Knowing we must pay

Thoughts occur that this night might

Stay yesterday

Thoughts that we as humans small

Could slow worlds and end it all

Lie around me where they fall

Before the new day

One more day when time is running out

For everyone

Like a breath I knew would come I reach for

The new day

Hope is my philosophy

Just needs days in which to be

Love of life means hope for me

Borne on a new day

You are the new day




10 comments:

  1. "Sufficient" would be a good #365 word

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  2. I so enjoyed the music this bright, sunny morning that I played it over and over and had a quick journey into the history of the King's Singers. Thank you, Kirsten.

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    1. They clearly love singing together, don't they. I'm glad you enjoyed it so much.

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  3. I'm not a great fan of "Great is thy faithfulness" - I'm not sure why. Perhaps it comes from the time I, together with other members of the CU, went into Winchester Prison to support some prisoners who were getting confirmed. The verse about "gazing on God's splendour, sunlight and meadows" (or something) seemed a bit mean in that situation! I always think of those prisoners when we sing it.

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    1. There's often a 'problem verse' in a hymn... we sang 'O Jesus I have promised' at my confirmation and I find it impossible to sing the words honestly. I've been known to have my fingers crossed behind my back. Ridiculous, I know. The 'honest' version for me is 'O Jesus I have (sort of) promised to serve thee (most of the time) to the end...'.

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    2. Mind you, those prisoners are getting prayers from you every time you sing it!

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  4. I love how those hymn lines and that verse fit so naturally together without you even trying to make the connection. It feels like a gentle reminder that God sometimes plants exactly the words we’ll need later, long before we know we’ll need them.

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    1. Reading and listening to scripture, and hymns, even if not particularly deeply, or spiritually, (that's me!) helps the words to sink in and make connections that reappear when needed.

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