Summer Soul Refresher: Great is thy faithfulness

Over the past few summers, the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association has run a series of spiritual growth articles we call the Summer Soul Refresher. This year, we’re taking a look at five popular hymns sung at Billy Graham Crusades—and how those songs fit into our lives today. This is part 1.

Read:
Part 2: Amazing Grace
Part 3: What a friend we have in Jesus
Part 4: How great thou art
Part 5: Just as I am

Great is Thy faithfulness, O God my Father. 
There is no shadow of turning with Thee. 
Thou changest not, 
Thy compassions they fail not. 
As Thou hast been Thou forever will be.


We’ve all been disappointed. Maybe you’ve even doubted God’s affection toward you or been angry that things aren’t the way they’re supposed to be. When is God going to step up and make it right?

Thomas Chisholm was 27 years old when he penned this hymn. He was a sickly man whose favorite Bible passage is found in Lamentations—the part that ends in “great is thy faithfulness” (KJV).

>> Scroll down to watch a video of this song performed at a Billy Graham Crusade.

Chisholm had plenty of reasons to be discouraged throughout his years of poor health. And yet, this song is a testament to the way God carried him—and carries us—through life’s hard places.

It’s a reminder that we aren’t forgotten. That God is consistent. That He provides “strength for today and bright hope for tomorrow.”

“Time after time,” Billy Graham once said, “the Bible turns our attention to God’s faithfulness and the supernatural life he works in us through the power of the Holy Spirit.”

Faithful
(adj): steadfast in affection and allegiance; loyal

Here’s just a sampling of God’s unwavering devotion found throughout the Bible:

  • Fulfilling promise after promise to people like Abraham and Sarah by not only providing a son to a barren couple but multiplying their descendants as numerous “as the sand that is on the seashore” (Genesis 22:17).
  • Protecting three God-fearing men—Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego—when they were thrown in a fiery furnace for not worshiping an idol set up by the king. They walked out without even a singe on their garments (Daniel 3:8-30).
  • And of course, and most profoundly, His faithfulness in sending the Savior of the world to rescue us from oppressive sin and mend the barrier between us and Him (John 3:16).

>> God is faithful to forgive us for our sins. Read more in this short answer from Billy Graham.

Admittedly, the Almighty’s constant loyalty can slip past our radar and go completely unnoticed. His faithfulness toward us isn’t always expressed in some big, saved-from-the-furnace display, and in our own inward focus, we can miss the many, little ways He stays true.

Composer and author Greg Scheer once said of Chisholm’s famous song: “The hymn reminds us that God doesn’t only work in dramatic or miraculous ways, but also in simple, everyday ways. It also reminds us that Jesus has never failed us in the past, so we have no reason to doubt his faithfulness in the future.”

>> Are you faithful in your commitment to God? Hear more from Billy Graham in this 1984 audio clip from Illinois.

Whether you’re facing disappointment with a job, spouse, child, test results or some other big letdown, don’t let it leave you jaded and cynical toward God. Sometimes difficult situations can cloud the rich blessings in our lives, yet over and over, God pulls through.

Maybe not in the way you think He should, but in His omniscient God kind of way.

All I have needed Thy hand hath provided
Great is Thy faithfulness
Lord unto me.

>> Have a hope that outweighs disappointment. Read more about God’s faithfulness toward us.

Behind the Music

Thomas Chisholm was born in Franklin, Kentucky, in 1866, and—like Billy Graham—spent much of his boyhood on a farm. He wrote 1,220 poems over the course of his life, often sharing them with friends. This particular one inspired by Lamentations was written to a friend who put the words to music.

“Great Is Thy Faithfulness” was published in 1923, but didn’t start rising in popularity until the 1950s. Canadian bass-baritone George Beverly Shea often sang it at Billy Graham Crusades.

Watch CeCe Winans and her mother Delores sing the hymn at a 1996 Minneapolis Crusade: