• “My soul remained in a kind of heavenly elysium. So far as I am capable of making a comparison, I think that what I felt each minute, during the continuance of the whole time, was worth more than all the outward comfort and pleasure, which I had enjoyed in my whole life put together. It was a pure delight, which fed and satisfied the soul. It was peasure, without the least sting, or any interruption. It was a sweetness, which my soul was lost in. It seemed to be all that my feeble frame could sustain, of that fulness of joy, which is felt by those, who behold the face of Christ, and share his love in the heavenly world.” – Sarah Edwards, wife of Jonathan Edwards

Sing Praise to the Lord! – Streams in the Desert 05/05

“When they began to sing and praise, the Lord set ambushments…and they were smitten” (2 Chron. 20:22).

Oh, that we could reason less about our troubles, and sing and praise more! There are thousands of things that we wear as shackles which we might use as instruments with music in them, if we only knew how.

Those men that ponder, and meditate, and weigh the affairs of life, and study the mysterious developments of God’s providence, and wonder why they should be burdened and thwarted and hampered–how different and how much more joyful would be their lives, if, instead of forever indulging in self-revolving and inward thinking, they would take their experiences, day by day, and lift them up, and praise God for them.

We can sing our cares away easier than we can reason them away. Sing in the morning. The birds are the earliest to sing, and birds are more without care than anything else that I know of.Sing at evening. Singing is the last thing that robins do. When they have done their daily work; when they have flown their last flight, and picked up their last morsel of food, then on a topmost twig, they sing one song of praise.

Oh, that we might sing morning and evening, and let song touch song all the way through. –Selected

“Don’t let the song go out of your life
Though it chance sometimes to flow
In a minor strain; it will blend again
With the major tone you know.
“What though shadows rise to obscure life’s skies,
And hide for a time the sun,
The sooner they’ll lift and reveal the rift,
If you let the melody run.
“Don’t let the song go out of your life;
Though the voice may have lost its trill,
Though the tremulous note may die in your throat,
Let it sing in your spirit still.
“Don’t let the song go out of your life;
Let it ring in the soul while here;
And when you go hence, ’twill follow you thence,
And live on in another sphere.”

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3 Responses to Sing Praise to the Lord! - Streams in the Desert 05/05

  • Eileen says:

    Is the author of the poem above known? I have written a song based upon it after seeing the last 4 lines on a plaque embedded in a rock at a Salvation Army location in Honolulu. Please let me know if you do. Thanks, Eileen

    • womenof7 says:

      Hi, the poem seems to have been written by Kate R. Stiles. However the words are different. http://www.archive.org/stream/brightsidelittle00skiniala/brightsidelittle00skiniala_djvu.txt Page 87 God bless.

  • L.B. says:

    The poem has 8 verses. It appears to have different words because it's quoting a different verse.

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  • “Prayer means rushing to the Father as His child. It means asking and receiving, loving and thanking Him” – Basilea Schlink

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Jesus said to her, “I am the resurrection and the life. He who believes in Me, though he may die, he shall live. — John 11:25 (NKJV)

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