By Barnabas Piper
Does your soul ever sing? That phrase sounds a bit odd. We sing in the car when a favorite tune comes on. We sing the national anthem at sporting events. We sing in church (sometimes). We say that good news is music to our ears and the sound of bacon frying is sweet music too. But do our souls sing?
That’s the refrain of “How Great Thou Art”— “Then sings my soul…”
But what does that mean?
My guess is that each of us knows what it means even if it is not the phrase we’ve used. Maybe we’ve never put words to the experience of the soaring, lifting, and filling of the soul—to the passion and joy that sometimes wells up in us— or maybe we can’t put words to it. But each verse of this hymn paints a picture of those things that might make a soul sing.
Verse one looks at the cosmos, the whole universe. It sees the power and bigness and majesty of God’s creation expanding beyond our sight, bigger than our comprehension. I think about lying in a canoe at night in the Boundary Waters of Northern Minnesota, staring at a sky so full of stars that it’s nearly as bright as the dawn. That makes my soul sing.
Verse two focuses in on the tangible creation—the sounds of birds and beautiful mountain views. I think of climbing House Mountain in East Tennessee, scrambling over boulders and pulling myself up on saplings and over fallen trees so that I could step onto a rocky outcrop and see the view of the valley below. The breeze cooled me and the quiet was so still that I could hear my soul sing then too.
While those verses offer hints of what it is that fills our soul, verses 3 and 4 dive deep into what the song of our souls really is. Yes, God created a majestic beautiful world that makes us feel and yearn, but we don’t find fullness in that. He did something more. He sent His Son to take our sins from us, to suffer and die on our behalf, to bear the burden we could not bear. Indeed, “I scarce can take it in.”
But that is not all.
The final glorious stanza of the hymn reveals the final glorious stanza of God’s mission – Christ shall come and will be greeted with shouts of praise. We will “bow in humble adoration” because His glory will be so great. Wrongs will be made right. Sin and pain will be abolished. There is only one response to this: “My God, how great Thou Art!”
What makes your soul sing? Don’t stop at the song of nature, no matter how beautiful it is. Find the truest soul song there is in the work Jesus Christ has done for you.
Written by Barnabas Piper
How Great Thou Art
Carl Gustav Boberg, 1885; Stuart K. Hine, c. 1920
O Lord my God, when I in awesome wonder
Consider all the worlds thy hands have made,
I see the stars, I hear the rolling thunder,
Thy power throughout the universe displayed:
Refrain
Then sings my soul, my Savior God, to thee:
How great thou art! How great thou art!
Then sings my soul, my Savior God, to thee:
How great thou art! How great thou art!
When through the woods and forest glades I wander
And hear the birds sing sweetly in the trees,
When I look down from lofty mountain grandeur,
And hear the brook and feel the gentle breeze:
Refrain
And when I think that God, his Son not sparing,
Sent him to die, I scarce can take it in,
That on the cross, my burden gladly bearing,
He bled and died to take away my sin.
Refrain
When Christ shall come with shout of acclamation
And take me home, what joy shall fill my heart!
Then I shall bow in humble adoration,
And there proclaim, My God, how great thou art!
For an added layer of worship during reading plan, we’ve created a Spotify playlist for Hymns. You can find the complete HRT Hymns Playlist here, or listen to the first track on the player below. Enjoy!
87 thoughts on "How Great Thou Art"
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We can take for granted how great the things around us are, and our souls should be singing for what Jesus has done more than anything else.
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How great he is!
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Try to focus on Jesus as being what my soul sings of the most.
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God showed His greatness by coming to us in Jesus.
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We are made to worship God.
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It is a wondrous thing and it fills us with joy!
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By saying thank you!
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He is great, majestic and awe inspiring.
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In thankfulness.
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He is larger, more majestic and all encompassing than my heart can fathom. In that place of realization, my soul marvels at his being. This makes my focus on the negative shift to the epic power of God that simultaneously acknowledges and overwhelms all things I can experience.
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That God addresses all things. That the wonder of the cosmos he created and manages. Moving down the ladder of the creation you get to humans. Here I see even in our small place in the universe he has created an epic and wonderful plan. Birth, Death, Resurrection, All in Christ Jesus.
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We are small. But when we take the time to stop to enjoy God, we get see and experience his epic goodness.
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I will still my heart. I will take the time to “go to the mountain top” and survey his greatness. I will ponder all the works of his hands and wonder. In two short words; quiet-time and worship.
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I will pray remembering that God is powerful and ever mindful of all my seasons of life. His plans and influence is in the macro and the micro.
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We should be expressing praise at all times.
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God is more than we could ever express in mortal terms.
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Man can sing out to God with their souls. It can be the goosebumps you feel when you’re singing worship, or the sense of appreciation one has when perceiving nature’s beauty, or the joy we sense when we make another human happy. Whatever it is to you, it’s your way of crying out with your soul, “How great thou art!”
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God’s power is awesome. His greatness no one can fathom. He is abundant goodness, pure righteousness, and glorious splendor.
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I will look for ways to allow my soul to sing. I will cry out with every fibre of my soul: “How Great Thou Art!”
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The Gospel is still the only way to have a blessed assurance in life. It’s the promise from God that we will be with Him, in all His splendor, if we proclaim Jesus Christ as our Lord and Savior.
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