Born in Hordeland Fylke Norway in 1885, hymn writer Haldor Lillenas, the son of Ole Paulson Lillenas and Anne Marie Jonsdtr Tveita, emigrated to America with his family as a child. They settled first in South Dakota, then moved to Oregon in 1889.
Lillenas, who studied music at the Siegel-Myers
School of Music in Chicago, is said to have written 4,000 hymns, and
supplied songs for many evangelists.
According to one biography online: “In 1900 the family moved again to Roseville, MN, where he worked as a farm laborer and began attending a Lutheran high school at Hawick, MN. He sold a few songs at age 19.
"At age 21 he began writing more songs, encouraged by some earlier ones becoming
popular (“He Set Me Free” was one). His mother died in 1906 and his father
returned to ND, but Lillenas decided to move back to Astoria, OR, to finish a
chemical correspondence course he had been taking. There he found employment in
a chemical factory. He started attending a Lutheran church, but one evening he
heard the song, “Tell mother I’ll be there,” sung at a rescue mission. It made
him decide to commit his life to Christ. An elderly lady who worked there told
him about Jesus and he started working at the mission himself. He was later appointed
leader of the mission and saw many there come to know Christ and felt called to
the Lord’s work.”
Here are some of the lyrics to “He Set Me Free”:
The Comforter divine is dwelling
Within my soul today;
His love to others I am telling
Since Jesus came to stay.
He set me free, He set me free,
I was blind, but hallelujah, now I see!
I shall ne’er forget the day
When He washed my sins away,
And He set, He set me free.
The grace of Jesus hath abounded
For all my sins I see,
Salvation walls have me surrounded,
From sin I am set free.
I found such a wonderful Savior
In Jesus, my Lord and my king!
Undying and true His devotion;
My heart shall his glad praises sing.
Oh, what a wonderful Savior is He!
Constant and true is Jesus.
More than I fancied He ever could be
Is Jesus, my wonderful friend.
Surpassing the love that a mother
May have for the child of her care;
The love of a sister or brother
With His we can never compare.
The pleasures the world could afford me
Are naught to compare with His joy;
The rapture and peace that He gives me,
Earth’s sorrows can never destroy.
Refrain
When sorrows and pain are my portion,
When tears of bereavement must fall,
My Savior, my friend, my companion,
Will comfort and keep through it all.
Refrain
When tempests around me are sweeping,
My pilot and guide He will be;
And safe is my soul in His keeping,
My mighty deliv’rer is He.
*****
The first priority God has in your life is to make you more and more and more, day by day, like His Son. To conform you to the image of His Son; to have Christ formed in you, says Richard Jordan.
In your ups and in your downs, to take that vital thread of that relationship you have with Jesus Christ, that's rooted in the truth of His Word, and authentic living with Him, to little by little have Him transforming your thinking and thus your life.
It's so that there's someone who thinks and talks like Jesus Christ. Then in your life you bring this outrageous attitude of gratitude, thanksgiving and contentment. And in the midst of the injustices of life and the injustices of work, you think like Jesus Christ thinks.
Living out the sufficiency you have in the Lord Jesus Christ takes teachableness. You have to choose to be thankful, focus on what you have in Christ and then step back and look around and ask, "What do I need to learn where I'm at? What does God's Word say about this that I can bring into my circumstances?"
Philippians 4: [11] Not that I speak in respect of want: for I have learned, in whatsoever state I am, therewith to be content.
[12] I know both how to be abased, and I know how to abound: every where and in all things I am instructed both to be full and to be hungry, both to abound and to suffer need.
[13] I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me.
Poverty doesn't have the power to take away contentment. Paul says, "I''ve had more and I've had less. More can't bring contentment, less can't take it away."
We really don't believe that latter one, do we? We really fear the poverty and yet, in the midst of abounding poverty, you can see people with contentment, joy, that people in the midst of luxury are all the day longing for.
(new Bible study tomorrow. I have been dealing with several health issues the past week but I feel like I am now getting back to normal and so thankful to be able to report this)