If you had to choose a hymn or worship song to describe the goodness of God, what would go at the top of your list?
I would initially think of something to do with creation, maybe dealing with how God provides good things for his creatures. Maybe “Great is thy faithfulness.” Possibly a setting of Psalm 23. Or something about God’s love.
Last year I ordered a copy of A Collection of Hymns for the Use of the People Called Methodists, from the Bicentennial Edition of Wesley’s Works. It is an amazing piece of literature, and everyone who is interested in Wesleyan history and theology should spring for one. The Wesleys put out numerous hymn collections throughout their lifetime, but this is the one that really stuck and became the standard of Wesleyan hymnody.
Near the start of the hymnal, there is a section of introductory hymns categorized as “Describing the Goodness of God”. The first hymn in this section, no. 22, written by Samuel Wesley (father of Charles and John), reads as follows:
Behold the Savior of mankind
Nailed to the shameful tree!
How vast the love that Him inclined
To bleed and die for thee!Hark, how He groans, while nature shakes,
And earth’s strong pillars bend;
The temple’s veil in sunder breaks,
The solid marbles rend.“’Tis done!” The precious ransom’s paid,
“Receive My soul,” He cries!
See where He bows His sacred head!
He bows His head, and dies!But soon He’ll break death’s envious chain,
And in full glory shine:
O Lamb of God! was ever pain,
Was ever love, like Thine?
It seems strange at first, because our inclination is to think that “describing the goodness of God” should mean dwelling on his eternal attributes, his care of creation, or his care of us amidst the trials of life. But Wesley launches right into a description of the cross.
Hymn 23 begins with an even more concrete description of Calvary:
Extended on a cursed tree, Besmeared with dust, and sweat, and blood, See there, the King of glory see! Sinks and expires the Son of God
In hymn 24 we find the opening lines, “Ye that pass by, behold the Man / The Man of griefs, condemned for you!” and in verse two: “See how his back the scourges tear / While to the bloody pillar bound!”
I was moved when I read through this section and realized what Wesley had done. All seventeen hymns in this section are focused on the cross and the atonement. There’s not one that speaks in general terms of God’s goodness. Wesley’s christocentrism is on full display in his ordering of these hymns.
How do we describe God’s goodness? Rather than beginning with an abstract conception of a good God, and then theorizing about what that might mean, we begin at the cross, the climax and centre of God’s self-revelation. We begin, strangely, with Jesus at his most human – suffering, bleeding, and dying for us and for our salvation – even though this is the point in the gospel narrative that most clearly underlines the inadequacies of our preconceived understandings of God and his goodness.
It is sad that many churches today shy away from a focus on the cross, even on Good Friday! People seem concerned that it the crucifixion story is too gruesome, or too depressing. One time I remember someone saying to me that we needed to end the Good Friday service on an “upbeat” note – as if we somehow need to “spin” the Good Friday story into a “positive” thing. The cross doesn’t need spin doctors. It doesn’t need to be turned into something “positive,” and it doesn’t need to somehow be reconciled with a preconceived notion of “goodness.” The cross is God’s demonstration of his goodness. To describe the cross is to describe the goodness of God. The story just needs to be told.
Let’s not rush past the contemplation of the cross this Good Friday.
I give the last word to Charles. This is hymn 27 in the Collection.
O Love divine, what hast thou done!
The immortal God hath died for me!
The Father’s co-eternal Son
Bore all my sins upon the tree.
Th’immortal God for me hath died:
My Lord, my Love, is crucified!Is crucified for me and you,
To bring us rebels back to God.
Believe, believe the record true,
Ye all are bought with Jesus’ blood.
Pardon for all flows from His side:
My Lord, my Love, is crucified!Behold and love, ye that pass by,
The bleeding Prince of life and peace!
Come, sinners, see your Savior die,
And say, “Was ever grief like His?”
Come, feel with me His blood applied:
My Lord, my Love, is crucified!Then let us sit beneath His cross,
And gladly catch the healing stream:
All things for Him account but loss,
And give up all our hearts to Him:
Of nothing think or speak beside,
My Lord, my Love, is crucified!