Hymns of the Faith
“The Sands of
Time are Sinking!”
A Presentation of First Presbyterian Church
With
Dr. Ligon Duncan, Dr. Derek Thomas, and Dr. Bill Wymond
Dr. Wymond:
Good morning! This is “Hymns of the Faith,” brought to you by
Dr.
Duncan: Good morning and thank
you Bill. I’m delighted to be with
you and with Derek for “Hymns of the Faith.”
Good morning, Derek. How are
you?
Dr. Thomas:
I am well.
Dr. Duncan:
We’re going to look at one of my all time favorite hymns.
It comes out of the nineteenth century but it has roots that stretch back
into the seventeenth century. Samuel
Rutherford was one of the great Scottish theologians, sometimes ranked alongside
Thomas Halyburton as the two finest theologians in the history of
Dr. Thomas:
In a place called Anwoth.
Dr. Duncan:
Anwoth, a tiny little parish down near the Solway.
I’ve been to Anwoth on many occasions.
I’ve walked through the ruins of the church, I’ve looked at the place
where his manse was and walked the area.
I’ve been to his gravestone, to his grave, many times.
He’s buried in the cathedral graveyard of Saint Andrews in
Dr. Thomas:
And what is it that we remember most about
Dr. Duncan:
Well, we remember a lot of things about
The tune itself was written apparently in 1834 and then arranged in 1867
and it’s named
Dr. Wymond:
No, it was written for a French hymn or song which said, “O Lord we ask
for Your mercy” and the melody was similar.
It went something like this. [plays tune]
So it’s similar. Just some
variations, but it was written earlier.
And then this gentleman named Edward Rimbault, who was an English
organist, found it in a French hymnal and then adapted it for this.
It was written by a guy who wrote and worked in opera orchestras and it
was arranged by a man who wrote operettas and so on like that.
I’m going to be candid about this tune, I was telling Derek earlier that I think
it is appropriate to a certain extent for the hymn because it’s a sobering
thought to think about how life slips away, the sands of time are sinking and so
on like that, and this is a melancholy tune I think, and the hymn has a lot of
joy in it, and the last part of it brightens up a bit to express the joy and
anticipation of glory where it goes [plays
tune] right there it talks about glory,
glory, glory dwelleth, and so on like that.
But I would love for it to have a lot more joy in it because I think the
overall effect of the words is a joyful one.
Dr. Duncan:
I think you’re right. It’s
interesting that our friend Mark Dever and
Dr. Wymond:
There is a very narrow range to the hymn and very small leaps.
Usually you use larger leaps for more expansive thoughts and smaller
intervals and so on like that when you’re just sort of talking on..
Derek, what were you telling me?
Is this actually sung in
Dr. Thomas:
Yes, but then the Celts have a thing for tunes in minor keys.
I have to say I absolutely love this tune.
It is mournful for sure but not in the dour sense.
I just think it evokes a certain sobriety in singing it.
Dr. Wymond:
It does. It’s actually still
in a major key. It’s not absolutely
minor but it’s minor in its spirit if you know what I mean.
Here’s what it would be in a minor key. [plays tune]
Dr. Duncan:
That’s pulling your Welshness out, isn’t it?
You’ve opened up new vistas for him!
Derek, tell us about Anne Cousin and anything you want to tell us about
Samuel Rutherford. You know Samuel
Rutherford still enjoys, in our circles, considerable popularity.
I suppose it’s his letters more than anything else that we remember.
He wrote a great deal and a friend of ours has been studying
Dr. Thomas:
Right, and I look forward to the day when that becomes more generally
available for sure. He actually did
have some very powerful ideas, and not all of the perhaps acceptable.
In the Westminster Assembly he records a few, very stratospheric thoughts
on the nature of God and the necessity of the atonement which are things still
discussed theoretically in classrooms for sure.
Dr. Duncan:
You’ve recently mentioned a book that he wrote that really got him into
trouble and the book was called Lex Rex
– the Law is King. Which, he wrote
it in 1650 and in 1660 that became a very controversial thing because it was
written against the tyranny of monarchs.
Dr. Thomas:
Right, it was used to other ends in the 1980s here in the States by those
who wanted to advocate a return to Old Testament civil law which was not, I
think, what Samuel Rutherford was arguing for.
I think you have to put it in the context of
he was a Scot – and that means he was anti-English and he was
particularly anti-English kings. And
in that context one needs to read the powerful book,
Lex Rex.
Dr. Duncan:
Well, from the time that Charles I was born, almost, his father King
James the VI of Scotland, who was also King James I of England, schooled him in
the concept of absolute monarchy and of course Charles lost his head over trying
to get that through, but his son would eventually come to the thrown after being
reared in exile and he came to the throne in Scotland first.
And one of the first things he did as king was issue a warrant for the
arrest of Samuel Rutherford because James had taught his son, and his son had
taught James’ grandson, that the proper understanding of the order of things was
Rex Lex – the King is law.
And so
Dr. Thomas:
Which is was.
Dr. Duncan:
Yes, which it was. And when
Charles came to power in
Dr. Thomas:
He’s a theological Braveheart figure.
Dr. Duncan:
Right. He spent a lot of his
life in exile. He was in a tiny
little parish in the southwest of Scotland, near the Solway Firth, a little
parish church called Anwoth, and he was exiled from his congregation and sent
almost to the opposite end of the country in Aberdeen and I’ve never quite been
able to figure out what castle it was that he was sort of quarantined to during
those times but many of his letters were written from Aberdeen to people in
these congregations – quite remarkable conversations.
For instance, there was a local noblewoman named Lady Kenmure who he clearly had
tremendous regard for spiritually and she was married to a less than mature
Christian man, who, although he was able to provide for her many wonderful
things from the standpoint of wordly goods, was not able to give her spiritual
company and as Lady Kenmure had children and lost children at early ages,
Rutherford would correspond with her and give her comfort from God’s Word and
there are some terrifically, tender, pastoral words from him to her and others
in the congregation that are recorded in his letters.
But it’s Anne Cousin who actually put this particular hymn to verse.
Anything you want to tell us about Mrs. Cousin?
Dr. Thomas:
She was the daughter of a minister and I guess he would have been a
minister before the formation of the Free Church in the middle of the nineteenth
century but she would expand that period when a momentous event took place in
Scottish Presbyterianism, once again over the similar issues to Rutherford
himself, that the interference of the state into church life and law.
She’s known, of course, for more than one rendering of hymns and this
versification of Rutherford’s thoughts, Rutherford’s prose - often thought to be
perhaps among the last things that
Dr. Duncan:
You know, I am so bad on my
Dr. Thomas:
I had a notion, and maybe because the hymn itself speaks about death, but
I’ve always thought this represented something
Dr. Duncan:
And I know that this, in it’s original – and Bill you may know – had
something like twenty-one or twenty-two or twenty-three stanzas to it.
It’s long. And I’m under the
impression, and this impression may be entirely wrong, but it was not just drawn
from one source but it was drawn from multiple letters.
Now where they came from I don’t know exactly.
That’s not something I’ve studied closely.
Dr. Thomas:
Now tell us a little about a modern work of –
Dr. Duncan:
Yes, I was mentioning this to you off-air before we came on this morning.
Faith Cook, who is the wife of Paul Cook – I think is his name – who is a
minister in the
Faith has done a lot of books with the Banner of Truth over the years and I’m
not sure whether this is the first one she did, but she wrote a book in which
she put a number of
And again it’s on the premise of whether it was one of the Bonars or someone
else who said it wouldn’t take too much effort to turn
Dr. Wymond:
Isn’t it amazing how these women really deserve a lot of credit because
they’re the poets really here. I was
just reading that the daughter of Mrs. Cousin was talking about her mother
working out the patterns of the lines of the poetry as she was sewing in her
manse there. And I know you’re going
to get to the text, but she called her book of poetry,
The Last Words of Samuel Rutherford.
I was noting that the great Spurgeon used
this hymn at his last service that he preached.
Dr. Duncan:
And you must be right Derek.
This must come from the very end of his life.
That’s why she would have named it that.
You’ll be right about that.
I’ll go back and see if I can find that out some other time.
We don’t have much time so let’s sort of rifle through the text here.
Dr. Thomas:
I guess the metaphor, the sands of time, refers to an egg timer or
something similar in which sand is passing from one bulb to another and time is
passing by.
Dr. Duncan:
Or the pulpit hourglass. You
know, you can see
Dr. Thomas:
Now you’re giving Bill an idea!
Dr. Wymond:
I just assumed that in
Dr. Duncan:
You know I think there very likely would have been an hourglass there.
The preacher could have watched that going down.
Dr. Thomas:
But there was an hour for the sermon!
(laughter)
Dr. Duncan:
That’s right! I believe he
begins to think of life in this metaphor.
But what is it, Derek, that he’s longing for?
He begins to talk about the “summer morn I’ve sighed for.”
What is he talking about longing for?
Dr. Thomas:
Emmanuel’s land and last time I think we were speaking about
Rejoice, Ye Pure in Heart, Edward
Plumptre’s hymn, and with a reference to looking forward to Jerusalem, pilgrims
on their way to Jerusalem. And this
one is to Emmanuel’s land.
Dr. Duncan:
And it’s a very similar metaphor to that of the Negro spirituals that
refer to crossing the
But the focus is not just on the place.
It’s especially on a person in the place.
So in the second stanza we read, “The King there in His beauty without a
veil is seen; it were a well-spent journey though sev’n deaths lay between.”
That’s a beautiful line. It’s
worth it all he was saying, even if he had had to die seven times to see the
King without a veil. “The Lamb with
His fair army doth on
But the focus of the last three stanzas is all on the King.
It’s all on Christ. “O
Christ, He is the fountain, the deep sweet well of love!
The streams of earth I’ve tasted more keep I’ll drink above:
there to an ocean fullness His mercy doth expand” – and don’t you love
that line – “there to an ocean fullness His mercy doth expand, and glory, glory
dwelleth in Emmanuel’s land.”
And then finally the stanza, “The bride
eyes not her garment, but her dear bridegroom’s face” – the metaphor changes
there doesn’t it? Now we’re at a
wedding. And
“I will not gaze at glory, but on the King of grace; not at the crown He
gifteth, but on His pierced hand; the Lamb is all the glory of Emmanuel’s land.”
That’s my favorite line, favorite stanza in the song.
It just points out that it won’t be the gifts that we’re gifted that will
take our breath away. It will be the
Lord Himself.
Dr. Thomas:
Well yes, and unless we get embraced in sentimentality, right at the very
end – “on His pierced hand.” Just a
reminder that the only reason we will get to Emmanuel’s land and see the beauty
of the King is because of the crucifixion of Jesus.
Dr. Duncan:
And it’s a mystery, isn’t it?
Paul makes a lot out of the fact that in the new heavens and in the new earth
that we will have glorified bodies, bodies that are utterly perfected with no
defect. You know I think of some of
the precious
Dr. Thomas:
Yes, it’s so thoroughly Christ-centered in its focus and to a cracking
good tune.
Dr. Duncan:
And that’ll be the last word.
Let’s hear “The Sands of Time Are Sinking.”
The sands of time are sinking,
the dawn of Heaven breaks;
The summer morn I’ve sighed for—the fair, sweet
morn awakes:
Dark, dark hath been the midnight, but dayspring is at hand,
And glory, glory dwelleth in Immanuel’s land.
The King there in His beauty,
without a veil is seen:
It were a well spent journey, though seven deaths lay
between:
The Lamb with His fair army, doth on
And
glory—glory dwelleth in Immanuel’s land.
O Christ, He is the fountain,
the deep, sweet well of love!
The streams of earth I’ve tasted more deep I’ll
drink above:
There to an ocean fullness His mercy doth expand,
And glory,
glory dwelleth in Immanuel’s land.
The Bride eyes not her garment,
but her dear Bridegroom’s face;
I will not gaze at glory but on my King of
grace.
Not at the crown He giveth but on His pierced hand;
The Lamb is all
the glory of Immanuel’s land.
Dr. Wymond:
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