God Shed His Grace on Thee



Posted: Tuesday, September 11, 2007

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God shed his grace on thee. Hard to think about that phrase without the melody of “America the Beautiful” going through our heads, isn’t it? Living at the point of our nation’s history when we do, we’d like to think our nation holds a favored place in God’s scheme of things. Well, maybe it does and maybe it doesn’t. I can’t say for sure. History will tell. But I can say for sure we can make our nation have a favored place in God’s scheme of things. All we have to do is learn from history, not the slanted or revisionist mumbo-jumbo that sometimes passes for objective history today, but we can learn from the true, accurate and inspired sacred history of the Bible. Look at a time during the life of God’s people here on earth where all ages would agree

God Shed His Grace on Thee

  1. From altar (1-9)

  2. To everywhere (10-28)

With the reign of King Solomon, we are in the Golden Age of Israel. The hard-scrabble, rags to riches days of David are done. It is time for the next generation to enjoy what their parents have worked so hard for. The Lord appears to Solomon a second time. The first time he had appeared to Solomon was at the start of his reign. Solomon asked for wisdom and the Lord gave it to him. Twenty years later, when Solomon had completed his building projects, the Lord appears again. Here’s the gist of what God told Solomon.

“If you walk before me in integrity of heart and uprightness, as David your father did, and do all I command and observe my decrees and laws, I will establish your royal throne over Israel forever, as I promised David your father. But if you or your sons turn away from me and do not observe the commands and decrees I have given you and go off to serve other gods and worship them, then I will cut off Israel from the land I have given them and will reject this temple I have consecrated for my Name. Israel will then become a byword and an object of ridicule among all peoples (4-7).”

God’s promise to Solomon had strings attached. Solomon was to worship the Lord whole-heartedly, not to serve other gods. So were Solomon’s sons who would reign after him. If they did this, then (and only then) would God continue to let a son of Solomon rule over the nation in Palestine. But if they didn’t live up to their part of the bargain, God would drive them out of the Promised Land and destroy this temple where people were learning about his love and forgiveness.

You know the history as well as I. The glory of Solomon’s rule was destroyed, carried away to pagan cities by conquering armies. The kings of Israel and Judah would turn away from the Lord. They would neglect his laws. Everything they had worked for would be gone. Even what was most sacred, most holy, the Temple itself, would be burned and torn down.

God wanted his grace to shine out from the altar in Jerusalem to everywhere and for most of Solomon’s reign, it did. But it wasn’t automatic. God rewards faithfulness with earthly blessings, most of which do not carry a price tag.

A particularly witty congressional chaplain once opened a session of the Senate with the prayer, “God, bless the deliberations of this Senate and see what you can do with the House of Representatives.”

I can’t daily do anything with the House of Representatives either, and outside of voting and letter writing, neither can you. But there’s something we can do every day to secure the blessings of God’s grace for this country we love so well. We can recognize our lives start at the altar of God and mold our lives to show it.

Do we regularly attend worship services to give praise and glory to God?

Do we bring our children to worship services with us to give praise and glory to God?

Do we look at church for only what we can get out of it or do we view worship for what we can put into it?

Do we regularly pray at home?

Do we regularly lead our family in prayer at home?

Do we regularly talk about our faith at home to our children?

If not, we are not building a stronger America. If not, we are simply “spending the kid’s spiritual inheritance,” like those obnoxious bumper stickers on a huge RV pulling either a big boat or an SUV which proclaim, “Spending the kids’ inheritance.” If not, we are cooperating with those who want to tear this country apart from the outside, only we are doing it from the inside and no earthly government has the power to put us into Guantanamo for what we’re doing to the moral fiber of this nation.

But if we are, or if we resolve today to stop putting bed or boat, weekend getaways or work ahead of worship, then we can be confident that God will continue to shed his grace on this great country of ours through the sacrifices his Christians are willing to make for her safety, the hard work they will put in to continue to build up this country, the compassion they will contribute to shame, if need be, unbelievers into living outwardly just and upright lives at the very least. That much is at stake. Really. When it comes to Christ, we are really either with him or against him. And those who are with him are with him in worship.

God shed his grace on thee, from altar to everywhere. It certainly showed in Solomon’s life, at least up to the point of our text. He transformed Jerusalem, taking a hilltop citadel and turning it into a showcase with Temple and Palace and other governmental buildings. He built up cities in what had, up to that time, been a largely rural countryside. He had literally armies of laborers with a bevy of supervisors. He created foreign trade, entering into a close alliance with King Hiram of Tyre, a long-time friend of both Solomon’s father, King David, and the people of God, not only for the building of the Temple but for an import-export business that resulted a profit of tons of gold. Solomon even enjoyed a long-lived Hollywood marriage to the Pharaoh’s daughter whom he loved with all his heart. Happiness at home, success in the public arena--who says you can’t have it all?

The first Psalm describes the lives of the children of God who experience God’s grace first at the altar and then throughout their lives. “Whatever he does prospers (Psalm 1.3).” Are we refugees, stripped of house and property and everything we owned by the ravages of war, like Luzi Schumacher’s family was when she came into our country fifty years ago? Hardly. A roof over our head, air conditioning, vehicles, entertainment, too much food for our own good. We have family and friends, children and grandchildren and some of us have great-grandchildren. We have or are contributing to society, making life better for those around us, trying to be honest and fair in our dealings with others. No, we aren’t as rich as that Buffet guy who is giving $80 billion dollars away to charities, because “it’s a great way to earn heaven.” And no, we’re not slated for a trip to the French Riviera right after our appearance in the box seats next to the President at this month’s All-Star game. We work hard, but we do have something to show for it. We believe hard and we have even more to show for that—godly children, a clean conscience before our God and a blazing hope of eternal life in heaven. Isn’t that worth more than being Brad Pitt’s next ex-wife?

God shed his grace on thee, on everything you do. It’s not just a wish, not just a prayer, it’s a blessing from the Lord who can do more than we can imagine.

God Shed His Grace on Thee

  1. From altar (1-9)

  2. To everywhere (10-28)

Our country enjoys the blessings of earthly freedom and liberty because previous generations were willing to sacrifice everything to secure it. You and I, as Christians, also enjoy the blessings of spiritual freedom and release from sin, death and the devil because Jesus Christ made the ultimate sacrifice to secure it for us. Those blessings are ours to pass on as well to enjoy. But they are not automatic. We tsk-tsk those who seem to take our country for granted. Don’t let the angels looking down from heaven tsk-tsk our attitude towards God’s spiritual blessings.




Rev. Don Pieper is a minister in the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod. He has devoted his life to sharing the Gospel of Christ to all of Gods people. For more information about the Green Valley Evangelical Lutheran Church visit us at www.gvelc.com or call 702-454-8979 .

Ask for Pastor Don or Pastor Matt.

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