Someone asks ‘What does a blessed life look like?’
Meet Tillit Sydney Teddlie of Texas, whom you might evaluate by how long he
lived – 102 years. Or, you might look at all the songs he wrote – about 130 by the
end of his life, including “When We Meet in Sweet Communion”, which he wrote as
a 37-year old in 1922. (He was only a little over one-third of the way home
then, at the age some of us might say was nearing middle-age!) Or, how about
all the songbooks he compiled – 14 songbooks; or, what about the 61 years he
spent teaching singing schools? What would the 1,000 people whom he reportedly
baptized in his life say if we were able to interview them? Let’s see if we can
discover what Tillit might say was the key, if he were here to answer. Hey
wait, maybe he is here, in a way.
Tillit Teddlie, it’s safe to say, wasn’t busy crunching
numbers and resting on his accomplishments. Tillit’s formula was not to focus
his attention on his own needs and desires. It’s no surprise what he
recommended for finding blessing. In 1922, as he partook of the same meal we
eat today, he inclined his ear, and invites us to follow suit, and listen for
God’s ‘whisper’ (it’s in all three verses).
He’d been engaged in music ministry for about five years (since 1917),
and while we don’t know the particular circumstances of this composition, his
poetry and what we know of his life give us clues about how he felt. First and foremost, he loved being with other
believers (that’s in verse 1), and experiencing the bond of Jesus with others.
God’s payment was ‘matchless’ (v.2), along with the consequent reunion-meal
with mankind that was ‘all surpassing’ (v.3), compared to other events in a
person’s life. These axiomatic principles steered his heart and his actions. It
certainly wasn’t the first time that he had eaten the communion bread or tasted
the grape juice, but he apparently wanted to focus minds on this special part
of a Christian’s devotion that day in 1922. What more needs to be said of this
Texan?
Introducing others to the Lord was a fire in Teddlie that
was never quenched, probably because the source of that blaze was so enduring. He
served in no less than six churches in Texas and one in Memphis, Tennessee,
demonstrating that he was willing to keep moving about to stoke the fire, to keep
it going as a preacher, hymn-writer, and publisher. So it’s not really that
surprising to read that Tillit lived so long. Someone says ‘Was it the Texas
sunshine that kept him alive for 102 years’? Or, was it contacting the blesser,
and coaxing others to do the same? Maybe God just found him too useful to stop
him earlier!
A link to the composer’s obituary: http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=8846104
Brief biography is here: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/bio/t/e/d/teddlie_ts.htm
A more thorough portrayal of composer’s life is here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tillit_Sidney_Teddlie
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