Saturday, February 29, 2020

Grace Greater Than Our Sin -- Julia H. Johnston


She took after her mother and grandmother when she lifted up her pen, perhaps early in the 20th Century and probably while she was living in Peoria, Illinois (and perhaps occasionally gazing upon Peoria’s waterfront that looked something like this period photograph from 1909). Julia Johnston’s father, who was a Presbyterian minister, also must have stimulated her with many a sermon that guided her thoughts about “Grace Greater Than Our Sin” that she voiced and saw published by 1911, near the end of her life. No doubt, her life’s work as a Sunday school teacher and director also helped spur her writing, and was this a reflection of what she thought students in the bible classrooms should be learning? What she expressed is a fundamental concept of Christian faith, so was she trying to ensure that young minds – or even adults’ attentions—did not miss this pillar of belief?

Julia Johnston’s life by the time she wrote ‘Grace…’ included decades of effort to educate and inspire those in her classrooms and anyone who picked up one of the four books in which her works were circulated. Her upbringing also must have paid dividends by the time the adult Julia wrote in the early 20th Century. Forty years as an educator must have meant that probably thousands of students were directly or indirectly touched by Julia’s influence. She was also a lifelong poet and hymnist, with reportedly over 500 texts attributed to her. Additionally, she was president of the Presbyterian Missionary Society for a time, so she would have been thinking about this grace extending probably much further than the borders of the Peoria area. Thus, she had a platform. But, the foundation upon which she first stood and grew was most likely the key to Julia some 40-50 years later – the adult influences in her childhood cannot be exaggerated. Her matriarchal and patriarchal models say much about Julia Johnston. One can imagine Julia as the young child or young adult sharing with her mother the poetry she wrote, episodes in which she was coached and affirmed, fine-tuning the art form she knew the older women in her life had practiced. Her grandmother, who while perhaps not present during most of Julia’s childhood, must have had some impact on Julia through the poetry her mother could have shared with the child. Woven into this tapestry was the ministry she watched her father exercise. How often had Pastor Robert Johnston preached on the subject of grace? We could say at least once, right? Multiple times is a better guess, since Julia decided as an adult to write a poem devoted wholly to this one idea, perhaps decades after her father had planted that seed.

Julia was not a rose-colored glasses-wearing poet because she wrote about a free gift. No, Julia was evidently in touch with why she stood in need of this most significant ‘G’-word. Verses 1, 2 and 3 contain many words that show she knew about ‘sin’, ‘guilt’ (v.1); ‘despair’, and ‘infinite loss’ (v.2); and a ‘dark stain’ (v.3). ‘Grace…exceeds’ all of those (v.1), she exults. Accordingly, she uses this word no less than 38 times in her four verses and the refrain, a reminder that Grace stands tall, despite various challenges to its power. Julia would have faced numerous grace-needy moments by the time she wrote about it, so as her life progressed perhaps Julia felt increasingly the urge to cling to God and His promise of clemency that He offers to all wrongdoers. Shouldn’t we all!   
  
See more information on the song story in these sources: The Complete Book of Hymns – Inspiring Stories About 600 Hymns and Praise Songs by William J. Petersen and Ardythe Petersen, Tyndale House Publishers, 2006; and Amazing Grace: 366 Inspiring Hymn Stories for Daily Devotions by Kenneth W. Osbeck, Kregel Publications, 1990.  

Also see this link, showing all three original verses: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/htm/g/r/a/g/gragreat.htm  

Also see these links for author’s biography: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/bio/j/o/h/n/s/t/johnston_jh.htm

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