Posts Tagged ‘Horatio Spafford’

WHEN SORROWS LIKE SEA BILLOWS ROLL

tragedy-at-seaThis is a drawing of an historic tragedy at sea. On board the Villa de Havre, which sunk after being struck by an iron ship, was Horatio Spafford’s wife and his four young daughters: Annie, Maggie, Bessie, and Tanita.  All of his daughters drowned. His wife was rescued from a plank of wood and taken to Europe where she telegraphed her husband with these famous words:

Saved alone. What shall I do?

He came on the next ship, but asked the captain to stop at the place his four little girls drowned. After looking into those deep dark waters, he went back to his stateroom and penned: It is Well With My Soul.

Spafford has been called a contemporary Job, and he was.  Most of us know this story — but there is more. He was a wealthy Chicagoan who loved the Lord deeply — he was extremely active, at risk to himself in the anti-slavery movement. He was a great friend and supporter of D. L.  Moody. Like Job, his first tragedy was loss of property, for Spafford lost tremendous wealth in the great Chicago fire. After the fire, the family decided to go to a Moody crusade in Europe, but Spafford was detained and sent his family ahead. It was then, like Job, that he lost all of his children.  Spafford, like Job, trusted God and clung to Him.

After this tragedy, Spafford and his wife were blessed with a son — a son who died at the age of four.  (If you happen to be a Netflix member, I heartily recommend renting the documentary on five songs called “Amazing Grace” — not the movie about William Wilberforce, though it has the same title — but a documentary on five songs, including It Is Well With My Soul.)

Please memorize all of It Is Well With My Soul, quieting yourself in the presence of God with it each morning, before you study.

Here are your questions to ponder for January 7, 8, and 9:

1. Looking at the first chapter of Job, what parallels do you see between Job and Horatio?

2.  Ponder verse 1 of It Is Well With My Soul. What new thoughts do you have, knowing the Spafford story?

3. According to the first chapter of Job, what was the reason that Job suffered? What thoughts or questions do you have about this?

4. Why did Satan think Job served God? What does loss reveal about our hearts?

5. Ponder the second verse of It Is Well With My Soul.  Do you think Satan may have also been behind Horatio’s tragedies? Why or why not?

6. What does Satan hope will happen to the Christian who suffers loss? What truths, according to the 2nd and 3rd verses of It Is Well With My Soul allowed Horatio to overcome Satan?

7. How can you apply this to your storm right now — or to storms in the future?

Finally — I want to issue a personal invitation to anyone in the Chicago area to sign up and come to the live event next Thursday at Moody.  I’ll be there and would love to meet any bloggers. Amy Shreve will be there, playing “It is Well With My Soul” on her harp as well as other great songs. I realize most of you cannot, though we covet your prayers, and hope you’ll listen online or on the radio! You can connect to the Midday site through my homepage.

I’m praying for you as you study! Thanks for praying for each other as well. He is with us.