Hymn: “Praise the Savior, Ye Who Know Him” – Thomas Kelly (1637-1711)
Tune: ACCLAIM
[My wife Carlita reminded me of this hymn yesterday, and I realized I had done this posting in 2015. So I decided to post it again today while I have the power of this hymnline racing about through my mind.]
Here is the full last stanza of this hymn:
“Then we shall be where we would be,
Then we shall be what we should be.
Things that are not now, nor could be,
Soon shall be our own.”
This
may sound like a riddle, but it is Kelly’s description of heaven… which
has been for centuries misunderstood and elaborated upon. Unlike many
hymn writers, he doesn’t describe the place to which believers go;
rather he lines out the condition of those who arrive there.
He
takes the “would’ve, should’ve, could’ve” quip a bit further into the
spiritual realm, saying that we will achieve what we always wanted to be
spiritually, we will become what we always should have been spiritually,
and those things which we have labeled “impossible” in this life will be
accomplished.
Kelly calls these (from the previous
stanza) our “promised joys with thee.” While seemingly wrapped up in a
riddle-esque statement, it is that to which most of us aspire in the
next life. If only we could achieve it in this life: be what I would
like to be, what I should be – and believe that the impossible can
happen.
Wouldn’t that be a taste of heaven?
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