Some through the waters, some through the flood,“Oh, no,” many of us protest. “That’s not right. That’s not loving. That’s certainly not God’s doing. He doesn’t do that to His children.” Is our gut response correct? Does this chorus survive a biblical interrogation?
some through the fire, but all through the blood;
some through great sorrow, but God gives a song,
in the night season and all the day long.
The refrain of “God Leads Us Along” stands up very well to biblical scrutiny, and when you read it as a piece of devotional theology rather than poetic sentiment, it becomes clear that it is drawing directly from Scripture rather than embellishing it. Look at what Isaiah says.
When you pass through the waters, I will be with you; and through the rivers, they shall not overwhelm you; when you walk through fire you shall not be burned, and the flame shall not consume you. (Isa 43:2)The refrain describes the varied paths God’s people walk: some are led “through the waters,” others “through the flood,” still others “through the fire,” and many “through great sorrow.” This is not a romanticized view of the Christian life but a deeply biblical one. Isaiah 43:2 explicitly names these same images—waters, rivers, fire—and frames them as the very places where God’s presence is most profoundly experienced. The hymn is not promising deliverance from trials but God’s faithful leading through them, which is exactly the pattern of Scripture.
The line “but all through the blood” is the theological anchor of the entire refrain. It reminds the singer that although the outward circumstances of believers differ dramatically, the basis of their salvation and their perseverance is the same for all: the atoning blood of Christ. This is the consistent witness of the New Testament, from Ephesians 1:7 to Hebrews 9 and 1 Peter 1. The hymn is not suggesting that Christ’s blood is merely a comfort in suffering; it is asserting that the blood of Christ is the means by which every believer is sustained, preserved, and ultimately brought safely home.
The closing thought—that God “gives a song in the night”—is also thoroughly scriptural. Job 35:10 uses that exact phrase, and the Psalms repeatedly speak of God’s song being with His people in the night seasons. The hymn captures the paradox of Christian experience: sorrow is real, but so is the God who meets His people in it with sustaining joy.
Taken as a whole, the refrain is not only biblically correct but biblically rich. It avoids the shallow optimism of some modern religious language and instead embraces the full biblical pattern: suffering is varied, salvation is singular, and God’s presence is constant.
2 comments:
“… [T]he blood of Christ is the means by which every believer is sustained, preserved, and ultimately brought safely home.”
Indeed, for it is the blood of Christ that places us in a relationship with the Father, as a dear child under His perfect care. It also makes us a possessor of the Holy Spirit, who accompanies us on our journey from start to finish--come hell or high water.
I agree that the wording of the refrain is very biblical and that it “avoids the shallow optimism of some modern religious language” (e.g. the kind usually espoused by Joel Osteen and his ilk ;).
Without the blood, there is no future hope for rest, nor is there present hope for the redemption of our trials and sorrows. Praise God for the blood of Jesus.
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