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Fto AlGhamdi🪽
Fto AlGhamdi🪽
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Saturday 08 June 2024 00:05:17 GMT
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In the late 19th century, Horatio Gates Spafford was a successful lawyer and a devoted Christian living in Chicago. By all appearances, life had been generous to him. He enjoyed a thriving legal practice, a loving marriage to his wife Anna, five cherished children, and a faith that shaped their home. Yet, within a few short years, that seemingly secure world would be shattered. In 1871, disaster struck when the Great Chicago Fire ravaged the city, destroying much of Spafford’s real estate investments and wiping out a large portion of his wealth. As he struggled to recover from this financial ruin, another, more personal tragedy followed, the death of his young son from scarlet fever. Though grief filled their household, the Spaffords clung firmly to their faith, trusting God as their refuge in sorrow. Two years later, hoping for rest and spiritual renewal, the family planned a journey to Europe to join their close friend, the renowned evangelist Dwight L. Moody, during a revival tour. At the last moment, urgent business matters delayed Horatio, and he sent Anna ahead with their four daughters, Annie, Maggie, Bessie, and Tanetta, aboard the French steamship Ville du Havre. Midway across the Atlantic, tragedy struck once more. The ship collided with another vessel and sank within minutes. Of the more than 300 passengers on board, only a few survived. Anna was rescued unconscious, clinging to floating wreckage, but all four daughters were lost to the cold, unforgiving sea. Upon arriving in Cardiff, Wales, Anna sent her husband a heartbreaking telegram containing just two words: “Saved alone.” Overcome with grief, Horatio immediately boarded a ship to reunite with his bereaved wife. As the vessel passed over the very waters where his daughters had perished, he stood quietly on deck, reflecting amid the rolling waves. In that sacred moment of sorrow, an extraordinary peace settled over his heart, a peace that defied human understanding. From that experience, he penned words that would echo through generations: When peace like a river, attendeth my way, When sorrows like sea billows roll; Whatever my lot, Thou hast taught me to say, It is well, it is well with my soul. “It Is Well With My Soul” is not a hymn of denial, but a profound declaration of faith. Born in the depths of anguish rather than ease, it stands as a testimony to unwavering trust in God amid life’s fiercest storms. Through the centuries, this timeless hymn has brought comfort to millions, reminding us that even when everything around us is broken, divine peace can still reign within the soul. #thestorybehind #ItIsWellWithMySoul #ItIsWell #WhenPeaceLikeARiver #HymnsOfPraise #HymnHistory #HymnsStory #ChristianHeritage #FaithThroughTrials #SacredMusic
In the late 19th century, Horatio Gates Spafford was a successful lawyer and a devoted Christian living in Chicago. By all appearances, life had been generous to him. He enjoyed a thriving legal practice, a loving marriage to his wife Anna, five cherished children, and a faith that shaped their home. Yet, within a few short years, that seemingly secure world would be shattered. In 1871, disaster struck when the Great Chicago Fire ravaged the city, destroying much of Spafford’s real estate investments and wiping out a large portion of his wealth. As he struggled to recover from this financial ruin, another, more personal tragedy followed, the death of his young son from scarlet fever. Though grief filled their household, the Spaffords clung firmly to their faith, trusting God as their refuge in sorrow. Two years later, hoping for rest and spiritual renewal, the family planned a journey to Europe to join their close friend, the renowned evangelist Dwight L. Moody, during a revival tour. At the last moment, urgent business matters delayed Horatio, and he sent Anna ahead with their four daughters, Annie, Maggie, Bessie, and Tanetta, aboard the French steamship Ville du Havre. Midway across the Atlantic, tragedy struck once more. The ship collided with another vessel and sank within minutes. Of the more than 300 passengers on board, only a few survived. Anna was rescued unconscious, clinging to floating wreckage, but all four daughters were lost to the cold, unforgiving sea. Upon arriving in Cardiff, Wales, Anna sent her husband a heartbreaking telegram containing just two words: “Saved alone.” Overcome with grief, Horatio immediately boarded a ship to reunite with his bereaved wife. As the vessel passed over the very waters where his daughters had perished, he stood quietly on deck, reflecting amid the rolling waves. In that sacred moment of sorrow, an extraordinary peace settled over his heart, a peace that defied human understanding. From that experience, he penned words that would echo through generations: When peace like a river, attendeth my way, When sorrows like sea billows roll; Whatever my lot, Thou hast taught me to say, It is well, it is well with my soul. “It Is Well With My Soul” is not a hymn of denial, but a profound declaration of faith. Born in the depths of anguish rather than ease, it stands as a testimony to unwavering trust in God amid life’s fiercest storms. Through the centuries, this timeless hymn has brought comfort to millions, reminding us that even when everything around us is broken, divine peace can still reign within the soul. #thestorybehind #ItIsWellWithMySoul #ItIsWell #WhenPeaceLikeARiver #HymnsOfPraise #HymnHistory #HymnsStory #ChristianHeritage #FaithThroughTrials #SacredMusic

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