“All My Help From Thee I Bring”
“When ... storms of unpopularity and tempests of financial disaster threaten the tiny bark upon life’s troubled seas,” wrote Sir Henry Lunn, “my friend and colleague, Hugh Price Hughes, whose ministry in some small degree I shared, asked me to believe with confidence that there was One ‘in the heavens to give attention to our personal concerns,’ and taught me to say with a new emphasis, ‘Thou, O Christ, art all I want,’
‘Other refuge have I none,
Hangs my helpless soul on Thee,
. . . . . . . . .
All my trust on Thee is stayed,
All my help from Thee I bring.’
“And now that the limit of three score years and ten is passed and life’s journey must be drawing to a close, I say triumphantly: ‘Here I raise my Ebenezer. Hitherto the Lord hath helped me and hither by His grace I have come.’”
Episcopal dignity was enriched on a recent occasion when, according to Zion’s Herald,