When First Baptist of Franklin celebrates its 150th year of existence this July 30th, the choir will sing a version of Psalm 90 entitled, "In Every Age, O Lord" by William Monaghan. Psalm 90 was written by Moses in acknowledgement of the providential care of the LORD for Israel throughout each generation. After contemplating the briefness of man in comparison to the eternality of God, the psalm ends with this prayer, "May the favor of the Lord our God rest upon us; establish the work of our hands for us - yes, establish the work of our hands."
God is indeed the Alpha and Omega, the author and finisher, but in his wisdom, God has chosen to work
in and
through his chosen people, first Israel, and now the Church. This willingness of God to work out his will through the efforts of mortal men and women makes the prayer of Moses entirely appropriate. We plan, strive, and hope, seeking to fulfill God's will and be useful servants for his kingdom, but we need the power of God to
establish the work we have undertaken. Why? To make it effective, to make it last. The Church has been able to endure, as a whole, because of the empowerment it has received from the Holy Spirit at work among its individual members. If we were but a human institution, we would have surely collapsed long ago, like Rome itself, under the weight of our own foibles and follies. But the Church of Jesus Christ has endured, despite the faults of those who comprise it and their foolishness, for it is an expression of the power of God.
Here at First Baptist we have had ups and downs. We had a generation where a 1,000 people came to be a part of this church's worship, and we have had a generation where a couple dozen were all we could muster. And yet, the work of God has endured here among his people. Those redeemed of the Lord continue to be trained and equipped, worship and prayer still rises up from our gatherings, and ministries of outreach both local and global continue to be undertaken. God, in his wisdom, has been with us thus far, allowing us today to stand at the end of a line of God's people stretching back at this location to the 19th century.
God has been our refuge, in each generation, and God has established the work of our hands for his kingdom. May God continue to bless his people, gathered here in Franklin, in his name and for his glory, for many generations to come.