Mrs Seaton's Letter to the Boys and Girls.

 

Dear Boys and Girls,

Frances Ridley Havergal, Hymn-writer.


I wonder how many of you know the name of Frances Ridley Havergal. I’m sure some of you may know some of the hymns she wrote, for Frances Ridley Havergal was a hymn-writer. Have you ever sung “Golden harps are sounding, Angel voices ring” or “I am trusting Thee, Lord Jesus” or “Who is on the Lord’s side”? these, and many other great hymns were written by Frances Ridley Havergal and in the hymns that she wrote she always loved to speak about the Lord Jesus Christ and all the He meant to her.


Frances Ridley Havergal

It wasn’t always so, however, boys and girls, and the only thing that Frances Ridley Havergal really seemed to love when she was a little girl was her parents’ garden where she used to spend most of her time looking at the flowers and sitting under the trees. She knew a great deal about the Bible and when she was only about eight years of age, she could repeat whole chapters of the Bible without making one mistake. But, although she knew the Bible, she didn’t know the Lord Jesus Christ as her Saviour, and so, she had no real love for Him, but only for her garden.


One day when young Frances was reading some hymns written by a man called William Cowper, she came across these words – “My Father made them all.” She had always believed that God had made the world and all things in the world and all the things that grew in her garden. However, the words that struck young Frances Ridley Havergal were those two words at the beginning of the line – “My Father made them all.” Even in her young life she began to realise that, although God was her Creator – although He had made all things – still with all, God was not really her heavenly Father. Before God would really be her Father, she would have to believe in the Lord Jesus Christ with all her heart.


This is true for every one of us, boys and girls; and as Frances Ridley Havergal later found Christ to be her Saviour, we pray that you, too, might find Him soon.



Yours Sincerely

Mrs. Seaton