Beauty for brokenness, hope for despair

Scriptures:
  • Genesis 3:16-19
  • Genesis 4:22
  • Exodus 35:35
  • Exodus 36:8-19
  • Leviticus 23:22
  • Leviticus 25:35
  • Numbers 35:6-34
  • Deuteronomy 4:41-43
  • Deuteronomy 15:7-11
  • Deuteronomy 19:1-10
  • Deuteronomy 24:19
  • Joshua 20
  • Judges 21:25
  • 2 Samuel 2:26-28
  • 1 Kings 7:14
  • 2 Chronicles 2:7-14
  • Psalms 72:11-14
  • Psalms 86:9
  • Psalms 113:3
  • Psalms 140:12
  • Proverbs 14:31
  • Proverbs 19:17
  • Proverbs 28:27
  • Isaiah 1:4-7
  • Isaiah 3:14-15
  • Isaiah 45:6
  • Isaiah 59:19
  • Isaiah 61:3
  • Jeremiah 22:16
  • Lamentations 4:4
  • Joel 2:25
  • Amos 2:6-7
  • Amos 4:6-10
  • Amos 5:11-12
  • Amos 8:4-8
  • Malachi 1:11
  • Romans 8:22
  • Philippians 4:11-12
  • 1 Timothy 6:6-8
  • James 5:1-6
Book Number:
  • 944

Beauty for brokenness, hope for despair,
Lord, in your suffering world this is our prayer.
Bread for the children, justice, joy, peace,
sunrise to sunset your kingdom increase.

2. Shelter for fragile lives, cures for their ills,
work for the craftsmen, trade for their skills,
land for the dispossessed, rights for the weak,
voices to plead the cause of those who can’t speak.

God of the poor, friend of the weak,
give us compassion we pray:
melt our cold hearts,
let tears fall like rain;
come, change our love
from a spark to a flame.

3. Refuge from cruel wars, havens from fear,
cities for sanctuary, freedoms to share,
peace to the killing fields, scorched earth to green,
Christ for the bitterness, his cross for the pain.

4. Rest for the ravaged earth, oceans and streams,
plundered and poisoned, our future, our dreams,
Lord end our madness, carelessness, greed,
make us content with the things that we need.

God of the poor…

5. Lighten our darkness, breathe on this flame
until your justice burns brightly again,
until the nations learn of your ways,
seek your salvation and bring you their praise.

God of the poor…

© 1993 Make Way Music
Graham Kendrick

Christ's Lordship Over All of Life - Those in Need

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Tune

The story behind the hymn

This item and the next have both been closely associated with TEAR Fund (The Evangelical Alliance Relief Fund) and sung at events planned to celebrate and extend its work. Graham Kendrick’s song from 1993, for which as usual he wrote both words and music (tune, BEAUTY FOR BROKENNESS), was also heard at Spring Harvest and published in Let’s Praise 2 followed by MP. Its text covers a wide range of current concerns, some of them rarely sung about, in all of which TEAR Fund has some part. Its alternative title ‘God of the poor’ is a reminder of David Sheppard’s earlier book Bias to the Poor. For 4.4, contrast Bunyan in >i>Pilgrim’s Progress: ‘I am content with what I have, little be it, or much’.

A look at the author

Kendrick, Graham Andrew

b Blisworth, Northants 1950. Son of a Baptist minister who moved with the family to Laindon (Essex) and Putney. He took a step of faith at the age of 5, and began composing songs as a 15- year old, teaching himself to play the piano before he learned to read music. Studied at Avery Hill College, SE London (Cert Ed 1972) before joining Clive Calver and others in an evangelistic team in 1972. He toured schools and colleges with his music group and worked with YWAM, as Musical Director of British Youth for Christ (1976–80), and at St Michael-le-Belfry Ch, York, eventually joining the church leadership team of the S London Ichthus Fellowship (1984–2004) to specialise in music. His first published songs were written in the 1970s, and rapidly established him as the prominent songwriter/musician of a movement variously described as ‘house/new church’, ‘renewal’ or ‘restorationist’. His 1978 tour was the catalyst for the annual Spring Harvest gatherings where his work was often first aired; he pioneered praise marches with the initial ‘Make Way’, nation-wide events and a global ‘March for Jesus’ involving an estimated 12 million people from 177 nations in 1994. Other forms of open-air celebration and witness also had a strong musical element. He has lectured and written on this approach, produced ideas and texts for children and for seasons and special occasions, and published material on music, evangelism and worship. In the 1990s his songs, already well-represented in MP, began to appear in mainstream British hymnals; and The Source (for which he was consultant editor) included most of his significant material to date as well as other work. Between 1971 and 2000 he produced 28 albums. CH 2004 edn included 11 of his songs. Some of his 300-plus compositions are intentionally ephemeral or otherwise limited in scope; others go some way towards narrowing the gap between hymns and songs, while often requiring musical expertise for adequate performance. His more recent work has a strong element of social and moral concern. Almost invariably, text and tune go together. He has appeared at major events in most denominations, and lives with his family at Croydon, Surrey. Among other honours he has received a Dove award for international work, 1995. See also Selling Worship by Pete Ward (2005) where he is often quoted and his development sympathetically discussed. Recent indications of his broad acceptance are his 2 items in Common Praise (2000) and 11 in both Christian Hymns (2004 edn) and Sing Praise (2010). Nos.200, 207, 294, 315, 336, 354, 358, 365, 369, 384, 396, 397, 415, 434, 464, 468, 489, 494, 533, 589, 619, 667, 674, 700, 723, 744, 803, 816, 826, 835, 944, 953, 955, 957, 1242.