fbpx

Jun 23, 2023

Gerhard Tersteegen

Share:

John of the Cross in the sixteenth-century coined the phrase “dark night of the soul” to describe a crisis of faith precipitated by an absence of God. This dark night can be intermittent or prolonged. In the case of Gerhard Tersteegen (1697-1769), it lasted five years.
Gerhard worked as an apprentice for a successful merchant in Germany. He quit his job and moved to the country to seek after God. Initially, it did not go well. He had no real sense of God and became spiritually depressed.  Divisions among Christians and the prosperity of evil people distressed him. Feelings of unworthiness led to his self-imposed exile from worship and the Lord’s Supper.

One morning, while on a journey to a nearby town and meditating on Scripture, his mood lifted. New appreciation for the redeeming work of Christ punctured a hole in his darkness and nourished him in peace. The transformation was immediate and long-lasting. He became an itinerant preacher.  People flocked to his home for spiritual guidance, and he had to move into larger quarters to accommodate the crowds. He wrote poems and hymns expressing his new-found gratitude. One such hymn, “The Hidden Love of God,” reflected on his five-year bout with spiritual depression. God’s absence is not a real absence, but a seeming absence, Gerhard came to discover. Even in dark times, God remains faithful.

Another of his prayers leads us to find our rest and strength in God:

O Lord, Thy hands have formed us,and Thou has sent us into this world,
that we may walk in the way that leads to heaven and Thyself,
and may find lasting rest in Thee
who is the Source and Center of our souls.
Look in pity on us poor pilgrims in the narrow way,
let us not go astray,
but reach at last our true home where our Father dwells.
Guide and govern us from day to day,
and bestow on us food and strength for body and soul,
that we may journey on in peace.
Forgive us for having so often wavered or looked back,
and let us henceforth march straight on the way of Thy laws,
and may our last step be a safe and peaceful passage
to the arms of Thy love,
and the blessed fellowship of the saints in light.
Hear us, O Lord and glorify Thy name in us,
that we may glorify Thee forever and ever.
Amen.

Rev. Dr. Peter James served 42 years as the senior of Vienna Presbyterian Church in Vienna, VA — 21 years in the 20th century and 21 years in the 21st century. He retired in 2021 and now serves as Pastor-in-Residence at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary.

Even as a pastor, prayer came slowly to Pete. Read Pete’s story.