Thy Word is rich in blessingĀ The HYMN OF THE DAY, āMay God Bestow On Us His Graceā (823), focuses on Our Lordās Word, rich in blessing as the Gospel (St. Luke 8) proclaims: That which fell on good ground, those hear the Word with a noble and good heart, keep it, and bear fruit with patience, yielding a crop a hundredfold.
This hymn is Martin Lutherās (1483-1546) based on Psalm 67.Ā Luther learned the psalms by heart praying the Divine Office in the monastery.Ā This is evident throughout his writings.Ā He asked colleagues to write hymns based on the psalms, and himself wrote five other Psalm hymns: Psalm 12 āO Lord, Look Down from Heaven, Beholdā (The Lutheran Hymnal 260), 46 āA Mighty Fortressā (656), 124 āIf God Had Not Been on Our Sideā (The Lutheran Hymnal 267), 130 āFrom Depths of Woe I Cry to Theeā (607), and 14 āAlthough the Fools Say With their Mouth.ā
Luther invites us to sing of the power of the Word of GodāOur Lord Jesus Christā and in His Holy Scriptures.Ā In stanza two: āThy peopleās pasture is Thy Word, Their souls to feed and nourish.āĀ Christians are fed by Our Lordās Word as sheep are fed in the pasture.Ā It is proclaimed in the Divine Service and the Daily Office, studied in Bible class, Sunday School, and catechism class, and meditated upon in daily prayer.
Connecting with the Gospel, stanza three exclaims: āThe land shall plenteous fruit bring forth, Thy Word is rich in blessing!āĀ Our Lord, through His Holy Ghost, works faith through His Word, calling sinners to repentance and proclaiming the forgiveness of sins in Jesus.Ā Working faith in the hearts of believers, they confess and spread the faith.Ā This hymn was an attachment to a German translation of Lutherās Latin Order of Mass and Communion, published in 1524.