Now that's a statement rarely heard in churches theses days. Usually words are on a screen or written out in the bulletin. Some churches no longer even have hymnals in their pews racks. For those who know how to read music, I imagine that is a real loss especially if the hymn is unfamiliar to them.
.....and turn to page 517 Taylor said. In FEC hymnal it's listed by title, The Solid Rock.
Why did Taylor want us to turn to this old familiar hymn of assurance and faith?
Taylor wanted us to focus on the apostrophe ' after Jesus' name.
He wanted us to see the duality of the possession indicated by said apostrophe. The hope we have is in Jesus, who not only shed His blood for our salvation but He also imputed His righteousness to us.
Whose are we? We are His Beloved. Ownership of sorts. There is no "Sort of" ownership with Jesus. Believer, we are totally His possession forever. God see us through His Son's righteousness from now until eternity. Hallejujah!
Simply put................apostrophes are punctuation marks (not diacritical markings helpful in accents and appearing over letters) marks to indicate omission of letters/ numbers or to indicate possession. Only when a word ends in "s" and is possessive does one place the apostrophe outside the "s."
In the life of a believer that all important possessive apostrophe reminds us we are His.
Our hope is built on nothing less than that---Jesus' blood and righteousness.
BOTH.....His blood and His righteousness!