It’s true.  It’s always been true.  And the people of the “coasts of Decapolis” said it well.  In Mark 7, they brought a deaf man who also had a severe speech impediment to Jesus for healing.  And the Lord healed him.  That’s when they exclaimed, “He hath done all things well” (Mark 7:37).  Although the people there that day were talking about that particular miracle, they expressed a wonderful truth concerning our Lord.  We see it at Creation when the Lord Himself looked at all He had made and proclaimed it “very good.”  This truth weaves its way through the Scriptures all the way up to and beyond the story in Mark 7.  “He hath done all things well.”  It’s a statement of praise for His blessings.  It’s a statement of worship to acknowledge His greatness.  But there’s something else that’s perhaps a little harder to see.  It is also a statement of faith.  I think you’d agree that God sometimes works in ways we do not and cannot understand.  Again, look at Scripture, especially Hebrews 11:32-39.  There we see both great blessing and great trial, yet they all had great faith.  Yes, it’s easy to say, “He hath done all things well” in times of joy.  But can we say it through the hard times, too?  Through the tears and heartbreak?  Through the questions with seemingly no answers?  That’s a hard one for me at times, but it doesn’t make it any less true.  So, will we trust our Lord enough to always lift our heads and proclaim, “He hath done all things well”?  Because He does!