Saturday, July 23, 2016

Bind Us Together – Bob Gillman



Was Bob Gillman making a request, from inside a group, which he hoped the Divine Intercessor would honor? Unity is undoubtedly an important subject in the heavenly family, one that Gillman could have spotted as he studied scripture, perhaps stimulating his composition “Bind Us Together”. If a believer has ever been in a group, each of who are like-minded, the prospect of sudden discord and separation is indeed painful. Was he a relative newcomer, experiencing for the first time the familiarity and then distress of a church crowd he’d grown to feel was a body with complementary parts? As a 28-year old, his experience indeed may have been limited with such an episode, but maybe he’d observed others who’d overcome such a challenge, and sensed what his own group needed to hear and say to one another. While being tied in knots (see picture here) is often perceived negatively, Bob’s vision of being bound was a positive one.

What else we can say with certainty about Bob Gillman will have to come later, including what circumstances inspired his “Bind Us Together” thoughts in 1974. Nothing more than what has already been mentioned above is known of him in published media, but perhaps the timing of his words and their content speak for themselves. By the early to mid-1970s, Gillman was a 20-something, and if he was a U.S. citizen, he wrote during the latter part of an era that certainly was turbulent. Had he been in Vietnam, or known others who’d been there? Or, was he part of the Jesus movement, with followers known as ‘Jesus freaks’? It would not have been atypical for that movement’s adherents to express humanity’s need for God-inspired love and unity, opposites of the war and government authority that Bob’s generation so mistrusted. With such strife invading the culture at the time, was he engaged with a church infected in the same way, perhaps split generationally by events of the time? Gillman’s prescriptive cure, no matter what the potential situation was, is evident in the verses he crafted. He talked to the Creator first (refrain of song, sung first). Then, he focused his hearers and fellow believers on some very basic tenets: the one God (v.1), each follower’s purpose in Him (v.2), and believers’ collective identity in Him (v.3).         

If Bob Gillman was shaped by events of his time – and who of us is not, by the way? – he certainly said what could not be denied, no matter what historical period one inhabits. Too often, the refrain and verse one are all I hear, however. Bob didn’t stop there. He felt it was important to acknowledge how mortal life plays out in light of Divinity’s inspiration (vv. 2-3). If He’s true, and I’m the result of His creative genius, despite my flaws, how do I proceed? Bob had surmised that whatever else is true of God, His presence can draw and hold imperfect people as one. There’s no better glue than God.  

This site shows three verses for song: http://www.higherpraise.com/lyrics/love/love852947.htm

This site shows composer’s birth year: http://www.hymnary.org/person/Gillman_B
 
This site indicates composer wrote song three years prior (in 1974) to its copyright date in 1977: http://www.hymnary.org/text/bind_us_together_lord

Link to brief description of the countercultural group of the period: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jesus_freak

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