This
fellow was a patriot, and proved it in two significant ways that survive over a
century later. As an Ohioan, Daniel Crane Roberts volunteered to serve in the
army during the mid-19th Century’s American Civil War, and perhaps
that episode stuck with him over a decade later when he penned “God of Our
Fathers” to commemorate the nation’s centennial. By 1876 Daniel was in Brandon,
Vermont (see map here) and was serving in a very different way, as a man of
peace and of the cloth in a Presbyterian church in the northeastern part of
America. What was it he remembered as he cast his vision backward, and was it
only about what had already happened? Was there something else he entreated his
God to do, upon the occasion of the 4th of July celebration in
Brandon? Daniel could say his two gifts of devotion to his country – his military
service to preserve the Union, and this song-poem he authored over 10 years later
-- merged with his allegiance to God.
Daniel Roberts was 34 years old in the months
leading up to the July 4th that would mark the nation’s 100th
birthday, no small feat considering the war that had threatened the Union in
the previous decade. His time among the 84th Ohio Volunteers as a
young man in his 20s undoubtedly must have been on his mind as he pondered that
cataclysmic event, yet he dwelt not on the past exclusively as he called out to
God in this hymn. Daniel looked ahead, too. He recalls the war’s imagery (verses
2 and 3) with a recognition that God’s protection was evident then ‘…in the
past’ (v.2), amid all of ‘…war’s alarms and deadly pestilence’ (v.3). There
must have been times that Daniel was overwhelmed with the experience, which was
a far cry from Kenyon College in Gambier in central Ohio where he had been in the
few years before the war commenced. Had Daniel thought about serving God in
professional ministry while at Kenyon College, or otherwise before 1861 arrived
and altered his life forever? History does not record what his life objectives
were as a 20-year old, someone who threw caution to the wind and put his life
at risk, along with many others. But, we do know that by 1865 he had been
ordained as a deacon in the church in which he chose to devote the remainder of
his life. His broader perspective on mortal -- and immortal life, especially – emerges
from his inner thoughts, a window that tells us he knew God would guide his and
his country’s future. Is it much of a leap to suspect that this viewpoint developed
in his spirit as he marched into and out of battlefields? He could see and
write about ‘…shining worlds in splendor’ (v.1), and implore God to ‘Refresh
thy people…lead us from night to never ending day’ (v.4), hopeful visions that
Daniel Roberts could imagine and call others to dream with him on July 4th,
1876.
Did Daniel
Roberts experience post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), the way many other
warriors, even to the present day, find it difficult to escape? His ministerial
life, and at least to a small extent this hymn, may have been therapy that
Daniel needed to overcome the war. Did his fellow Brandon, Vermont citizens
wonder about this as they sang his words for the first time on that 1876
Independence Day? Daniel probably didn’t want them to focus on that, however,
but on the One who he must have felt saved him over 10 years earlier. He’s
still in that saving business, by the way.
See more
information on the song story in these sources: The Complete Book of
Hymns – Inspiring Stories About 600 Hymns and Praise Songs by William J.
Petersen and Ardythe Petersen, Tyndale House Publishers, 2006; Amazing
Grace: 366 Inspiring Hymn Stories for Daily Devotions by Kenneth W. Osbeck,
Kregel Publications, 1990; and 101 More Hymn Stories, by Kenneth W.
Osbeck, Kregel Publications, 1985.
Also see this link, showing all four original verses: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/htm/g/o/d/o/godofath.htm
Also see this link for author’s biography: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/bio/r/o/b/e/roberts_dc.htm
Also see this site for song information: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/God_of_Our_Fathers
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