Life changes everything – a rather obvious fact, isn’t it?
But, that’s what Alfred Henry Ackley was thinking around Easter in 1932, a
thought that so energized him that he wrote a hymn to say how important this reality
is. “He Lives” was his assertion of hope, despite the dire circumstances of the
Great Depression that was ongoing in this his 45th year. He wasn’t
despondent, but did feel a desperate need to answer a question posed to him, a question
that lit a fire and was further stoked by nonchalance and even doubt that he
heard regarding Christ’s resurrection (shown in this 15th Century
masterpiece). His method provides a recipe for how to manage a confrontation
with suspicion. Life is proof, he says.
Alfred Ackley had been a minister and music-lover for many
years when he wrote “He Lives” in the early 1930s. His father had musically tutored
him in New York before sending young Alfred to London’s Royal Academy of Music,
but his training didn’t end with music and learning to play the cello. He also
obtained theological training at Maryland’s Westminster Seminary, and
subsequently ministered in the eastern United States before moving to
California. There, a Jewish student bluntly challenged Ackley – ‘why worship a
dead Jew?’ Ackley’s prompt response
presaged the title of the hymn he later wrote. He also was aroused by some casual
skepticism he later heard over the radio, eliciting such passion that his wife
reportedly pushed him to record his feelings in this hymn. Verses 1 and 2 of “He
Lives” give us hints of his debate with his young Jewish friend, as well as
with the culture at large. ‘…(no matter) what men say’ and the weariness and ‘stormy
blasts’ he mentions are conceivably reflections of his conversations about faith
and a recognition of the era’s economic upheaval. It’s apparent his hymn wasn’t
just a song, but a sincere, fervent answer in his world at the time.
Perhaps he had had other similar encounters and subsequent
discussions with his wife or others, for Alfred is credited with some 1,500
songs, both secular and religious, over his lifetime. Composers often tell us
how their musical inventions have sprung from real events, even challenges,
which crystallize ideas and spur something uniquely apt for the moment. Music
that does that is like an aroma that stirs a memory of how we felt, what we
were doing at the time. “He Lives” came about apparently as Ackley also studied
the bible’s resurrection accounts, the fast-paced, exciting story of Jesus’
rising. The story he read was as real for him, undoubtedly, as the Jewish
student’s question and the radio address that fired his spirit that Easter in
1932. Ackley’s method sounds effective, kinda like so many others who’ve composed.
Live life, address challenges, read your bible, greet the world with an answer.
Give it a try.
Information on the song was obtained from the
books “Amazing Grace – 366 Inspiring
Hymn Stories for Daily Devotions”, by Kenneth W. Osbeck, 1990, Kregel
Publications; “The Complete Book of Hymns – Inspiring Stories About 600 Hymns
and Praise Songs”, by William J. and Ardythe Petersen, 2006, Tyndale House Publishers,
Inc.; and “Then Sings My Soul”, by Robert J. Morgan, 2003, Thomas Nelson, Inc.
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