Saturday, January 26, 2013

By Christ Redeemed -- George Rawson



George Rawson would have been familiar with various procedures in a legal framework, with the scales of justice (shown here), all necessary to maintain order and uphold established law. One must have a commitment, a loyalty, to legal mandates as like a foundation to a building. Would this kind of mindset have been influential in this 50-year old in 1857 when he wrote “By Christ Redeemed”? How many legal minds also compose poetry for hymns? Are the two natures – one legal and ordered, and the other artistic, expressive -- normally complementary? They were for George Rawson.

Rawson was a solicitor-lawyer in 19th Century England and also a man of Christian faith that was apparent in more than just membership and attendance in a local church. He was from Leeds (north-central England), where he was a solicitor, but he also was apparently active in the worship life of the Congregational church there. He is credited with helping assemble in 1853 a hymnal for the Leeds church; at least six of that hymnal’s works were his compositions. Perhaps this experience whetted his appetite, and led to his completing the words for “By Christ Redeemed” just a few short years hence. It was about this time, 1858, that he also helped some local Baptists develop another hymnal, this time with 13 of his works therein. Rawson reportedly composed a total of at least 50 hymn texts throughout his life. Not much is known of his legal reputation, other than his practice of his chosen profession for many years in the Leeds or Bristol, England (southwest England) areas. In his later years in 1876 and then 1885, four years before his death, he authored two more hymn collections. So, his mid-life hymnody in the 1850’s was not just a passing hobby, but something he continued to develop over the last 30 years of his life.  While his professional acumen is largely anonymous, his published hymn texts are said to be well-refined, with carefully and properly chosen language – not unlike what one could expect from a lawyer. This guy who knew how to write a brief also was apparently able to express himself poetically. Perhaps he needed this as an outlet, a respite from his professional life.

Rawson’s words in “By Christ Redeemed” show he must have been pondering the communion, and how that kept him and fellow believers linked to the Divine One. ‘Until He Come’ might have done as well for the title of this hymn, for the words consummate each of Rawson’s original six verses. They tell us that he sensed a fidelity to the supper that he as a 50-year old must have taken hundreds of times by the mid-19th Century when he considered its import. Doing something every week might become rote, too routine for the restless person. But, Rawson’s words and his life example communicate that there’s something - a testimony - that I give to Him and my spiritual siblings each time I eat this meal. Hey, can you hear that lawyer coaching you with this reminder as you sing now?           


For the original six verses, see this site:

See following site for further information on the composer:

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