Friday, March 1, 2013

He Paid a Debt – Anonymous



He or she was American, that much can be said. And, it should go without saying that this composer of ‘He Paid a Debt’ was a Christ-centered believer – just look at the words written by this otherwise anonymous writer-musician.  He/she was focused on His sacrifice, and on singing a grateful note in humble response. The few times it appears in contemporary music collections also suggests it had a narrow audience, perhaps in just one of America’s Protestant church traditions. It may also be called a ‘devotional’ song, one that you as a teenager may have learned around a campfire, looking into a light in an otherwise dark place. That’s a metaphor for every believer….perhaps that’s why the song has stuck around.


The words ‘American Folk Hymn’ or ‘American Folk Melody’, but no other attributions, accompany this tune in a few hymnals today. Most American folk music has been around for relatively few years, perhaps only in the last two centuries as music goes, according to historical accounts of this music genre. Typically, a song in this tradition without an identified specific composer develops orally, based on a simple construct. It’s something that can be learned easily, just by anyone who can ‘carry a tune in a bucket’.  This unknown creator, or maybe even group of creators, must have been bible students, studying and thinking about what His sacrifice cost in two past-tense verses, and its relative value to the devoted follower in one future-tense verse. It was personal for this writer – notice how often, 15 times, that ‘I’, ‘me’, or ‘my’ is vocalized in the three short verses. Yet, unknown is this person, in a rather ironic twist, huh? But, it’s completely appropriate and consistent with the song’s theme. I would be nothing without His everything, to put it simply. Jesus said to come as a little child (Matthew 19:14), say nothing, but feel His embrace. Nothing else matters in that world. It’s timeless, so maybe that’s why there’s no date associated with this tune either. Just focus on Him, in that timeless space. That’s what I can do with ‘He Paid a Debt’.   

See the links here for articles about the origins of American folk music:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_folk_music

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